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The Skepticism Toward the Human Form of Prophets in the Masnavi

In Jalaluddin Rumi's Masnavi, a prominent theme is the spiritual blindness of the masses who reject the prophets because of their ordinary human appearance. Rumi illustrates this skepticism by voicing the people's doubts: they dismiss prophetic claims as fraud, questioning how God could appoint an average person—referred to proverbially as Zayd and Bakr—as a divine deputy. The skeptics argue that an envoy should share the majestic nature of their king, finding it absurd to equate mortal water and clay with the Creator of the heavens. By comparing the prophet to a gnat or a mote, and God to the mythical huma bird or the sun, the masses demonstrate their inability to comprehend the hidden spiritual bond between the finite human form and the infinite Divine reality.

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Updated 2026-05-08

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