2022/05/01

HarperCollins 100 Best Spiritual Books of the Century | Book awards | LibraryThing

HarperCollins 100 Best Spiritual Books of the Century | Book awards | LibraryThing




Book awards: HarperCollins 100 Best Spiritual Books of the Century

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Works (98)
Titles Order
  1. Alcoholics Anonymous by Alcoholics Anonymous
  2. And There Was Light: Autobiography of Jacques Lusseyran, Blind Hero of the French Resistance by Jacques Lusseyran
  3. I and Thou by Martin Buber
  4. Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahansa Yogananda
  5. The Autobiography of Malcolm X by Malcolm X
  6. The Autobiography of Saint Therese of Lisieux: The Story of a Soul by Saint Thérèse of Lisieux
  7. An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth by Mahatma Gandhi
  8. Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux by John G. Neihardt
  9. The Candle of Vision by George William Russell
  10. Celebration of Discipline: The Path to Spiritual Growth by Richard J. Foster
  11. Centuries by Thomas Traherne
  12. Christ and Culture by H. Richard Niebuhr
  13. Christianity and Culture by T. S. Eliot
  14. Collected Poems by W. B. Yeats
  15. The Collected Stories by Isaac Bashevis Singer
  16. The Cost of Discipleship by Dietrich Bonhoeffer
  17. The Courage to Be by Paul Tillich
  18. Crossing the Threshold of Hope by Pope John Paul II
  19. Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism by Chogyam Trungpa
  20. The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac
  21. The Diary of a Country Priest by Georges Bernanos
  22. Duino Elegies by Rainer Maria Rilke
  23. Enthusiasm by Ronald Arbuthnott Knox
  24. The Epistle to the Romans by Karl Barth
  25. Essays in Zen Buddhism by Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki
  26. Four Quartets by T. S. Eliot
  27. Gitanjali: Song Offerings by Rabindranath Tagore
  28. God in Search of Man : A Philosophy of Judaism by Abraham Joshua Heschel
  29. The Golden String: An Autobiography by Bede Griffiths
  30. The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna by Ramakrishna
  31. The Gospel of Thomas: The Hidden Sayings of Jesus by Marvin W. Meyer
  32. A Guide for the Perplexed by E. F. Schumacher
  33. I Have a Dream: Writings and Speeches That Changed the World by Martin Luther King, Jr.
  34. The Idea of the Holy by Rudolf Otto
  35. The Immense Journey: An Imaginative Naturalist Explores the Mysteries of Man and Nature by Loren Eiseley
  36. In Search of the Miraculous: Fragments of an Unknown Teaching by P. D. Ouspensky
  37. In the Heart of the Seas by Shmuel Yosef Agnon
  38. Journal of a Soul: The Autobiography of Pope John XXIII by Pope John XXIII
  39. Letters and Papers from Prison by Dietrich Bonhoeffer
  40. The Lord by Romano Guardini
  41. The Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien
  42. Lost in the Cosmos: The Last Self-Help Book by Walker Percy
  43. The Love of Learning and The Desire for God: A Study of Monastic Culture by Jean Leclercq
  44. Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism by Gershom Scholem
  45. Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl
  46. Markings by Dag Hammarskjöld
  47. Meditations on the Tarot: A Journey into Christian Hermeticism by Anonymous
  48. Meetings with Remarkable Men by G. I. Gurdjieff
  49. Memories, Dreams, Reflections by Carl Gustav Jung
  50. Mere Christianity by C. S. Lewis
  51. Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres by Henry Adams
  52. Mount Analogue by René Daumal
  53. My Guru and His Disciple by Christopher Isherwood
  54. Mystical Dimensions of Islam by Annemarie Schimmel
  55. The Myth of the Eternal Return: Or, Cosmos and History by Mircéa Eliade
  56. The Nature and Destiny of Man: A Christian Interpretation by Reinhold Niebuhr
  57. New Seeds of Contemplation by Thomas Merton
  58. Night by Elie Wiesel
  59. Orthodoxy by G. K. Chesterton
  60. Peace Is Every Step: The Path of Mindfulness in Everyday Life by Thich Nhat Hanh
  61. The Perennial Philosophy by Aldous Huxley
  62. The Phenomenon of Man by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
  63. Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard
  64. The Pillar and Ground of the Truth: An Essay in Orthodox Theodicy in Twelve Letters by Pavel Florensky
  65. The Plague by Albert Camus
  66. The Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins by Gerard Manley Hopkins
  67. The Power and the Glory by Graham Greene
  68. Practical Mysticism by Evelyn Underhill
  69. Prince Caspian by C. S. Lewis
  70. Raissa's Journal by Raissa Maritain
  71. The Razor's Edge by W. Somerset Maugham
  72. The Reign of Quantity & the Signs of the Times by René Guénon
  73. The Road Less Traveled: A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values, and Spiritual Growth by M. Scott Peck
  74. The Sabbath by Abraham Joshua Heschel
  75. Saving the Appearances: A Study in Idolatry by Owen Barfield
  76. Seeing the Form (The Glory of the Lord : a Theological Aesthetics) by Hans Urs von Balthasar
  77. The Seven Storey Mountain by Thomas Merton
  78. Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse
  79. Silence by Shūsaku Endō
  80. A Simple Path by Mother Teresa
  81. Something Beautiful for God by Malcolm Muggeridge
  82. Spiritual Letters by John Chapman
  83. The Spiritual Teaching of Ramana Maharshi by Ramana Maharshi
  84. The Star of Redemption by Franz Rosenzweig
  85. Taking on the Heart of Christ: Meditations and Devotions by John Henry Newman
  86. Tales of the Hasidim by Martin Buber
  87. A Testament of Devotion by Thomas R. Kelly
  88. Think on These Things by Jiddu Krishnamurti
  89. The Thirteen Petalled Rose: A Discourse On The Essence Of Jewish Existence And Belief by Adin Steinsaltz
  90. The Transcendent Unity of Religions by Frithjof Schuon
  91. The Varieties of Religious Experience by William James
  92. Waiting for God by Simone Weil
  93. The Way of All the Earth: Experiments in Truth and Religion by John S. Dunne
  94. Wise Blood by Flannery O'Connor
  95. The World's Religions: Our Great Wisdom Traditions by Huston Smith
  96. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry into Values by Robert M. Pirsig
  97. Zen Flesh Zen Bones: A Collection of Zen and Pre-Zen Writings by Paul Reps
  98. Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind by Shunryu Suzuki


Award description

This list was compiled by Philip Zaleski and published in November 1999. All books on the list had to be published in English for the first time in the twentieth century.

