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For lovers, the only teaching is the beauty of the Beloved: their only book and lecture is the Face.

Jalaluddin Mevlana Rumi

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The Beauty of the Beloved

Topic: Creativity, Culture, & the Arts

For lovers, the only teaching is the beauty of the Beloved: their only book and lecture is the Face. Outwardly they are silent, but their penetrating remembrance rises to the high throne of their Friend. Their only lesson is enthusiasm, whirling and trembling, not the minor details of law.

Jalaluddin Mevlana Rumi

Jalāl al-Dīn Muḥammad Rūmī (born September 30, 1207, in Balkh, present-day Afghanistan – died December 17, 1273, in Konya, present-day Turkey) is revered as one of the world’s greatest poets, mystics, and spiritual teachers. Known in the West simply as Rumi, he was born into a family of scholars and mystics who fled westward during the Mongol invasions, eventually settling in Konya, then part of the Seljuk Empire. Under the guidance of his father, Bahāʾ al-Dīn Walad, Rumi was trained in Islamic theology, jurisprudence, and the contemplative disciplines of the Sufi path. His early years reflected the classical model of a scholar-saint—rooted in devotion, study, and service to his community.

Rumi’s life was transformed by his meeting with the wandering mystic Shams of Tabriz around 1244. Their profound spiritual companionship awakened in Rumi a passion that transcended formal learning and opened him to the depths of divine love. When Shams mysteriously disappeared, Rumi’s grief became the flame that illuminated his poetry and devotion. From this crucible emerged the Mathnawī, often called the “Persian Qur’an,” a six-volume masterpiece that weaves stories, parables, and reflections into a vision of love as the animating force of all creation. His shorter lyric poems, collected in the Divan-e Shams-e Tabrizi, sing of longing, union, loss, and the ecstatic dance between the soul and the Beloved.

Rumi’s teachings centered on the transforming power of divine love, the unity underlying all faiths, and the inward journey from self-centeredness to God-centeredness. He taught that every experience—joy and sorrow, presence and absence—serves as a mirror reflecting the divine mystery. After his passing, his followers established the Mevlevi Order, known for its sacred whirling as a form of remembrance (dhikr). Across eight centuries, Rumi’s voice has transcended language, culture, and creed, inviting seekers into the stillness of the heart where the human and divine meet in love.

(1207-1273) Sufism

Rumi, Jalal al-Din. Rumi: Daylight: A Daybook of Spiritual Guidance. Translated by Camille Helminski and Kabir Helminski, Threshold Books, 1990.

Jalaluddin Mevlana Rumi


Theme: Beauty

About This Jalal al-Din Rumi Quotation [Commentary]

Jalal al-Din Rumi begins with a direct statement: “For lovers, the only teaching is the beauty of the Beloved.” Their deepest knowledge comes through encounter rather than explanation. The Beloved’s “Face” becomes their “only book and lecture,” a living presence through which the heart recognizes what it loves.

Jalal al-Din Rumi then turns from outward silence to inward devotion. The lovers are “outwardly silent,” yet their “penetrating remembrance rises to the high throne of their Friend.” Their silence holds an active remembrance reaching toward divine intimacy. By naming the Beloved as their “Friend,” Jalal al-Din Rumi joins reverence with closeness.

The passage ends with “enthusiasm, whirling and trembling.” This is the lovers’ “only lesson,” an embodied response to the presence they behold, rather than attention to “the minor details of law.” When the “beauty of the Beloved” becomes their true teaching, remembrance enters the whole person—mind, heart, and body—and knowledge becomes devotion.

Additional Jalal al-Din Rumi Quotations

“Know, son, that everything in the universe is a pitcher brimming with wisdom and beauty. The universe is a drop of the Tigris of His Beauty, this Beauty not contained by any skin. His Beauty was a Hidden Treasure so full it burst open and made the earth more radiant than the heavens.”

—Rumi, Jalal al-Din. The Rumi Collection: An Anthology of Translations of Mevlana Jalaluddin Rumi. Edited by Kabir Helminski, translated by Kabir Helminski and Camille Helminski, Shambhala Publications, 1998.

“Though we sleep and rest in the dark, doesn’t the dark contain the water of life? Be refreshed in the darkness. Doesn’t a moment of silence restore beauty to the voice? Opposites manifest through opposites: in the black core of the heart God created the eternal light of love.”

—Rumi, Jalal al-Din. The Rumi Collection: An Anthology of Translations of Mevlana Jalaluddin Rumi. Edited by Kabir Helminski, translated by Kabir Helminski and Camille Helminski, Shambhala Publications, 1998, p. 103.

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