Showing posts with label **. Show all posts
Showing posts with label **. Show all posts

2022/05/25

Mysticism and the spiritual | Britannica

mysticism - Mysticism and the spiritual | Britannica



Mysticism and the spiritual

Extrasensory experience

Mystics believe that their experiences disclose the existence of an extrasensory dimension of reality: phenomena whose existence cannot be detected through sense perception become apparent during mystical experience. Mystics differ radically, however, in their claims about extrasensory realities. 
Ancient and Hellenistic philosophers offered three examples of the reality of the extrasensory:
  1.  the numbers and mathematical formulas of Pythagoras
  2. the forms (or “ideas”) of Plato and the universals (substantial and accidental forms) of Aristotle; and 
  3. the Stoic concept of the lekton, or “saying.” 

Thus, a number or a mathematical formula exists or is true objectively, whether or not it is known by any person. It is an intelligible or thinkable reality, though not a sensible or perceptible one. The Aristotelian concept of universals similarly builds from sensory evidence of things to concepts about those things to the concept of conceptual things. Red, yellow, and blue things can be seen through the operation of the senses; the ideas of red, yellow, and blue can be conceptualized through abstraction. The further abstraction—the concept of colour—no longer pertains to anything sensory but concerns an extrasensory phenomenon, colour in general, or colour in the abstract. The signification or meaning of a vocal sound (a word or a sentence) is similarly extrasensory but again entirely real.


All laws of nature describe interactions or relationships among perceptible things. The relationships are intelligible or thinkable; they are not themselves sensible or perceptible. When, for example, Newton’s third law of motion (that interacting bodies apply forces to one another that are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction) is illustrated through the collision of two moving objects, sense perception witnesses the objects approaching, making contact, and moving apart.

 It is the mind or intellect that conceptualizes the processes of action and reaction, equality and opposition, and perhaps attraction and repulsion. 
Equally extrasensory are the realities operative in emotional relationships.

 Psychological phenomena such as honour and revenge are perceived by the mind, rather than the senses, through abstraction from highly complex and potentially variable physical interactions. When mystics make claims about extrasensory dimensions of reality, they are making the same type of claim as do physical scientists when they cite the laws of physics or psychologists when they posit emotional complexes that govern healthy and morbid responses to events. They are not speaking of the magical, mythological, or otherworldly; they are attempting to speak, however well or inaccurately, of aspects of the world of sense perception that are not perceptible to the senses.

During mystical experiences, extrasensory phenomena are said to be directly perceived, whether by the soul, the mind, the imagination, or some other faculty.

The phenomena that mystics encounter may be impersonal—e.g., a unifying principle, structure, process, law, or force—or personal—e.g., ghosts, spirits, angels, demons, or gods or revelations derived from such personal beings. 

The inclusion of both impersonal and personal phenomena within the extrasensory is reflected in the medieval description of the extrasensory as “spiritual,” a usage that is reflected in the meaning of the German word Geist (“intellect” or “spirit”).

Understanding the spiritual

For mystics the spiritual is not something merely to think about but also something to be encountered. Spiritual phenomena may be said to be experienced when they are thought about in such a way that a depth of feeling becomes attached to them. When experience of the spiritual is heartfelt, the spiritual is found to be mysterious, awesome, urgent, and fascinating—what the German theologian and historian of religion Rudolf Otto called numinous.”


Rudolf Otto, 1925.Foto-Jannasch, Marburg/Art Resource, New York


The relation between the spiritual and the numinous is comparable to the relation between a beautiful object and an aesthetic experience of the object by someone. 

A work of art may in some moments be experienced as beautiful and in other moments be experienced as boring or even ugly. 

Its beauty—that is, its potential to be experienced as beautiful—exists whether or not the work of art is momentarily being appreciated as beautiful. Similarly, the physical circumstances that are used to define the physical laws of motion exist whether or not any objects happen to instantiate them at a particular time. Analogously, the spiritual exists, and can even be known to be spiritual, whether or not it is momentarily being appreciated as numinous.

Discerning what is truly spiritual from what is falsely or only apparently spiritual is a task that mystics everywhere address, though they differ in their approaches to the problem. Shamans and other mystics embrace pantheons that define the scope of the spiritual, partly by deduction from the perceptible world and partly through mythology. 