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Gardner, L. Ron,THE EXOTERIC PERENNIAL PHILOSOPHY, PART 1

Meditation-Consciousness-Spirituality

 Meditation-Consciousness-Spirituality
9 February 2017 at 21:25 ·

THE EXOTERIC PERENNIAL PHILOSOPHY, PART 1

[For more articles, like this one, on esoteric spirituality, check out my blog: electricalspirituality.com.]

If you Google “the Perennial Philosophy,” you’ll find that two names dominate the search results: Aldous Huxley and Frithjof Schuon. This article, Part 1 of a two-part piece, will focus on their explications of the Perennial Philosophy. 
In Part 2, I will consider the explications of other exponents of the Perennial Philosophy, including Rudolph Otto, Rene Guenon, and Julius Evola.

Why have I titled this article “The Exoteric Perennial Philosophy”? Because, in my opinion, none of these Perennial Philosophy exponents has done the “Esoteric Perennial Philosophy” justice. In other words, to this point in time, not a single Perennial Philosophy expositor has tied together the common deeper, or esoteric,
aspects of the Great Spiritual Traditions. Sans an Esoteric Perennial Philosophy, it is not possible to synthesize into an integral whole the various descriptions of the “higher” dimensions of the En-Light-enment project found in the Great Traditions.

 The key component to such a synthesis is radical (or gone-to-the root) Trinitarianism; but because none of the renowned exponents of the Perennial Philosophy “cracked the cosmic code,” none of them figured this out. Hence, none of them could explicate an esoteric Perennial Philosophy.

Below, in order, are my Amazon reviews of 
  • Huxley’s “The Perennial Philosophy” (four stars) and 
  • Schuon’s “The Transcendent Unity of Religions” (one star) and 
  • “The Essential Frithjof Schuon” (two stars). 

These reviews make clear my view of their writings and explain some of my criticisms of the Exoteric Perennial Philosophy.

A NOBLE EFFORT
In "The Perennial Philosophy," Aldous Huxley, the celebrated novelist, turns his attention to spiritual philosophy and attempts to explicate and elaborate the Perennial Philosophy, which he considers the "Highest Common Denominator" found in the "higher religions"--Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Taoism, Judaism, and Islam. He argues that at the mystical core of these religions is "the ethic that places man's final end in the knowledge of the immanent and transcendent Ground of all Being." And because this book is an anthology, he provides excerpt after excerpt from the "Great Traditions" to buttress his argument.
I have the utmost respect for Huxley, a brilliant thinker, writer, and humanitarian; and I applaud him for his noble effort in this book, which, in my opinion, generally, but not completely, succeeds in explicating and elaborating the Perennial Philosophy.
Positively, Huxley continually points to the divine Ground, the Godhead--the God of Being rather than becoming--as the alpha and omega of true, or mystical, spirituality. Negatively, his thesis is "flattened" by his "Vedantaized" approach, which places the essence of the higher religions under a single, staid umbrella.
At the time Huxley wrote this book, 1944, he and fellow great writer Christopher Isherwood were deeply into the Hindu Vedanta teachings of Swami Prabhavananda. While I like Prabhavanda's writings--I've read books by him
on the Bhagavad Gita, the Upanishads, Patanjali, and the Sermon on the Mount--there is a certain exoteric flatness to them, which makes them more suitable for beginners and intermediate students of Truth than for esoteric mystics; thus Huxley's book is brought down a notch by this conventional "Vedanta-ized effect."
This "Vedanta-ized effect" manifests itself in the topics and extracts Huxley chose for this anthology. In short, these topics and extracts emphasize the themes of moral purity (of heart) and self-emptying (poverty) as the keys to the Kingdom of God. One who reads this book will, mistakenly, think he has to become a self-nullified saint in order to become Self-realized, and few will find this demand enticing or possible.

Huxley misses the boat relative to God-realization because he didn't "crack the cosmic code." Hence the "astrolabe" he emphasizes for "locating" the Divine is essentially apophatic; and he essentially ignores the positive, or cataphatic, means to the Godhead, which is the practice of (Plugged-in) Presence, or Divine
Communion. The integral spiritual astrolabe is a dialectic, with Plugged-in Presence representing the thesis, self-emptying the antithesis, and reception of Divine Power the synthesis.
Because Huxley didn't crack the cosmic code, he reveals his spiritual-philosophical limitations in several places throughout this text. For example, he doesn't understand the Buddhist Trikaya (or "Triple Body"), which is
analogous to the Christian Holy Trinity; and some of his philosophizing falls flat. For example, he writes:
9+ 9+ 43 


Meditation-Consciousness-Spirituality

Gardner, L. Ron, Beyond the Power of Now: A Guide to, and Beyond, Eckhart Tolle's Teachings eBook : Gardner, L. Ron: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Beyond the Power of Now: A Guide to, and Beyond, Eckhart Tolle's Teachings eBook : Gardner, L. Ron: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store




Beyond the Power of Now: A Guide to, and Beyond, Eckhart Tolle's Teachings Kindle Edition
by L. Ron Gardner (Author) Format: Kindle Edition


4.6 out of 5 stars 15 ratings
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Eckhart Tolle is perhaps the most popular spiritual guru in the world. His books have topped the New York Times Bestseller List, and his core teaching--achievement of liberation via the power of Now--has become the "guiding light" of the New Age movement. But according to L. Ron Gardner, author of Beyond the Power of Now, there is a problem--a big problem--with Tolle's core reaching: Tolle never explains what, exactly, the power of Now is. Is it the same thing as Hindu Shakti or the Buddhist Sambhogkaya or the Christian Holy Spirit? Tolle doesn't say. He continually refers to the Bible and Jesus in his book, but, shockingly, never once mentions the Holy Spirit and how it relates to the Power of Now. Gardner makes it clear that the true power of Now is the Holy Spirit, which is the same divine Light-energy as Hindu Shakti and the Buddhist Sambhogakaya. He explains and extols the true power of Now and castigates Tolle for failing to identify and describe it. And most importantly, he provides explicit instructions on how to connect to and channel the true power of Now, Light-energy from above. To some, Eckhart Tolle is a New Age visionary, describing a "new earth" that can materialize if mankind, en masse, awakens to the power of Now. But according to Gardner, he is simply a histrionic ranter full of empty rhetoric. Throughout this book, Gardner continually points out, from different angles, the folly of Tolle's New (or Now) Age chimera and describes the social system that represents mankind's sociopolitical salvation. Beyond Tolle's teaching about the power of Now and rhetoric about a "new earth," Gardner takes the renowned guru to task on virtually every subject he addresses. Most significantly, he rebuts his arguments that: 1) emotions can be trusted more than thought; 2) time is a mind-created illusion; 3) psychological time is insanity; 4) the present moment is the Now; 5) the "inner" body is the direct link to the Now; 6) your cells stop aging when you live in the Now; 7) women are spiritually more evolved than men; and 8) animals such as ducks and cats are Zen masters. Eckhart Tolle's teachings are replete with erroneous ideas, and L. Ron Gardner exposes the major flaws in his principal arguments while providing readers with integral solutions.
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Print length

