2022/11/02

Christian universalism - Wikipedia

Christian universalism - Wikipedia

Christian universalism

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
Off-center cross of Christian Universalism

Christian universalism is a school of Christian theology focused around the doctrine of universal reconciliation – the view that all human beings will ultimately be saved and restored to a right relationship with God. 'Christian universalism' and 'the belief or hope in the universal reconciliation through Christ' are concepts that can even be understood as synonyms.[1] Opponents of this school, who hold that eternal damnation is the ultimate fate of some or most people, are sometimes called "infernalists."[2]

The term Christian universalism was used in the 1820s by Russell Streeter in the Christian Intelligencer of Portland, Maine—a descendant of Adams Streeter who had founded one of the first Universalist Churches on September 14, 1785.[3][4][5] Christian universalists impute that in Early Christianity (prior to the 6th century), this was the most common interpretation of Christianity.[6]

As a formal Christian denomination, Christian universalism originated in the late 18th century with the Universalist Church of America. There is currently no single denomination uniting Christian universalists, but a few denominations teach some of the principles of Christian universalism or are open to them.

Unitarian Universalism historically grew out of Christian universalism but is not an exclusively Christian denomination. It formed from a 1961 merger of two historically Christian denominations, the Universalist Church of America and the American Unitarian Association, both based in the United States. In the academic world, theologians such as Karl Barth and Jürgen Moltmann are typically held to have supported a theology of universal reconciliation.[citation needed]

Beliefs[edit]

In his Plain Guide to Universalism, the universalist Thomas Wittemore wrote, "The sentiment by which Universalists are distinguished, is this: that at last every individual of the human race shall become holy and happy. This does not comprise the whole of their faith, but, merely that feature of it which is peculiar to them and by which they are distinguished from the rest of the world."[7]

The remaining central beliefs of Christian universalism are compatible with Christianity in general:

  • God is the loving parent of all people (see Love of God).
  • Jesus Christ reveals the nature and character of God and is the spiritual leader of humankind (see New Covenant).
  • Humankind is created with an immortal soul which death does not end—or a mortal soul that shall be resurrected and/or preserved by God—and which God will not wholly destroy.[8]
  • Sin has negative consequences for the sinner either in this life or the afterlife.

In 1899 the Universalist General Convention, later called the Universalist Church of America, adopted the Five Principles: the belief in God, belief in Jesus Christ, the immortality of the human soul, that sinful actions have consequence, and universal reconciliation.[9]

Views on Hell[edit]

Christian Universalists disagree on whether or not Hell exists. However, they do agree that if it does, the punishment there is corrective and remedial, and does not last forever.[10]

Purgatorial Hell and Patristic Universalism[edit]

Purgatorial Universalism was the belief of some of the early church fathers,[citation needed] especially Greek-speaking ones such as Clement of Alexandria,[citation needed] Origen,[citation needed] and Gregory of Nyssa.[citation needed] It asserts that the unsaved will undergo Hell, but that Hell is remedial (neither everlasting nor purely retributive) according to key scriptures and that after purification or conversion all will enter Heaven.

Fourth-century Christian theologian and Bishop Diodorus of Tarsus wrote: "For the wicked there are punishments, not perpetual, however, lest the immortality prepared for them should be a disadvantage, but they are to be purified for a brief period according to the amount of malice in their works. They shall therefore suffer punishment for a short space, but immortal blessedness having no end awaits them… the penalties to be inflicted for their many and grave sins are very far surpassed by the magnitude of the mercy to be shown to them."[11]

Ilaria Ramelli, a scholar of the Early Patristic history writes, "In the minds of some, universal salvation is a heretical idea that was imported into Christianity from pagan philosophies by Origen" (c. 185–253/4).[12] Ramelli argues that this view is mistaken and that Christian theologians were the first people to proclaim that all will be saved and that their reasons for doing so were rooted in their faith in Christ.

Eternal Hell in Christian history[edit]

Christian Universalists assert that the doctrine of eternal Hell was not a part of Christ's teachings nor even the early church, and that it was added in.[13] The first clear mention of endless misery is to be found in a work from 155–165 AD by Tatian.[14] According to Theologian Edward Beecher in the first four centuries there were six main theological schools and only one of them advocated the idea of eternal Hell.[15]

Origins of the idea of Hell as eternal[edit]

Christian universalists point towards mistranslations of the Greek word αιών (aion – an epoch of time), as giving rise to the idea of eternal Hell.[16] Dr. Ken Vincent writes "When it (aion) was translated into Latin Vulgate, 'aion' became 'aeternam' which means 'eternal." He also states that the first written record of the idea of an eternal Hell comes from Tertullian, who wrote in Latin.