Ancient thinkers in the Platonic tradition subjected the spiritual to philosophical investigation. While validating the contemplation of intelligibles (extrasensory objects or phenomena), they divided visions into metaphorical expressions of intelligibles on the one hand and unreliable fantasies on the other. In both cases, visions were regarded as imaginative combinations of memories of sense perceptions

In the subsequent Aristotelian tradition of rational mysticism, the spiritual was discovered through meditation on nature. Following the 4th-century theologians Evagrius Ponticus and John Cassian, Christian mystics permitted themselves only a much reduced program. They contemplated both God’s intelligible power in the world and God himself, but they avoided visions on the grounds that reliable visions were too easy for demons to counterfeit successfully. 

Visions were rehabilitated in Islam as early as the 10th century and in Christianity and Judaism in the 12th century. In all cases the contemplation of intelligibles was considered more reliable, and more desirable, than the experience of visions.

The problem of discerning the truly spiritual has also been addressed in Asian religions. 

In Daoism, visions are favoured because the human microcosm contains the same constituent components as does the cosmos, and the contemplation of the cosmos has reliable implications concerning the Dao as a whole. 

Hinduism and Buddhism instead share an arch skepticism that dismisses both materiality and almost all spirituality as maya (“illusion”). For Hindus, the solitary exception to maya is spirit at its most abstract. As noted above, Hindu mystics locate the truth beyond illusion either dualistically, in pure purusha (“spirit”) —as opposed to the illusion of prakriti (“matter”)—or nondualistically, as the monistic substance sat-cit-ananda (“being-consciousness-bliss”). 

Buddhist mystics reject even these affirmations. Their meditations classically address a series of eight jhanas (Pali: “meditations”). The first four have forms that can be imagined or envisioned, and the last four are formless and culminate in “neither perception nor nonperception.” 

Thus, from a comparative perspective, it may be concluded that, because the mystics of the world make contradictory claims regarding the spiritual, a component of fantasy presumably complicates the perception of the extrasensory.

Transcending the spiritual

The aspiration of Buddhist meditation to transcend the whole of the spiritual represents an option that many mystical schools have taken. 

Western mysticism’s perception of God as utterly transcending both material and spiritual creation has led to descriptions of him as the Ineffable, the Infinite, the God beyond being, the God beyond being and nonbeing, and the God whose essence can never be known. Mystics of these traditions claim that their experiences are limited to the spiritual; it is these experiences, however, that convince them that the spiritual was created and transcended by God.

Other mystical traditions consider similar ideas, only to dissent from them. The Daodejing, the great work of Chinese philosophy composed about 300 BCE, begins with the assertion that the Dao that cannot be named is equivalent to the Dao that can be. The unnameable, ineffable Father is utterly transcendent, and the nameable Mother is manifest everywhere. Although Father and Mother are radically opposite, both are one. 

Christian mystics generally extend the doctrine of the Incarnation of God in the man Jesus to express a more general concern with the omnipresence of the Word in the whole of creation. The transcendent Father can be known only through the Son (the omnipresent Word); yet, together with the Holy Spirit, they form a single Godhead that is immanent everywhere.

An equivalent paradox is embraced by Mahayana Buddhists, who speak of phenomenal reality as shunyata (Sanskrit: “void” or “empty”). In their view the immanent is empty because it also transcends itself.

Whether the mystic views radical transcendence impersonally or as an attribute of God, mystical experiences themselves are always limited to the spiritual and do not include contact with the transcendent. During mystical experiences, spiritual phenomena may appear to be ultimate, self-existing, and divine or may be experienced as contingent

Spiritual phenomena are not then considered to be self-existing but instead attest to a superordinate role by a creator who transcends them. A distinction is then made between the spiritual and the divine, and mystics content themselves with inferring the divine from experiences of the spiritual.



===
Next topic
===

Mysticism and secrecy

Experiencing the hidden

Because mystics experience spiritual phenomena that are hidden from the senses, the physical world disclosed by sense perception does not exhaust reality as mystics understand it. Some mystics find the spiritual to be immanent within the world of ordinary sense perception, but others discount the perceptible world as illusion and attribute reality to the spiritual alone. Whatever the precise detail of the relation of the extrasensory to the perceptible, the hiddenness of the spiritual is an important characteristic of mysticism.