265 pages
==
L Ron Gardner
 · 
THE PRESENT MOMENT IS NOT THE NOW

[This is an excerpt from my book "Beyond the Power of Now: A Guide to, and Beyond, Eckhart Tolle's Teachings."]

Although Eckhart Tolle deifies the Now as the Nirvana beyond pain, shockingly, he never describes the power of Now in detail or explains how it relates to the enlightenment process. The Power of Now is certainly a catchy title, but, unfortunately, it has little to do with the material in Tolle’s book.
Tolle not only fails to describe the power of Now in detail, but he also fails to provide a graphic, holistic description of the act of avoiding the Now. The denial or avoidance of the Now is not merely a matter of mind, as Tolle contends; it is a matter of the entire psycho-physical organism, the whole person. The avoidance of the Now is an act of whole-bodily recoil or retraction from the “position” of direct connectedness to the divine Being. The ordinary spiritual seeker has already retracted from whole-bodily oneness with Being into abstraction and becoming, so he mistakenly views the mind as the “problem.” But the fundamental spiritual problem is not the mind. Rather, the fundamental spiritual problem is the avoidance of organismic intercourse with the Deity.
Eckhart Tolle is a refined European gentleman, an ex-Cambridge scholar. And much of what he says is derived from the teachings of the late renowned mystic J. Krishnamurti, a European-educated Indian. Predictably, then, Tolle’s words are rather flat and formal, lacking the descriptive fullness that does the mystical experience justice. In the highest mystical experience, the entire bodily-being is not merely present to the moment; it’s also felt to be pressing against, even embracing, the radiant force field of the divine Being, which is ever prior to and beyond the moment. The divine Being floods the mystic-devotee with Its down-pouring Shakti (or Spirit-power), and when this Shakti, the Holy Spirit, penetrates the devotee’s Sacred (or Mystic) Heart-center (just to the right of the center of the chest), the devotee experiences mystical oneness with the Deity. In the rarest mystics—those blessed with extremely intense Shaktipat (down-pouring Shakti, or Grace)—the forceful down-flow of the Holy Spirit, in a “timeless moment,” severs the “knot of karma” in their Mystic Heart-center, thereby enabling them to unite forever with the divine Being.
Eckhart Tolle states that, “Time and mind are in fact inseparable.” Tolle’s statement is pure mystical poppycock. It is time and change, not time and mind, that are in fact inseparable. Mind is merely the faculty that measures time—rate of change relative to a standard—and that rate of change relative to that standard exists whether the mind recognizes it or not. For example, the Earth rotates 365 times in the course of its one-year orbit around the Sun. Whether the mind recognizes this cycle or not, it still exists. Just because the mind is rendered silent in mystical samadhi hardly negates the reality of time. Contrary to what Tolle says, even animals measure time in their own way. When birds migrate or a squirrel stores nuts for the winter, they are, implicitly, acknowledging the reality of time.
Tolle tells us to stop “creating” time. He says, “Realize deeply that the present moment is all you ever have. Make the Now the primary focus of your life.” First, human beings do not create time; they simply recognize it as a reality. Second, the idea that the present moment is all we ever have sounds like a mantra Tolle extracted directly from a ’70s LSD-inspired hippie manual. Anyone with his brain intact knows that before the “present moment” there were endless past moments, and that after the present moment there will be endless future moments. Anyone who drops past and future moments from the context of his life is going to end up in serious trouble. If you don’t believe it, consider this: in 2008, renowned New Age guru Wayne Dyer was soliciting donations on public television for Baba Ram Dass, the now-needy author of the cult spiritual classic Be Here Now, who was hoping to retire in Maui.
A serious problem with Tolle is his tendency to conflate the present moment with the Now. The present moment, what conditionally is, is not the timeless Now. The present moment is the passing, or temporal, “now,” not the changeless, or eternal, Now. The present moment can be, but isn’t necessarily, a doorway to the Now. Being present to the moment opens the door to the Now—but unless you step across the threshold to the “other side,” you’ll simply be present to arising phenomena and oblivious to the noumenal Reality beyond it.
Many successful people live part of their lives in the present moment, but that doesn’t grant them automatic access to the Now. For example, living in the manifest “now” is common for great artists and athletes, who possess the ability to single-pointedly focus their attention on immediate conditional phenomena. Many of these artists and athletes possess monstrous egos, so Tolle’s claim that resistance to the present moment reflects the egoic mind hardly accords with the observable evidence.
*****
Q: The present moment is not always pleasant.
A: Eckhart Tolle says, “It is as it is,” and “by watching the mechanics of the mind, you step out of its resistance patterns, and you can then allow the present moment to be.” Put more descriptively, if you simply are present to your psychic content and allow it to be exactly as it is, without accepting or rejecting it, then it tends to dissolve, and the Now, which is prior to and beyond your mind, begins to make its presence felt.
Tolle says to accept the present moment “as if you had chosen it” and to “always work with it, not against it.” Put more descriptively, the way to “accept” the present moment is simply to allow it to arise and fall of its own accord, and the way to “work with it” is simply to be whole-bodily present to, through, and beyond it.


==





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L. Ron Gardner



I am a mystic-philosopher and spiritual teacher and have authored three books – “Beyond the Power of Now: A Guide to, and Beyond, Eckhart Tolle’s Teachings,” “Electrical Christianity: A Revolutionary Guide to Jesus’ Teachings,” and “Kill Jesus: The Shocking Return of the Chosen One.” The first two books are nonfiction, while the third is a novel.