The second major source of the idea of Hell as eternal was the 4th-century theologian Augustine. According to author Steve Gregg, it was Tertullian's writings, plus Augustine's views and writings on eternal Hell which "overwhelmed" the other views of a temporary Hell. First Augustine's views of Hell were accepted in the early Latin Church, out of which rose the Roman Catholic church. Up until The Reformation Augustine's view of Hell as eternal was not questioned.[17]

Mistranslation of the Greek word aion[edit]

About the word aion as having connotations of "age" or "temporal", the 19th-century theologian Marvin Vincent wrote:

Aion, transliterated aeon, is a period of longer or shorter duration, having a beginning and an end, and complete in itself. Aristotle (peri ouranou, i. 9,15) says: "The period which includes the whole time of one's life is called the aeon of each one." Hence it often means the life of a man, as in Homer, where one's life (aion) is said to leave him or to consume away (Iliad v. 685; Odyssey v. 160). It is not, however, limited to human life; it signifies any period in the course of events, as the period or age before Christ; the period of the millennium; the mythological period before the beginnings of history.

The adjective aionios in like manner carries the idea of time. Neither the noun nor the adjective, in themselves, carry the sense of endless or everlasting. They may acquire that sense by their connotation, as, on the other hand, aidios, which means everlasting, has its meaning limited to a given point of time in Jude 6. Aionios means enduring through or pertaining to a period of time. Both the noun and the adjective are applied to limited periods.

Words which are habitually applied to things temporal or material cannot carry in themselves the sense of endlessness. Even when applied to God, we are not forced to render aionios everlasting. Of course the life of God is endless; but the question is whether, in describing God as aionios, it was intended to describe the duration of his being, or whether some different and larger idea was not contemplated.[18]

Arguments against the idea of eternal Hell[edit]

Author Thomas Talbott states that if one believes in the idea of eternal Hell or that some souls will be destroyed, one must either let go of the idea that it is God's wish and desires to save all beings, or accept the idea that God wants to, but will not "successfully accomplish his will and satisfy his own desire in this matter."[19]

Author David Burnfield defends the postmortem view,[citation needed] that God continues to evangelize to people even after they die (1 Chronicles 16:34; Isaiah 9:2; Romans 8:35-39; Ephesians 4:8-9; 1 Peter 3:18-20; 4:6).

History[edit]

According to the New Schaff–Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge (1912), over the first five hundred years of Christian history there are records of at least six theological schools: four of these schools were Universalist (one each in AlexandriaAntiochCaesarea, and EdessaNisibis), one taught conditional immortality (in Ephesus), and the last taught eternal Hell (in Carthage or Rome).[20][unreliable source?]

An important figure in early American Christian Universalism was George de Benneville, a French Huguenot preacher and physician who was imprisoned for advocating Universalism and later emigrated to Pennsylvania where he continued preaching on the subject. De Benneville was noted for his friendly and respectful relationship with Native Americans and his pluralistic and multicultural view of spiritual truth which was well ahead of his time. One of his most significant accomplishments was helping to produce the Sauer Bible, the first German language Bible printed in America. In this Bible version, passages teaching universal reconciliation were marked in boldface.[21]

Other significant early modern Christian Universalist leaders include Elhanan Winchester, a Baptist preacher who wrote several books promoting the universal salvation of all souls after a period in Purgatory, who founded the first Universalist church in Philadelphia, and founded a church that ministered to African American slaves in South Carolina;[22][23] Hosea Ballou, a Universalist preacher and writer in New England;[24] and Hannah Whitall Smith, a writer and evangelist from a Quaker background who was active in the Holiness movement as well as the women's suffrage and temperance movements.[25]

The Unity School of Christianity, founded in 1889 by Charles and Myrtle Fillmore, has taught some Universalist beliefs such as God's total goodness, the divine nature of human beings, and the rejection of the traditional Christian belief that God condemns people to Hell.[26]

The Universalist Church of America gradually declined in the early to mid 20th century and merged with the American Unitarian Association in 1961, creating the modern-day Unitarian Universalist Association, which does not officially subscribe to exclusively Christian theology. Christian Universalism largely passed into obscurity for the next few decades with the end of the Universalist Church as a separate denomination. However, the Unitarian Universalist Christian Fellowship remains as an organization for Christians from the Unitarian Universalist tradition and liberal Christians interested in Unitarianism and Universalism.[27]

