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The Philosophy of Divine Love: A Comparative Study of Sufi Mysticism and Bhakti Movement

Sk Abdul Hamid

Revista Review Index Journal of Multidisciplinary March 31, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.31305/rrijm2024.v04.n01.017 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

Divine love in Sufi mysticism and the Bhakti movement is compared, revealing both similarities and differences in conception, practice, and moral implications. Sufi love dissolves the ego to unite with the transcendent Absolute, while Bhakti devotion is a personal, reciprocal relationship with a deity. Both traditions use poetry and ritual to foster spiritual fulfillment and communal harmony. The essay argues that divine love is a dynamic ethical principle, not merely a feeling, offering a model for empathy and moral engagement in modern, diverse societies.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Divine love, as expressed in Sufi and Bhakti traditions, is a dynamic ethical and spiritual principle that fosters personal transformation and social cohesion, offering a model for empathy and moral engagement in contemporary pluralistic contexts.

Abstract

The idea of divine love as expressed in Sufi mysticism and the Bhakti movement is examined in this essay, along with the similarities and differences in its conception, application, and moral implications. I examine how Sufi mystics view divine love (ʿIshq e Haqiqi) as a transformational force that dissolves the ego and joins the seeker with the transcendent Absolute, cultivating moral virtues and spiritual insight, using a comparative perspective. The Bhakti tradition, on the other hand, integrates moral living with emotional closeness and group involvement, emphasizing a personal, relational, and reciprocal devotion (prema) toward a particular deity. Despite having different metaphysical underpinnings, both faiths are deeply committed to the transformational power of love and use ritual expression, poetry, and devotional activities to foster communal harmony as well as individual spiritual fulfilment. The study also explores the spiritual and ethical ramifications of divine love, emphasizing how these customs foster moral involvement, inclusion, and compassion in both individual and societal contexts. The philosophical insights of Sufi and Bhakti love provide a compelling model for interpersonal empathy, moral behaviour, and communal togetherness in modern circumstances characterized by cultural variety, social fragmentation, and existential ambiguity. The paper shows that divine love is not just a devotional feeling but a dynamic ethical and spiritual principle with ongoing relevance by placing mystical devotion within both historical and contemporary frameworks. This comparison highlights how the pursuit of divine love can both elevate the individual and promote social development. Sufi and Bhakti traditions offer ageless patterns of ethical and spiritual transformation.

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