When I’m not writing I regularly abide in a state of blissful at-one-ment with the Spirit. Over the past forty years, I have practiced Transcendental Meditation, Self-Realization Fellowship meditation, Buddhist Vipassana Meditation, Zen Meditation, Tibetan Buddhist meditation (Mahamudra and Dzogchen), J. Krishnamuti's "choiceless awareness," Ramana Maharshi's Self-enquiry, Adi Da's radical understanding, Kashmir Shaivist Shaktipat, and hermetic Holy Communion. I now teach my my own method of meditation: Plugged-in Presence.

Because I specialize in sociopolitical philosophy as well as spiritual mysticism, I enjoy mixing in sociopolitical insights with spiritual ones in my books.

I have a B.A. in sociology from the University of California, San Diego, and currently reside in Tijuana, Mexico. Beyond meditation, philosophy, and writing, my interests include working out, tennis, and travel.

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4.6 out of 5 stars



Dr. Andreas Ullrich
5.0 out of 5 stars Spiritual SynthesisReviewed in Germany on 3 November 2013
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I bought this book because I previously read Eckhart's Great “The Power of Now” a few years ago and have now taken it back to hand. However, at Tolle I lacked the treatment of the energy system and the importance of spiritual energy. In addition, great is one of those authors who condemn thinking and feeling (“mind”) and see it as the main obstacle to spiritual enlightenment and as the cause of all human problems.

Ron Gardner proceeds according to the structure of Great Book and gives his own explanations and answers in question and answer form regarding the topics dealt with at Tolle. You notice that Gardner has 40 years of experience with the most diverse systems, theoretically and practically; I can judge this, because I have been on the spiritual path for 10 years and have read hundreds of books on various systems and practiced countless exercises. Gardner explores the meaning of spiritual energy (Shakti), which penetrates the body from above and enlightens the body and mind. The process of meditation is described in more detail in his other book “Electrical Christianity”. He establishes the connections between the Buddhist, the Christian and the Indian yoga path that I have not found anywhere else. In combination with his other book, one holds the essence of the highest teachings (Dzogchen, Shaivism of Kashmir, Christian mysticism) in his hand. I can only recommend buying both books with a clear conscience!
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Sheer brilliance, nothing less!Reviewed in the United States on 15 June 2017
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Mr. Gardner has done a great service for all serious spiritual aspirants. I emphasize the word serious since there isn't an ounce of wishy-washy neo-advaita psycho-babble in his books. I must admit though that I'm slightly biased in my review since I am indepted, as is Ron, to Adi Da Samraj. Even though some critical reviewer stated Gardners work to be nothing but "recycled Daism", I don't think that is the case. I'd say that Gardners work recognizes the value of Da, but adds colossal amount of clarity to the teaching-dharma of Adi Da. His criticism of Echart Tolle and his ilk is near flawless, but those who see mere criticism can't see the fact that he does on rare occasions give credit where credit is due. Granted, when it comes to Tolle this credit is very scarse. I hope Gardners books gain a wider audience due to the fact that his books can give great deal of clarity to those who have succumbed to the spell of weak-minded magical thinking (New Age preachers of Now). The way I see it Gardner is just downright real and tells you like it is, and if someone finds that offensive then that is their loss. Alas, what a loss it is!

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A. Jorge Barbosa
5.0 out of 5 stars Strange but goodReviewed in the United States on 25 September 2017
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This work pinpoints flaws in Eckhart Tolle’s thought, while synthesising apparently irreconcilable views. Quite rich and creative, I highly recommend it to readers of Tolle who find there is something false in the latter’s ideas.

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9-11 Was An Inside Job
5.0 out of 5 stars Important Corrective To A Superficial Treatment Of The "Now"Reviewed in the United States on 11 February 2013
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As Krishnamurti famously said, "You yourself have to be the master and the pupil. The moment you acknowledge another as a master and yourself as a pupil, you are denying truth. There is no master, no pupil, in the search for truth." In the same spirit, L. Ron Gardner exposes the numerous flaws in Tolle's "Now" argument, effectively knocking him off his new age guru pedestal. I am no fan of Tolle. I've attempted to read his work a few times, and found his point of view dulling to my senses -- and his "now" argument both abstract and uncompelling. I prefer physiological inquiries into the nature of reality, ala Gopi Krishna and other yogic explorations. Spiritual discussions that are absent a consideration of the animating force of enlightenment -- Holy Spirit, Kundalini, Shakti, whatever name you want to give It -- ring hollow. Gardner goes into this shortcoming of Tolle's in an exhaustive manner. As well, Tolle mistakenly deemphasizes the importance of rational thought. Unless you are born with the proverbial silver spoon in your mouth, with your every need catered to by staff in your estate's employ, the vehicle for the Now -- i.e., your body, mind, and general well-being -- needs a very competent and astute rational mind. In Gardner's view, and in mine, too, in order for one's spiritual presence and practice to be grounded in this world, one needs to develop excellent discrimination skills. That is, you can't "chop wood, carry water" i.e., hold down a job, pay the rent, and raise the kids if your head isn't screwed on right. In this sense, it is a wisdom derived from the right application of mind to the circumstances of this world that gives enlightenment -- and the physiological and cognitive development that accompany it -- safe mooring.

Gardner shows Tolle's age of aquarius fantasy to be just that -- a boomer generation pipe dream that there is an effortless shortcut path to the Now writ large. The TM folks already showed that you can have 500 meditators in a city -- with a shared intention to lower crime -- with no measurable effect on the incidence of crime. Tolle's supposed living in the Now has had little impact on the violence and suffering gripping the planet. In contrast, planetary change, argues Gardner, requires concrete political and social action. A flash of insight into the Now is insufficient in itself. That insight must inform a series of mundane actions taken by the spiritual practitioner to improve the political, economic, and educational systems of the world. Tolle does not describe what his "new earth" will look like, and hence gives no direction to where an enlightenment of the world may take us.