Many mystics claim that their experiences are indescribable in human language. Language can refer to experiences, as a kind of notational shorthand that enables other people who have had similar experiences to understand approximately what is meant, but it can never convey the whole content of an experience.

Not only do mystics feel that they have experienced a hidden dimension of reality, they generally seek to conform with it. For Confucians, conformance with the Dao traditionally consisted of implementing it in the administration of government. For Western rational mystics, conformance with nous took the form of pursuing philosophical knowledge and, in some cases, its technological implementation, as in medicine or alchemy. For most of the world’s mystics, however, conformance with reality’s hidden dimension is achieved through its imitation. Many Hindu Yogis, Buddhist meditators, and Christian mystics have attempted, so far as possible, to be exclusively spiritual, abstaining from material possessions and the satisfaction of bodily needs and withdrawing from human society and the entire world of physical existence. Other approaches, however, are less extreme.

Claims of indescribability differ from claims of inexplicable paradox. Unitive experiences frequently inspire mystics to assert a paradox, such as the claim that all is one, that being is nothingness, or that masculinity and femininity are the same thing. The analytic psychologist Carl Jung suggested the term mysterium coniunctionis (Latin: “mystery of the conjunction”) as a designation for mystical paradoxes. Mystics who conceptualize a mysterium coniunctionis—and not all do so—find it difficult to express the paradox in words, both in their own thoughts and in interpersonal communications. Words permit one to arrive at the paradox. For example, the statement “A and B are one” uses the nonparadoxical concepts “A,” “B,” and “one.” Each of the nonparadoxical concepts can be explained separately. However, the concepts are juxtaposed in such a way that the sentence as a whole arrives at a concept of “one” that is not its customary meaning, and it can be extremely difficult to find words that express the paradox at greater length by articulating nuances, implications, corollaries, and so forth.

The practice of secrecy


Because mystics experience spiritual phenomena that are hidden from the senses, they often conform with the secrecy of the spiritual by being secretive themselves. Some mystics retreat into silence. Some preserve secrecy about their ecstatic experiences but speak openly about their mystical ideas and beliefs. Others are still less secretive, withholding, for example, only a certain technique by which alternate states of consciousness are attained, such as a doctrine, a chant, or a spiritual name. In many Native American cultures, people were expected to seek visions in order to encounter a guardian spirit who would bestow a song or name by which a lesser spirit could be acquired as a helper. The song or name was kept secret, so that no one else would have access to the power it conferred, and in most cases the contents of the vision were reported only to the person who taught the visionary. In this manner the hiddenness of the spiritual was imitated by the visionaries and their communities. In several traditional African cultures, boys approaching puberty were taken from their villages into the forest, where they lived in a boys’ village for as long as two or three years. During this period, they were taught secret lore and underwent the ritual induction of a mystical experience through the administration of a psychoactive drug. Following initiation, the youths returned to the communal villages and outwardly carried on as though no secrets existed.

In many other cultures, people undergo initiation into secret societies through mystical practice. In other cases, initiation into a mystical practice defines a social class. For example, a successful vision quest was a condition of male eligibility to join a hunting party in many Native American cultures. Elsewhere, initiations were key to participation in warriors’ groups and militias and in occasional trades, such as iron smithing. In Classical Greece and the Hellenistic world, rites of initiation were undergone for the sake of having mystical experiences and gaining knowledge of the mysteries. Secret societies, often with political agendas, have been a major feature of Daoism for nearly 2,000 years and have been characteristic of Western esotericism since the Renaissance.

Mystics in many cultural traditions maintain secrets by speaking and writing in coded languages that are not understood by the laity of the tradition. Shamans convey secret meanings to each other by using vocabularies that consist of archaic words and metaphors. Daoism similarly utilizes coded language, a fact that makes extensive parts of Daoist texts incomprehensible to noninitiates. The “intentional languages” of Hindu and Buddhist Tantric texts include vocabularies in the names of commonplace items that are intentionally used in secret ways to speak about visionary and mystical experiences. In his Seventh Letter, Plato asserted that his writings contain hints at secret teachings; and the Babylonian Talmud, a compilation of Jewish teachings and commentaries, instructs that Jewish mysticism is to be taught by means of “chapter headings” alone. The symbolae (“symbols”) of the Pythagoreans, the ciphers of Western alchemists, the taʾwil (allegorical interpretations) of Sufi mystics, and the Kabbalists’ exegetical technique of sod (“secret”) are further developments of the practice of coded languages among Western mystics.

