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I was wondering if a Baha'i could point out the differences between the Sufi faith and the Baha'i faith.
Rumi is Bahai? I thought Rumi was definitely Sufi....You will find allusions to Rumi, Saadi and other well known poets in the Baha'i Writings but this does not mean as above that Baha'is are Sufis. As mentioned we don't accept that the soul becomes united with God or becomes God this is a more pantheistic idea. We turn to the Manifestation of God.
- Art
This is news to me, and of great interest.I am a Baha'i who has the pleasure of spending a lot of time with the Ruhaniat Sufis who trace their lineage to Hazrat Inayat Khan who was a Persian master musician who grew up in India and is credited with having brought Sufism to the West. There are a lot of wonderful books with quotes from his public speaking abroad.
Media coverage of "things Sufi" (inspired by renewed interest in the works of Rumi) also brought to public attention other Western branches of Sufi orders (turuq, sing. tariqa) conventionally framed within Islam, as well as Western "Sufi" groups no longer anchored to Islam, such as Hazrat Inayat Khan's Chishti-derived International Sufi Movement, and the spiritual descendents of European aficionados of Sufism, such as René Guénon and Frithjof Schuon.
Quatrain No 1173.I am the servant of the Qur'an as long as I have life.
I am the dust on the path of Muhammad, the Chosen One.
If anyone quotes anything except this from my sayings,
I am quit of him and outraged by these words.
And so you should.These are some of the comparisons that come to mind from what I have learned. I am sure there are more. Certainly, these spiritual paths are highly compatible---both appreciate friendship whether one joins or not and both value interfaith association and common endeavors. I feel very blessed to be both a Baha'i and a friend of the Ruhaniat Sufis.
I liken it, more and more, to the spirit/body relationship, which is an holistic one, not a dualistic one.I think that anchoring in the Word of God/connection with a revelation, as in Rumi's case with the Koran, can be like tree roots that support the breath and height of mysticism.
And what I know hardly scratches the surface. My tradition is Catholicism, and I've hardly scratched the surface of that!Much of what you shared about the history of Sufism just confirmed how little I actually know.
It's a whole world, isn't it?It is quite a large subject...
Sadly my singing tends to set the local dogs howling. In the Latin West, Gregorian Chant is regarded as central to the Liturgical, and I chose the church I attend specifically because they sing the mysteries of the Rite.... and was disappointed to discover the total absence of singing ...
May Peace Abide with you also Wil,
Rumi was certainly Sufi but Baha'u'llah quotes a lot of Sufi poetry, including Rumi, in his writings; especially when he was writing for Sufis. He also wrote his own mystical poetry that is reputedly incomparable but since it does not translate well enough to do it justice, you have to read that level of Persian or Arabic to witness it.
So do you do Dances of Universal Peace also?
----Evanessa
Dear All, Let me tell you, I am not a Bahai. Whether Rumi was Islam or a Bahai, whether Bahaullah was from Islam or Sufi, the difference between Sufis, Bahais, Zens or Yogis. These questions are all futile. By the way you guys are involved in the discussions is something to be admired. The question should be probably, Have we got a taste of the Goal which we seek or rather get entangled in the arrangement or use of words to describe something. If you have got and liked the taste of the Goal you will definitely, sincerely and earnestly set forth on its pursuit. The Person, place, faith etc. which has actually given you the taste of the goal contains the hint for the Route to the goal or the route itself.
Catch the flight rather than walking to the goal. Don't waste the taste because the Sacred is Secret.
When Religion ends Spirituality Starts
When Spirituality ends Reality Starts
When Reality ends, that is true bliss and Peace
When even that ends that is the Goal
You will find allusions to Rumi, Saadi and other well known poets in the Baha'i Writings but this does not mean as above that Baha'is are Sufis. As mentioned we don't accept that the soul becomes united with God or becomes God this is a more pantheistic idea. We turn to the Manifestation of God.
- Art
The difference as I see it is Sufism accepts Islam and Sufism as an expansion of that...., but all Muslims don't accept all Sufism...Sufism is not a religion, it is the diverse mystic tradition within Islam. "Christian mysticism" is also not a religion, it is an approach to religion.
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Actually, Sufis are heretical in traditional Islam.
The difference as I see it is Sufism accepts Islam and Sufism as an expansion of that...., but all Muslims don't accept all Sufism...
I see sufism while mystical, also akin to Bahai thinking, Renewal Judaism, New Thought Christianity... all of which embrace a connection between all religions, all of which support folks of different religions working together, studying together,
Lol....correct on both counts... there is nothing like it when dreamers find other dreamers...I say you're a dreamer, but most likely, not the only one...