You may disagree with some of the specifics of Gardner's argument. But that is the beginning of the great conversation that must take place. The devil is always in the details, and that is why this superficial guru has been given the nod by the establishment: his insights do not upset the apple cart -- do not challenge the status quo. Gardner fills in the many blanks Tolle leaves us with. Gardner makes the difficult but necessary argument that increased self sufficiency and decentralized political and economic power are essential to a concrete manifestation of the Now. The federal government, with its $trillion+ deficits, immoral foreign wars, and unconstitutional destruction of civil rights domestically is no more true an expression of just governance than the Vatican and the Pope are of radical spiritual insight. Gardner, reminiscent of Ayn Rand and Ron Paul, calls for the U.S. to return to its roots as a constitutional republic as a necessary corrective to the anemic and purposeless non-vision of Tolle's. Again, the reader may disagree with some of the specifics of Gardner's arguments, but that is where any important discussion needs to start if the presence of the Now is to be made manifest on a global scale.
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Clint Baxley
5.0 out of 5 stars Good book.Reviewed in the United States on 21 September 2016
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Great book to look outside of theo bounds of the power of now.
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Gardner, L. Ron, Electrical Christianity: A Revolutionary Guide to Jesus' Teachings and Spiritual Enlightenment : Gardner, L. Ron: Amazon.com.au: Books

Electrical Christianity: A Revolutionary Guide to Jesus' Teachings and Spiritual Enlightenment : Gardner, L. Ron: Amazon.com.au: Books


Electrical Christianity: A Revolutionary Guide to Jesus' Teachings and Spiritual Enlightenment Paperback – 23 July 2013
by L. Ron Gardner  (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars    23 ratings

Electrical Christianity is a revolutionary guide to Jesus' teachings and spiritual en-Light-enment. It provides clear-cut, in-depth instructions on how to directly "plug into" the Divine Being, the Holy One, and literally "pull down" His Power. 

Grace is not an abstract principle; it is the palpable experience of God's Spirit-power--and anyone who religiously (or devotedly and intensely) practices the discipline of true Holy Communion presented in this book can experience the descent of Divine Power, the Holy Spirit. The true Eucharist, the practice of Holy Communion (which in its "awakened" form implies reception of the Holy Spirit), is the very heart of real Christianity, and the foremost method for attaining salvation (spiritual en-Light-enment). Electrical Christianity not only details the radical (or gone-to-the-root) practice of Holy Communion, but also analogizes it to an electrical circuit. The Eucharist is simply Ohm's Law applied to spirituality, and once you grasp the Eucharist-Ohm's Law connection, which is explicated in this book, you'll become like Jesus: a spiritual revolutionary. In addition to explicating the Eucharist-Ohm's Law connection, the book also sheds penetrating light on psychology, politics, and sociology. It presents a vision of integral psychology that differs markedly from Ken Wilber's, considers Jesus' politics in a modern context, and examines the history and future of Christianity in the New (or Aquarian) Age.
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172 pages
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Beyond the Power of Now: A Guide to, and Beyond, Eckhart Tolle's Teachings
by L. Ron Gardner
Paperback
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Beyond the Power of Now: A Guide to, and Beyond, Eckhart Tolle's Teachings
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L. Ron Gardner
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Customer Reviews: 4.4 out of 5 stars    23 ratings
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L. Ron Gardner
I am a mystic-philosopher and spiritual teacher and have authored three books – “Beyond the Power of Now: A Guide to, and Beyond, Eckhart Tolle’s Teachings,” “Electrical Christianity: A Revolutionary Guide to Jesus’ Teachings,” and “Kill Jesus: The Shocking Return of the Chosen One.” The first two books are nonfiction, while the third is a novel.

When I’m not writing I regularly abide in a state of blissful at-one-ment with the Spirit. Over the past forty years, I have practiced Transcendental Meditation, Self-Realization Fellowship meditation, Buddhist Vipassana Meditation, Zen Meditation, Tibetan Buddhist meditation (Mahamudra and Dzogchen), J. Krishnamuti's "choiceless awareness," Ramana Maharshi's Self-enquiry, Adi Da's radical understanding, Kashmir Shaivist Shaktipat, and hermetic Holy Communion. I now teach my my own method of meditation: Plugged-in Presence.

Because I specialize in sociopolitical philosophy as well as spiritual mysticism, I enjoy mixing in sociopolitical insights with spiritual ones in my books.

I have a B.A. in sociology from the University of California, San Diego, and currently reside in Tijuana, Mexico. Beyond meditation, philosophy, and writing, my interests include working out, tennis, and travel.

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Dr. Andreas Ullrich
5.0 out of 5 stars Die ultimative Meditation
Reviewed in Germany on 3 November 2013

 
Ich habe dieses Buch als Ergänzung zu "Beyond The Power of Now" gekauft (siehe meine dortige Rezension). Es greift die dort angesprochenen Themen auf und erläutert die genaue Meditationsmethode. Ron Gardner stellt eine sehr sinnvolle Analogie zwischen Ohms Gesetz betreffend Elektrizität und dem Hineinfließen von spiritueller Energie in das menschliche Körper/Geist-System her. 

Es wird auf die Trinität im Christentum, im Buddhismus und im Hinduismus eingegangen. Besonders aufschlussreich fand ich die Erläuterung des Herzzentrums, und damit ist nicht das Herzchakra gemeint, sondern ein Bereich, der im Körper in Höhe des Herzens etwas rechts vom Brustbein gefühlt wird. Seine Erläuterungen decken sich völlig mit jenen Ramana Maharshis. Er stellt auch den Bezug zur "niederen" Kundalini am unteren Ende der Wirbelsäule und zum Chakrensystem her.


I bought this book as a supplement to Beyond The Power of Now (see my review there). It takes up the topics addressed there and explains the exact meditation method. Ron Gardner makes a very useful analogy between Ohm's law regarding electricity and the flow of spiritual energy into the human body

The Trinity in Christianity, Buddhism and Hinduism is discussed. I found the explanation of the heart center particularly insightful, and this does not mean the heart chakra, but an area that is felt in the body at heart level, slightly to the right of the breastbone. His explanations are fully consistent with those of Ramana Maharshi. It also relates to the "lower" kundalini at the bottom of the spine and to the chakra system.


Dieses Buch wird in einigen Jahren ein Klassiker sein, da bin ich mir sicher!
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Friend
3.0 out of 5 stars Mixed bag...Profound and Silly
Reviewed in the United States on 3 March 2021
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L Ron is quite notorious for his ruthless Amazon reviews. More often that not I actually agree with his critiques; he often correctly points out that many teachers are confusing early stages of awakening with final Self-Realization. Yet, I also wonder why he is so narrowly obsessed with using his spiritual wisdom/knowledge for such petty ends, which I would suggest is holding back his own Self-Realization. As far as his own book is concerned, the meditation/holy trinity/ohms law portion of this book is quite well done and useful. I'd give it 5 stars on it's own. Unfortunately, the book is also accompanied by high school level political and philosophical analysis that seems woefully out of place for a book that could actually be quite profound. Separate the wheat from the chaff and it's a good book. All in all, 3 stars.
4 people found this helpful

 
Victorsque
5.0 out of 5 stars The end-game practical guide to spirituality and meditation
Reviewed in the United States on 4 September 2020
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This book encompasses the esoteric teachings of East and West
and it’s credibility backed by a meditation method that really works.