Secrecy may also have ethical consequences. In Hinduism, Buddhism, and the early-Christian gnostic movement, mystical secrecy includes the devaluing of phenomenological reality as “unreal.” The divine is seen as a keeper of secrets, who deceives and makes sport of humanity, condemning it to suffering through ignorance. In other mystical systems, perceptible reality is regarded not as a deception but as a code that a mystic may learn. Syrian Christian mysticism regards physical phenomena as symbols of higher spiritual realities. The Neoplatonic tradition, which undergirds Sufism, the Kabbala, and Western esotericism, regards physical phenomena as lower manifestations of realities that are spiritual at higher levels of being. In the 16th century the Dutch mystic Jakob Böhme wrote of “the signature of all things.” The correspondence of the cosmos with the human body in both Daoism and Tantric mysticism permits both orders of reality to be coded in terms of the gods, the landscape, the elements, various mineral and vegetable substances, and so forth.



Mystical states

Trance

Mystical experiences can be categorized not only according to their contents but also according to the alternate states of consciousness during which they occur. For example, St. Teresa of Ávila distinguished four stages of mystical prayer. In “the prayer of simplicity,” a prayer that is roughly one sentence in length is repeated continuously until other thoughts cease to follow in an orderly succession. As thought is gradually halted, the prayer reaches a point termed the “ligature” or “suspension,” when external reality is significantly less distracting. The second stage of prayer, “the prayer of the quiet,” begins at the onset of the ligature. During this stage, repetitive prayer continues to require conscious effort, but it gradually ceases to be a voluntary meditation and instead becomes an involuntary passively experienced object of contemplation. When the increasing oblivion to external reality and the preoccupation with contemplation reach such an extent that distractions entirely cease to intrude on consciousness, the prayer of quiet has ended and “the prayer of the full mystical union” is said to have commenced. Efforts to avoid distraction and maintain contemplation are now all but unnecessary. Sense perception is half-suspended; the sense of hearing is the last of the senses to be inhibited. The simultaneous increase of the ligature and contemplation is again progressive, arriving by increments at the final stage of Roman Catholic mystical experience, which St. Teresa described in terms of three categories. “Ecstasy” appears gradually or quietly. “Rapture” is an experience of the same content when its onset is violent and sudden. Lastly, the “flight of the soul” is a rapture with the specific content of an out-of-body experience.

The four stages of mystical prayer may be described psychologically as four gradually deeper stages of trance, a psychic state in which thinking about something accomplishes what an effort of will is ordinarily necessary to effect. As trance deepens, the ordinary functions of consciousness are lost one by one, with gradually increasing intensity or extent. Because the functions of ordinary consciousness are inhibited, the contents of trance experiences are received without conflict, regardless of whether they would be disturbing during normal waking sobriety. Similarly, it is no more possible during trance than during the dreams of natural sleep to recognize fantasies as fantasies. Whatever their contents, mystical trances may be experienced as real and true. Ideas become delusions; daydreams become hallucinations. Trances consequently promote forms of religiosity that are at least partly inconsistent with a scientific understanding of the perceptible world.

Reverie


Not all mysticism has its basis in trance states, however. Rudolf Otto noted this fact when he proposed a dualistic classification of numinous experiences. In the mysterium tremendum (“awe inspiring mystery”), the numinous is experienced as mysterious, awesome, and urgent. Otto identified the other class of experiences, in which the numinous is fascinans (“fascinating”), with the “Dionysian element,” as defined by the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. This allusion to the chaotic, creative, spontaneous, and irrepressible element of the unconscious implied that the mysterium tremendum was the Apollonian element—orderly, controlling, rationalistic, and conscious.

In reverie states, numinous experiences occur without the inhibition of consciousness, and visions are experienced as revelations rather than as perceptions of externally existing realities. The contents of the visions are often symbolic or allegorical and require proper interpretation in order to be understood. Unitive experiences too are thought to be metaphors and not literal truths.