Some Christians from a Pentecostal background who were involved in the Latter Rain Movement of the 1940s and 1950s came to believe in the ideas of Christian Universalism on their own, separately from the Universalist Church tradition. They emphasized the teachings of universal reconciliation and theosis. These ideas were spread primarily through newsletters and traveling evangelists from the 1950s to 1980s, and were not typically identified by the term "Universalism". The only significant organization representing these beliefs that emerged within the Charismatic tradition was the Home Missions Church, a loosely organized network of ministers and house churches founded in 1944.[citation needed]

Universal reconciliation and pre-modern Christianity[edit]

Yale Professor of Philosophy Keith DeRose points out that in the Christian Scriptures there are verses which point to universal reconciliation and verses which point to destruction or eternal punishment for some. If looking only to scripture, he argues that Universalism is not only based in scripture, but has a stronger scriptural backing than the position of destruction or eternal damnation. Like early Christians, he points to Purgatorial Hell, a temporary place of cleansing of sin that will be necessary for some as a way to reconcile these seeming differences.[28]

Modern types[edit]

There are three general types of Christian Universalism today – Evangelical Universalism, Charismatic Universalism, and Liberal Christian Universalism – which by themselves or in combination with one another describe the vast majority of currently existing and identifiable versions of Christian Universalist belief and practice.

Evangelical Universalism[edit]

The type of Christian Universalism that departs the least from orthodox or traditional Protestant Christian doctrine is Evangelical (Christian) Universalism, also called Biblical or Trinitarian Universalism. Evangelical Universalists hold to conservative positions on most theological or doctrinal issues except for the doctrine of hell, in which case they assert universal reconciliation instead of eternal torment.[29] They tend to emphasize the substitutionary atonement of Jesus Christ for the sins of all humanity as the basis for their Universalism.

In 2006 a mainstream evangelical writer, revealed[30] as Robin Parry in 2009, under the pseudonym of "Gregory MacDonald" (taken from the names, Gregory of Nyssa and George MacDonald) released a book, The Evangelical Universalist.[31] In 2008 this inspired the creation of a forum,[32] featuring "Gregory MacDonald" and Thomas Talbott, to discuss Evangelical Universalism and related topics. Evangelical Universalists derive a large part of their beliefs from Evangelicalism and Reformed theology. Many of them come from an Evangelical Christian background, but they may or may not identify with this movement and seek to remain with it.

Some Evangelical Universalists avoid using the word "Universalism" to describe their beliefs, perhaps because of the negative connotations of this word among conservative Christians. Alternative terms that are in use among Evangelical Universalists include the "Larger Hope" or "Blessed Hope" and the "Victorious Gospel".[33]

Charismatic Universalism[edit]

Some Christians with a background in the Charismatic movement or Pentecostalism have developed a version of Universalism which could be called Charismatic (Christian) Universalism. Charismatic Universalists usually do not call their theology "Universalism" but commonly refer to their specific beliefs by the terms "Reconciliation" (shorthand for universal reconciliation, the doctrine of apocatastasis) and "Sonship" (shorthand for "Manifest Sonship" which is a variant of the doctrine of theosis).[34] The term "Feast of Tabernacles" is used by some Charismatic Universalists as a term for their post-Pentecostal spiritual tradition, reflecting a symbolic interpretation of this Jewish festival as an entrance into a fuller knowledge and relationship with God and understanding of God's plan for humanity.[35][36]

Charismatic Universalism is marked by its emphasis on theosis; the idea that the return of Christ is a body of perfected human beings who are the "Manifested Sons of God" instead of a literal return of the person of Jesus;[37] the idea that these Sons will reign on the earth and transform all other human beings from sin to perfection during an age that is coming soon (a version of millennialism);[38] and the absolute sovereignty of God, the nonexistence or severe limitation of human free will, and the inevitable triumph of God's plan of universal reconciliation.[39][40] Some see similarities to the teachings of Jacob Arminius, a Dutch theologian who tried to modify John Calvin's teachings about predestination.