I’m deeply thankful to the author for the contribution.
Take this advice from a guy who couldn’t sit still for five minutes.
After spirit baptism, there is not much effort needed in meditation.
You are being “meditated,” resting in the down-pour of shakti.
Also, the recommended reading list alone is priceless
Author is the authority on spirituality and meditation.
Namaste
2 people found this helpful


 
Freddy
5.0 out of 5 stars interested in christian mysticism?
Reviewed in the United States on 26 August 2019
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If you are more interested in contemplative practice than in intellectual speculation, you may like this book. 
Ron Gardner presents an unusual metaphor and work hypothesis. The suggested experiment integrates both the consciousness and the energetic aspect of meditation in a kind of ecstatic dance. Put it to the test. On the side I suggest you read articles on his web site as well (like the one on trekchö), the author is well-read, critical and very outspoken.
2 people found this helpful

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From other countries
R. Reviere
4.0 out of 5 stars Valuable book built from a Traditions orientation
Reviewed in the United States on 17 August 2015
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I read Electric Christianity several months ago. I usually write reviews promptly, but this one is a hard nut to crack and even now not fully digested in my case. Here goes anyway. As a matter of recommending this book, this part is easy. If you feel you benefit from L. Ron's many reviews of other books on this site, then you will be very happy with your choice to buy this book.

 It is the more substantial work that illuminates and expands on L. Ron's points made in-between his remarks on other books. If you can't bear the, how shall we say, free-for-all atmosphere of his collection of reviews… well, you have been warned, not that you even need this warning. 

For my part, nothing L. Ron says (or could say) offends me, because my own choice is to treat the matters discussed seriously (with my definition of serious), and therefore my choice is to focus on the light when it appears and ignore the heat. I recommend this method in reading L. Ron and any similar writers where a lot emotion is employed and the emotion is essentially beside the point (as in, it isn't an action, romance or other type of novel we are reading). In any case, I very much respect the seriousness (using his apparent definition of serious which often includes negative characterization) that L. Ron displays in writing on these matters.

On to the book itself.

I have not read 2000 books on spirituality topics (more like only a hundred or so), and therefore I found it somewhat hard to follow Electric Christianity's myriad equivalences of Traditional spiritual concepts (and vocabulary). So this review is necessarily covering only the part of the book that I feel that I actually understood. 

I agree with many of the other (positive) reviewers that there is something new and distinctive here. Other reviewers have helpfully pointed out many of these specifics. I would add to their comments that, to me, the work stands as synthesis of mostly old school Spiritual Traditions (plus Objectivism and Da-ism being the newest sources of ideas and therefore the exception)…and so it is valuable to anyone with deep familiarity with any of these Traditions. Not so much if you have never delved into any of them. This is not a beginner's book.

If Tradition (plus) is good enough for you, then this book and L. Ron's reading list will provide plenty of grist for your mill. Some of us, though are bothered the focus on the Traditions because this a) neglects the new, experimental/experiential work being done, b) is encumbered by all sort of translation challenges (between languages and cultures, often involving great spans of time) that lead to an uncertain amount of uncertainty and imprecision, and c) involves mountains of material that is frankly categorical and assertional and therefore is no more valuable than the (limited) power of reason (building models from data aka induction, and extracting 'specific predictions' from models aka deduction). People today have been seduced by this process and have forgotten that 'reason' always results in something with less truth/truthfulness in it than the original observations (subject to the usual list of caveats of course that mostly deal with competence).

So rather than just complaining about the focus on Traditions, here's an additional sources list if you want your reading (and hopefully experiences) to go beyond Tradition (and the singular focus on Plugged-In Presence per Electric Christianity (and the recommended reading list therein).
-everything mentioned in the Monroe Institute website (this material is focused on Out of Body Experiences - OBEs). Monroe is experiential and Tom Campbell's writings are partially experiential but mostly metaphysical.
-everything mentioned in the Researchers of Truth website (Dr. Atteshli's work is particularly fine). This is a highly comprehensive metaphysics. Plugged in Presence is called "At-One-Ment" in this body of work, and it is a high attainment.
-the whole body of work on Psychedelics (start with Rick Strassman's books & the associated videos) plus the many other authors with offerings in this space
-any decent collection of reports on Near Death Experiences
-For those who have or want to develop beyond childish skepticism (such as 'rationalwiki' and anything 'skeptic.com'), then be sure to read Rupert Sheldrake's work, plus Irreducible Mind and other similar sources...

For those who are interested in Electric Christianity's topics and are put off by L. Ron's background as an astrologer, I would say this: at least L. Ron is clear about his primary use of astrology, which is as a model to understand personalities. Thanks to L. Ron for making this clear… I had previously had little interest in this subject because of my lack of any beginning of a dim imagining of how spatial position of large bodies in the universe can cause or affect anything on the vastly different scale of individual personal predilections. I still lack that dim imagining. But at least now I can see where astrologers over the centuries evidently focused their work: psychology. This makes a lot of sense.

A comment on L. Ron's frequent references to Ayn Rand and Objectivism, as well as the libertarian-rants included in Electric Christianity. This indeed seems out of place in a volume devoted primarily to an esoteric subject, i.e. achieving Plugged-In Presence. 

On the other hand, L. Ron is likely correct in the general surmise that, when humanity-on-earth has reached a high degree of Plugged-In Presence and the other (consequent?) forms of human wisdom, then indeed coercive government will collapse… no one will want it. It sort of follows that anyone in the here-and-now that practices any degree of Plugged-In Presence is unlikely to be supportive of coercive government (or coercive anything). Because it's coercive, which is highly Not-Plugged-In. So for those of you who get in a kerfluffle over the lack of liberal pass-a-law-to-fix-it values in Electric Christianity, relax. 

L. Ron does not seem to subscribe to an integral (K. Wilber style) or Spiral Dynamics (D. Beck style) human development scheme, so of course he will not see a place for your interventionism (with implied coercion) within the context of social values evolution where it makes a kind of sense.