Many contents of mystical experience may occur in both trances and reveries and may differ in little more than the reification and preternaturalism that trance contributes. The experience that all is one, for example, may lead in trance to a denial of the reality of physical plurality, while in reverie it may lead to wonderment at something like the periodic table of atomic elements, which attests to a unity that underlies physical reality. In trance, the all-in-one is reified, so that plurality cannot be real; in reverie, the all-in-one is self-evidently a metaphor and speaks to an extrasensory dimension of the physical. The idea of dying may be manifested during a reverie as an experience of “mystical death,” a rare instance when reverie has the quality of a mysterium tremendum. Vivid hallucinatory fantasies of being about to die, in the process of dying, or having died can cause extreme panic, which ends with the realization that life continues. During a trance, the idea of dying may take visionary form as an out-of-body experience in which the visionary survives the body by leaving it. Reverie and trance accommodate other disturbing materials in similar ways, with disturbance being experienced in reverie and inhibited or wished away in trance. Mystics can interpret reverie states as though they were trance states, resulting in an attitude toward visions that the French historian of religions Henry Corbin termed “imaginal.” Mystics can also interpret trance states as though they were reveries.








Resurrecting Jesus: Embodying the Spirit of a Revolutionary Mystic by Adyashanti | Goodreads




Resurrecting Jesus: Embodying the Spirit of a Revolutionary Mystic by Adyashanti | Goodreads:

Resurrecting Jesus: Embodying the Spirit of a Revolutionary Mystic

 4.37  ·   Rating details ·  576 ratings  ·  57 reviews
The story of Jesus has not waned in its power to change lives. Yet today, even though the majority of us grew up in a culture suffused by the mythos of Jesus, many of us feel disconnected from the essence and vitality of his teachings. With Resurrecting Jesus, Adyashanti invites us to rediscover the life and teachings of Jesus as a direct path to what may be the most radical of transformations: spiritual awakening.



Jesus crossed all of the boundary lines that separated the people of his time because he viewed the world from the perspective of what unites us, not what divides us. In Resurrecting Jesus, Adya asks us to consider the man known as Jesus as a model of enlightened engagement with the world. He examines the story of Jesus from his birth to the Resurrection to reveal how the central events in Jesus' life parallel the stages of awakening that we may be called to experience ourselves. Adya then illuminates five central archetypes of the Jesus story--Peter, John, Mary Magdalene, Judas, and Pontius Pilate--and the key insights they hold about the way we might relate to the spiritual impulse within. Our journey concludes with an inspiring call to live the Christ in a way that is unique to each one of us.

When the eternal and the human meet, writes Adya, that's where love is born--not through escaping our humanity or trying to disappear into transcendence, but through finding that place where they come into union. Resurrecting Jesus is a book for realizing this union in your own life, from one moment to the next, with heart and mind wide open to the mystery that lives inside us all.
 (less)

GET A COPY

Hardcover235 pages
Published April 1st 2014 


Jon
Jan 04, 2015rated it really liked it
Adyashanti is a Zen Buddhist born in Cupertino CA in 1962. This book is based on a series of talks/classes he gave in 2013. It outlines his interpretations of Jesus's teachings, along with various episodes in his life as related in the Gospels, all from a Buddhist perspective. He regards Jesus as one of the most enlightened (in the Buddhist sense) men who ever lived, at least on a par with the Buddha himself, but expressing his experience of the spiritual in an entirely different way. The interpretations are sensitive and nuanced, and in most cases I found them very instructive. This is definitely not an orthodox Christian reading, and it doesn't always work with equal felicity; but then neither does any other interpretation I've read. The author tells a number of disarming stories about his own youthful naivety and his struggles with organized religion as he was growing up. He freely admits that in a particularly dry, unrewarding place in his meditation practice, he found the love of Jesus as introduced to him by the writings of St. Therese of Lisieux to be the one thing that enabled him to progress. This book, in conjunction with Paul Knitter's much broader Without Buddha I Could Not Be a Christian, has been a real education for me. (less)
Eden
Apr 26, 2014rated it it was ok
I really dig Adyashanti as a meditation teacher and all-around guru, but I feel like some of his character insights in this book were a little tone deaf. Mary Magdalene may have "loved too much" but it seems profoundly naive to say that someone becomes a prostitute because of their "lustful" nature. It's my understanding that women become prostitutes out of desperation, a need for protection, and lack of resources and/or education, not because they have deep feelings for the men who pay to use their bodies. I think Adyashanti is a tremendously insightful teacher, but some of his insights here seemed to miss the mark. (less)
Jeannie
Sep 11, 2014rated it liked it
I felt like this book described the steps of spiritual awakening and then illustrated HUMAN Jesus's journey to enlightenment throughout the Gospels, but not HOW to achieve this personally. I want to too! Only gave this book a 3rd star because of the final Part Three of the book. I'm glad I read this, and it definitely did have some sections worth thinking about, even discussing with my kids maybe as a subject for the dinner table, but just never got really excited about this book.