 Just skate by these discussions, which aren't important for YOUR critical path internal/esoteric work. Don't get distracted… the politics narrative is almost entirely a side issue… go back to the middle of page 17, take a big breath, and start taking that in at a deeper level.

To finish up, I would love to walk around and live my life enjoying always-on Plugged-In Presence (At-One-Ment). And I'll be working on this. But I'm just a humble brother of yours, here in the Worlds of Separation (to use a Researchers of Truth term), and I seem to have a lot of Resistance (per Electric Christianity) at this point. I now have a slightly better idea what the Work is, and I am thankful to L. Ron for his contribution to this understanding.

13 people found this helpful
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M
5.0 out of 5 stars I would strongly recommend anyone interested in Spiritual life and its goal of ...
Reviewed in the United States on 21 January 2016
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I would strongly recommend anyone interested in Spiritual life and its goal of Holy Communion (the Truth of the Christian Eucharist) or en-Lighten-ment to not only read Electrical Christianity by L. Ron Gardner but to earnestly practice the technique he teaches for establishing a relationship with God through his Holy Spirit/ Shakti (blessing power).
In this book he compares the process to Ohm’s Law, the relationship among electric current, resistance, and voltage; which to my knowledge is a completely original insight and one that should be a great benefit to seekers. He also ties together the 3 aspects of Ohms Law to the 3 vows of a Christian Mystic : obedience, poverty and chastity.
Although the title of the book is Electric Christianity and is chiefly concerned with the Christian Eucharist he draws upon other great traditions Hinduism (mostly Kashmir Shaivism) and Buddhism (mostly Tibetan Dzogchen) to show similarities in terms and practices that mirror each other and strengthen and clarify the readers grasp of the material.
I would also suggest others to check out some of the Authors own Amazon reviews for more enlightening and helpful reading. The author has obviously spent much time and effort in understanding and practicing the spiritual traditions of man and has done a service to others with his discerning reviews that will save people time and point them in the right direction. His suggested reading list at the end of Electrical Christianity is excellent.
7 people found this helpful
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Unique Writer, Book, and Explanation of the Holy Trinity
Reviewed in the United States on 6 July 2015
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I own 1905 books on spirituality and related topics! (Yes, it is one thousand nine hundred and five books; I counted them one by one last year.)

A few of the books I own and read could be what I consider an ‘all round, all inclusive book.’ Most of the books sound like one of Barack Obama’s State of the Union speeches: long on rhetoric but short on specifics. Occasionally I read a book that leads me to think, ‘I wish I had written that.' Electrical Christianity is one of those books. The author's attention to detail coupled with broad-based erudition all infused with Eastern thought, Western esotericism, and practical experience—is staggering. It’s very hard to impress me, but with E.C. I’m truly, enthusiastically impressed.

Bits that resonated with me:
1) First of all, I like front page picture. It is well done and the artist deserves praise.
2) I like the question and answer format. The book is short but the thought and style is so tense and intense that it requires additional reading .It would be redundant to repeat that Ohms law and Holy trinity analogy is superb. Ron L. Gardner should protect it as intellectual patent and propriety.
3) After reading E.C. I can say that first time in my life I understand the concept of the Holy Trinity and the trinitarian nature of reality. Before this book, Holy Trinity looked like big theological fog and ‘theological shape-shifter.’ Gardner is doing free revival and advertisement for Christianity. It seems that Christianity is in the possession of great mystical secrets but they are explaining it wrongly or they do not understand it at all. After reading Gardner, I have an impression that Christian theology and tradition has spiritual diamonds covered with pile of theological lies and dung, and the author is doing the Herculean task of cleaning Augean-Christian stables and exposing real mystical jewels.
4) I like his personal story (mystical experience) with doctors (page 65.
5) I learned from this book the difference between true prayer and true meditation.

6) I like his book recommendations and annotated Spiritual reading list. Other authors just copy -paste endless list of books and I despise such lazy approach. Out of his life-long spiritual quest Gardner distilled the best books and provided us with explanation what books he considers the ''creme de la creme'' and WHY.
7) Gardner is not a slave to empty ‘sweet talking’ of ‘spiritual -political correctness.’ I think that ‘'spiritual political correctness’ is the newest form of intolerance, and it is especially dangerous because it comes disguised as tolerance. It presents itself as fairness, yet attempts to restrict and control an author's language and ideas with strict codes and rigid rules. It is form of spiritual censorship.
I have found one (minor) weakness in the book.The book does not have an index. I was forced to make one for myself for later analysis of names and concepts.

Conclusion:
The book is must read if you want to understand the trinitarian nature of reality as expressed in world religions. I would like to thank the author for his original and important book and for sharing with us his erudition and lifelong quest. I am also impressed with other book by this author and with his work, and his unique, honest and open style of teaching and communication. May he never cease to ''electrify'' his readers!
8 people found this helpful
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A. Jorge Barbosa
5.0 out of 5 stars Original and creative
Reviewed in the United States on 2 October 2017
Verified Purchase
The way the author combines and synthesises apparently divergent theories is quite creative, uplifting and inspiring. It is also practical in its approach.
3 people found this helpful

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Vinicius
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is a great presentation of esoteric Christianity and its parallels with Buddhism ...
Reviewed in the United States on 15 December 2014
Verified Purchase
This book is a great presentation of esoteric Christianity and its parallels with Buddhism and Hinduism. It also delivers a strong form of meditation, the author's "Plugged-In Presence". If you're not a dogmatic Christian, and not afraid of an esoteric approach of Christianity, I recommend it!
6 people found this helpful
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Martin Matye
5.0 out of 5 stars No nonsense direct and clear explanation and directions to become a disciple with hopes of becoming fully awakened
Reviewed in the United States on 23 May 2014

 
Coming from a Pentecostal Jesus Name Church I found the explanations L. Ron Gardner gave of spiritually to be exceptional. Electrical Christianity explained why I still felt incomplete even after speaking in tongues at church which is supposed to be evidence of receiving the Baptism of the Holy Ghost . I was surprised to find myself in agreement with the definitions, terminology, and suggestions in the book. Electrical Christianity has helped me understand how a person can go to church on Sunday and live like the Devil the rest of the week. Electrical Christianity has inspired me to resume trying to connect with the "Entity" (GOD) through the Christ with grace from the Holy Spirit.
10 people found this helpful

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Paul A
5.0 out of 5 stars If you want to accelerate your spiritual development - read this book!
Reviewed in the United States on 21 April 2016
Verified Purchase
I have been a seeker of Truth for many years and I wish this much needed book had been written decades ago and I had read it then! It would have spared me much confusion over the years and introduced me to spiritual concepts and a practice that is sound. Ron has brilliantly synthesized his 40 years of study and experience into this book and it contains practical and tangible material that will benefit all. Thank you Ron for your generosity of Spirit.