I kept thinking about a few people who I feel are living spiritually awakened. You can almost feel the spirit radiating out of them. But how can I find that within me? I keep thinking of the person who said we are not supposed to be human beings having divine experiences. We are divine beings having a human experience. As Adyashanti says, that is hard to experience in this Western culture where everything seems so egocentric. It was interesting to study the Gospel with his approach.
 (less)
Berry Lob
Feb 11, 2016rated it it was amazing
One of the most personal, beautiful and fascinating books I've read about Jesus, written by a Buddhist who sees with open eyes and heart. (less)
Mara Vernon
Sep 10, 2021rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
I loved this sounds true program and Adyshanti's wisdom around the Jesus story. I struggle with large organized religions sometimes because they seem more interested in regulating, judging and being rules based than they are with someone's spiritual journey at the Jesus story. I learned so much and really got clear on key points for my spirituality.

“As Jesus says in the Gospel of Thomas, “If you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you.” [Gospel of Thomas 70]”

“Of course, there are those churches today that are inspired by the real living presence of Christ, but as a whole, Christianity needs new life breathed into it. It needs to be challenged to awaken from the old structures that confine spirit, so that the perennial spirit of awakening can flourish once again.”

“In the original Greek, one of the meanings of sin [hamartia] is simply “to miss the mark.”

“we’ve come to understand sin as a kind of moral failing, but that interpretation actually comes from the power structures of the church and religious authorities. If you can convince somebody that they are inherently impure and that there is a mistake at the center of their being, then sin becomes a wrongdoing that deserves blame.”

“In the Gospels, Jesus repeatedly challenges the religious authorities of the day, but ultimately what he’s saying is relevant to all forms of religion. It wouldn’t matter if he grew up a Jew, or a Christian, or a Buddhist, or a Hindu, because he’s speaking about the structure of religion itself—its hierarchy, its tendency to become corrupted by human beings’ desires for power, for influence, for money. Jesus, I think, had a profound understanding that the religion itself, instead of connecting us to the radiance of being, connecting us to that spiritual mystery, could easily become a barrier to divinity. As soon as we get too caught up with the rites and the rituals and the Thou shalts and Thou shalt nots of conventional religion, we begin to lose sight of the primary task of religion, which is to orient us toward the mystery of being and awaken us to what we really are. Of course,”

“Myth isn’t about factual or historical truth, but about a deeper truth. In ancient times, people saw myth in a very different light—as a vehicle that can transmit and carry a subtlety and richness of experience that simply cannot be conveyed by linear, conceptual forms of language.”
― Adyashanti, Resurrecting Jesus: Embodying the Spirit of a Revolutionary Mystic
 (less)
Alice
May 14, 2018rated it it was amazing
Shelves: spirit-mind
Although he didn’t have a particularly religious upbringing, Adyashanti’s connection to the Jesus story began during his childhood, when he was still Steven Gray, living in Cupertino, California. He grew up in a family that frequently discussed spirituality and religion and had a grandfather he describes as having “embodied the Christian spirit of generosity and love.” As a teenager Steven was passionate about bike racing and meditation, but meditation ultimately triumphed and he went on to study Zen Buddhism. At 31 Steven had a profound awakening experience and changed his name to Adyshanti (which means primordial peace) and became a spiritual teacher. It was during this period that he began to read about the Christian mystics, especially St. Therese of Lisieux, which shone a different light on the Jesus story, illuminating Adyashanti’s understanding of Zen. He was rewired. As he put it, “That’s a very powerful dynamic, when the mystery of our own being meets a really extraordinary story. That meeting can elicit something quite transformative.”