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MeerKatExtremely
5.0 out of 5 stars Most useful book on Christianity I've ever read.
Reviewed in the United States on 16 August 2013

I looked forward to this book because I learned so much from Beyond the Power of Now, Gardner's first book. And I learned a lot more from this book, which goes beyond anything Christianity or Christian mysticism than I've read before. Unlike other books, Gardner goes into detail about the practice of true Holy Communion, which is what real Christianity is about. 

And he explains exactly what all the important terms--Eucharist, Trinity, Heaven, Baptism, and Holy Spirit - really mean. I honestly feel like my understanding of Christianity has greatly improved.

L. Ron Gardner details the "Holy Communion Method" which he calls the plugged in Presence and relates it to Ohm's Law. I believe Mr. Gardner is the first to make this connection with this key scientific law and the book is worth studying for that alone. If you are interested in truly spiritual Christianity then I highly recommend this book.

Most useful book on Christianity I've ever read.

7 people found this helpful
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Passive Observer
5.0 out of 5 stars The Rest of the Journey to Enlightenment
Reviewed in the United States on 9 October 2013

I begin my review of "Electrical Christianity" by L. Ron Gardner with a caveat and a warning. First, my review is shaped by the degree of my own spiritual development. To some, the material that I discuss in my review may be old news. To others, it may be informative and helpful.

Secondly, I warn the reader not to assume that "Electrical Christianity" is solely about Christianity. It is not. Gardner very skillfully explains how the principles of Christianity are common to all of the world's great religions: Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism and Hinduism. 

As one example, "Communion" in Christianity means making contact with the Holy Spirit. Analogously, the name of a principal spiritual discipline in Buddhism is called "yoga," which means, "yoke." "Yoke," of course, refers to the desired union of the spiritual aspirant with the Divine. 

Another commonality is the "Eucharist" of Christianity. The Eucharist is simply the practice of Holy Communion with the Divine and, again, this is common to all religions.

Numerous writers have, to a very great degree, expounded the role of the Kundalini on the journey to enlightenment. As we know, the Kundalini is an intense energy that uncoils like a serpent from the base of the spine and rises to the crown when it is activated.

Prior to reading "Electrical Christianity," I believed that the raising of the Kundalini was the end of the journey to enlightenment. But Gardner very clearly explains that the "Serpent Power" is only the lower Kundalini. In his words, "The ascended spinal Kundalini leads a yogi to intense, absorptive samadhis (states of blissful, locked-in engrossment), but it cannot free him; only the "higher Kundalini" can. The higher Kundalini, the Holy Spirit, is the descending half of the Great Circuit, or Current, of the Divine." And so the raising of the Kundalini is only part of the entire journey to enlightenment. Unless and until we succeed in connecting to the higher Kundalini, we cannot achieve true freedom or final liberation from the Wheel of Samsara.

As a means to achieving Holy Communion with the Divine, or Absolute, Gardner presents a very thorough and fully detailed meditative practice that he calls "plugged-in presence." The idea is to plug into the Spirit-current of the Divine, the higher Kundalini. The practice advocated is an elucidation of the seer Adi Da Sumaraj's "Meditation of Understanding," instructions on the practice of "real meditation," or "radical [root-based] understanding."

Gardner explains and outlines the meditative practice as the following threefold process: (1) forgo memory and imagination and assume a state of "Presence," that is, a state of concentrated, undivided attention to the present moment, (2) seek to connect with the Spirit-current of the higher Kundalini, and (3) increase receptivity to the Spirit-current by not resisting it.

Gardner likens the Meditative process to an electrical circuit. In an electrical circuit, the current flow increases when the driving force (voltage) increases and/or the resistance to the flow decreases. In the case of our meditative practice, our potential for connecting to the Spirit-current of the higher Kundalini increases when we increase the intensity of our steadfast, unwavering attention (voltage) to establishing a connection with the Spirit-current. The flow of the Spirit-current increases further when we reduce our resistance to it once the connection is made.

Gardner has an awesome depth of knowledge and understanding of mysticism and he shares it in his book. The book is comprehensive and inspiring. It is skillfully and convincingly written. His logic is unassailable. In short, the book is a Five-Star Gem. I am very glad that he wrote it. I consider it a "must read" for every sincere seeker.

WARNING: The author's writing style tends to be a bit blunt, at times. The reader must not allow oneself to be turned off by that. There is a wealth of very valuable information and knowledge to be gained from Gardner's books.
26 people found this helpful
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rikitikitavi
3.0 out of 5 stars "A Questionable Piece of Meat Passed-off as a Spiritual Practice, wrapped up in a Right-wing Sandwich of Ayn Rand Worship"
Reviewed in the United States on 20 May 2014
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Oct 24, 2019Ishmael rated it it was amazing
Well, that was a fun read.

And I think a very valuable one at that. Very interesting, provocative dharma, written in plain English (thank you), and I will be considering it for quite some time.

The author really believes in the stuff he's writing, and he seems to really want to get it out there. I was really quite charmed when he explicated how you would 'package' his dharma to an atheist friend, a christian friend, a friend into the occult, etc in order to make it more palatable to them. It's clear to me that the author cares. He's trying to get this stuff out there, no bullshit. He's trying to get Truth as he understands and sees it out into the world.

I really liked the voice throughout the book. It was entertaining, very readable.

There was no obfuscation, which can't be said for all dharma. In fact, the author tried to make things as clear and understandable as possible, which I highly, highly appreciated. Very understandable description in plain language that the western mind can immediately grasp and comprehend. Cheers. And thank you!

In the end, it goes off on a bit of a tangent, talking about politics, but honestly, it was fun, enjoyable reading, and it was at the end, after the author's delivery of the main topic, so I didn't mind at all, and in fact, I enjoyed it.

It seems to me that the author's primary motivation was Truth, and it shines through. He's a bit of a quirky fellow, but he earned my respect. (less)
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Yasu Ogura
Sep 03, 2020Yasu Ogura rated it it was amazing
The end-game practical guide to spirituality and meditation

I tried the plugged-in method and it works!!
Also, the recommended reading list alone is priceless
Author is the authority on spirituality and meditation.