All of Adyashanti’s spiritual exploration, practice, and growth inform his method of teaching, which encompasses many traditions including Zen Buddhism, Advaita Vedanta (Hindu philosophy), and the Jesus story. “The Truth I point to is not confined within any religious point of view, belief system, or doctrine,” he has said, “but is open to all and found within all.”

Resurrecting Jesus reflects this. The Jesus Adyashanti shows us is a revolutionary mystic, “breaking through all the false boundaries and imaginary dividing lines that separate us as human beings and separate us from the world.” Adyashanti recognizes that “the Western mind has been dominated by Christianity for more than two thousand years, so whether you’re Jewish, Buddhist, Muslim, or even atheist, you can’t help but be impacted by the story. This fact alone makes the story worth examining, and in doing so, we might find that the Jesus we’ve been told about is very different from the Jesus in the Gospels. That’s what I hope to investigate.”

And he does. 
(less)
Preston Bryant
Mar 04, 2018rated it it was amazing
Everyone and their grandma needs to read this book. If only our western culture could adhere to the story of Jesus in a way that relates to our divine being without dogma and religion. It is funny that Jesus, someone who would get enraged by hierarchical religious structures, is being praised in these very places today. He has been misunderstood because the structures built around his message have totally corrupted it. His message could only be heard by people in a certain state of consciousness. Instead of relating the story of Jesus back to us, the western religious structures have convinced the masses that they were born as sinners. However, this was not the message of Jesus. The message of Jesus message is simple: the kingdom of god is within you. How that has been so misinterpreted, I do not know. But Adyashanti does a fantastic job at bringing the story of Jesus back to to life. Perhaps the most outstanding theme of the story is that Jesus’ life is a reflection of our inner life. For example, Some of his disciples represent parts of ourselves that deny the truth of divine being when encountered in some way or another. (less)
Karl Griffiths
Jul 26, 2019rated it it was amazing
As someone who has been turned off from Christian mythology.
I have not yet read the bible and would classify myself as an atheist. The book gave me a positive impression of the story of Jesus and I enjoyed Adyashanti's framing of the different stories and tellings.
I have a clearer idea of the central characters Pontus, Judas, Mary and the disciples.

I recommend this book wholeheartedly.
 (less)
Roben
Aug 11, 2014rated it it was amazing
My minister once told me that I was a mystic. Intrigued, I wanted to hear what Adyashanti had to say about Jesus. The words hit all my buttons.
Paloma
Jan 18, 2021rated it really liked it
An interesting look at Jesus’ life through the different Gospels and a spiritual perspective
Alex Smith
Resurrecting Jesus interprets the story of Jesus as one of spiritual awakening, arguing he preached “intimate, personal, immediate access to divine being, to the Kingdom of Heaven within” - hence the description “revolutionary mystic”. I’d never encountered such a framing before; it was really interesting to see the gospels read in a metaphorical sense instead of historically or as moral didacticism. By no means do I have a sophisticated understanding of the non-dualistic ideas Adyashanti uses here, and not every part hit home for me, but it’s written in a way I still found quite approachable and was able to take much away from. I found this to be a thoughtful, mind-expanding read that’s given me a new lens through which to see these stories.

The message of the Jesus story is that we must fully enter the world - and that the way to freedom is through pouring ourselves into life, through saying yes in the biggest, boldest, possible way. And we can only do that when we connect with that sense of well-being, which is love. Love doesn’t ultimately concern itself with questions like, “Am I having a great time?” It doesn’t concern itself with the ego’s search to have a better and better experience. Love is a completely different energy. Love pours itself forth, gives itself fully; love finds its fulfillment by offering itself.
(less)
Mikey Whitehead
Jun 12, 2020rated it it was amazing
Wow wow wow.

In all honesty, I adore stories about Jesus. That being said, I abore the ‘Christian’ Depiction of the man and his teachings.

This book should be something which all followers of Christ have on their bookshelf. It will shine a new light on what you think you know about Jesus and his teachings. Whilst i wouldn’t say it necessarily negates the Christian depiction of the stories behind Jesus, it certainly challenges some of the concepts behind how they’ve been translated over the years. You can belong to any religion to enjoy this book, including Christianity. I would urge anyone to read it. 
(less)
Laura
Mar 08, 2018rated it it was amazing
Highly recommend. A new lens with which to look through the story of Jesus and apply to your own life; that of spiritual awakening. As opposed to being presented as some untouchable that no one could ever hope to embody or aspire to, Adyashanti has distilled the kernels of his teachings and life story and presented them in such a way so as to illuminate to the reader that this was not merely the premise but the entire purpose of the teachings of Jesus. Highly illustrative and interesting and as always Adya's voice is both deep and incisive. (less)
Tommaso Pollio
Jan 28, 2020rated it it was amazing
This book breathes new life into a two thousand year old story. I felt deeply touched , saddened and inspired by the age old story of Christ. Whether you believe it as historical fact or an old myth, this story has shaped the world for good (and bad). Adyashanti has with his beautiful interpretation of the gospels of John, Mark and Thomas renewed my faith in a revolutionary figure who dared challenge the status quo of his day. A figure that ultimately sacrificed himself to awaken others.
Annie
Mar 09, 2020rated it it was amazing
Enjoyed this book thoroughly!

To provide some context, I am drawn to Buddhist philosophy but don’t identify as a Buddhist (yet); I am still exploring the world of religion and spirituality.

And I am certainly not Christian but I had attended Christian schools for most of my life.

This book was a fascinating way to interpret the Bible. I will never read the stories and think of the figures like John, Mary, Judas, Peter...the same ever way again!
Joseph Solis
Dec 31, 2020rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
A beautiful analysis of Jesus' life

I grew up catholic but I was never taught the story of Jesus the way Adyashanti did. This book offered me a chance to look at Christianity with a different lens and even to consider giving it another chance. The author compares the moments in Jesus' life as an example of our own spiritual journey, the characters in the story as parts that live within ourselves, and invites us to connect with the divine while we are alive. Very powerful. 
(less)
Bryar Trent
Jan 01, 2018rated it really liked it
An interesting non-dual, Zen oriented take on the life and teachings of Jesus. Would recommend to those who are familiar with Zen or Dhyana Yoga and are interested in Jesus Christ. I would further recommend the first volume of the Philokalia for an early Christian version of Zen by the Desert Fathers.
Miss Rachel
Jun 28, 2020rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Transformational

I wish I had read this book years ago. I followed mainstream religion for so long but just couldn't connect. I kept feeling guilty because there was something I clearly wasn't getting until I read this. Merchant's words spoke directly to my soul. This is a book for life that has truly resonated with me. It just makes so much sense. Thank you 💓
 (less)
Maureen
May 15, 2017rated it really liked it
Shelves: theology
The author asks us to look at the life of Jesus through Buddhist eyes. I think we always learn something new when we view our Christianity through other eyes. For the most part I agreed with him although there are theologians who wouldn't. He did have some excellent points however. (less)
Judy Waitkus
Jul 21, 2017rated it it was amazing
I read this as a group discussion. Adyashanti shines a new light on how Jesus is portrayed, as a man. The central archetypes of Jesus, - Peter, Mary Magdalene, John, Judah's, and Pontius Pilate - how they related with the spiritual impulse within us. Worth reading again and again. ...more
Sheila Pritchard
Jul 22, 2017rated it really liked it
Excellent. Very good to read the life and significance of Jesus written by someone not primarily calling himself a Christian - yet deeply identifying with the mystical meaning of the historical Jesus. I found it both freeing and challenging.
Kim Janson-Smith
Dec 02, 2017rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
A new understanding of this historical figure that eliminates the layers of institutional religion. Adya eloquently models through Jesus, to those interested in the path of knowing one's true self, to use the Jesus story as a road map to one's own quest of understanding their own true nature. ...more
Karen
May 23, 2018rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Beautiful

Beautifully written. Things finally came together for me in the story of Jesus. I’ve always felt there was more to the Jesus story than was being told. Now I know what that is.
Ferci
Nov 06, 2018rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition
I was really disappointed

The lady who wrote the foreword was not exaggerating when she said that the author was an amateur at best. But when one has achieved a certain level of fame, I guess one can choose to write on anything.