Many Charismatic Universalists meet in house churches or do not belong to a church at all. Most of the evidence of Universalism existing as a school of thought within the Charismatic movement is found in a large number of internet-based ministries that are informally networked with one another.[41]

Liberal Christian Universalism[edit]

Liberal Christian Universalists include some members of mainline Protestant denominations, some people influenced by the New Age and New Thought movements, some people in the emerging church movement, some Unitarian Universalists who continue to follow Jesus as their primary spiritual teacher, and some Christians from other religious backgrounds.

Liberal Christian Universalism emphasizes the all-inclusive love of God and tends to be more open to finding truth and value in non-Christian spiritual traditions compared to the attitude of other forms of Christian Universalism, while remaining generally Christ-centered.[42] In contrast to Evangelical Universalism, Liberal Christian Universalism views the Bible as an imperfect human document containing divine revelations, is not necessarily Trinitarian, and often downplays or rejects blood atonement theology in its view of the crucifixion of Jesus.[43][44] Some Liberal Christian Universalists believe in mystical philosophies such as panentheism and process theologyGnostic or New Age ideas such as the preexistence and reincarnation of the soul,[45][46] and New Thought ideas such as the law of attraction.[47][48]

The Unitarian Universalist Christian Fellowship is an organization for Liberal Christian Universalists, especially those who belong to the Unitarian Universalist Association. The Liberal Catholic Church, the Catholic Universalist Church and the Unity Church are liberal Christian denominations which teach some Universalist beliefs.[49][50][51]

Hybrid types[edit]

Former Pentecostal Bishop Carlton Pearson's "Gospel of Inclusion" appears to be a hybrid between Charismatic and Liberal Christian Universalism. He is now a minister in the United Church of Christ, a liberal Christian denomination, but continues to believe in some ideas and practices of Pentecostal or Charismatic forms of Christianity. Pearson has also incorporated some New Age and New Thought teachings into his message.[52] Brian McLaren is a Christian leader in the emerging church movement who is sympathetic to the idea of Universalism but does not embrace it.[53][54][55]

A number of ministers and evangelists connected with Restoration Nation conferences are Universalists who draw from both the Evangelical and Charismatic traditions.[56] One notable example is Robert Rutherford, a minister from Georgia (USA) who was a finalist on The Learning Channel's 2006 reality TV series The Messengers.[57][58] Another example is Dick King, an independent Charismatic Baptist pastor in North Little Rock, Arkansas, whose church left the Southern Baptist Convention in 2004.[59]

Modern proponents[edit]

The conversion of Bishop Carlton Pearson to a form of Universalism and his subsequent excommunication by the Joint College of African-American Pentecostal Bishops in 2004 caused Christian Universalism to gain increased media attention because of Pearson's popularity and celebrity status.[60]

Disagreements[edit]

There are many religious issues on which Christian Universalists disagree with each other, depending on their theological background and denominational tradition. Some examples include:

  • Various views of atonement
  • Whether non-Christians can be saved in Christ (inclusivism), or whether salvation occurs only after profession of belief in the Lordship of Jesus Christ (exclusivism).

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ MacDonald, Gregory (2011). All Shall Be Well. p. 1. At the most simple level Christian universalism is the belief that God will (or, in the case of "hopeful universalism," might) redeem all people through the saving work of Christ.
  2. ^ Kilby, Karen (16 March 2020). "Against the Infernalists"Commonweal. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  3. ^ Russell Streeter 1835, Familiar conversations: in which the salvation of all mankind is…, page 266: "We now come to those distinguished men, Murray and Winchester, who, as our opposers would have people believe, were the inventors and first preachers of Christian Universalism."
  4. ^ The Christian repository: volume 9, page 218 Church of the United Brethren in Christ (1800–1889), 1829 "In a piece entitled Christian Universalism, in the Christian Intelligencer, volume 3d, page 4, he wrote the following: "The Editor," speaking of himself, "deems it a solemn obligation to protest against proceedings calculated to make an…"
  5. ^ The journal of Unitarian Universalist history: volumes 26–28 Unitarian Universalist Historical Society, 1999 "The adoption of the name Christian Universalist can, nevertheless, be explained plausibly in the context of Dean's debate with Aesop."
  6. ^ Hanson, John Wesley (2008) [Boston & Chicago: Universalist Publishing House, 1899], Universalism: The Prevailing Doctrine of the Christian Church During its First Five Hundred Years, Biblio bazaar, ISBN 978-0-55956315-7 – via Tentmaker
  7. ^ "2". Plain Guide to Universalism. Auburn university. Paragraph 1. Archived from the original on 2016-08-26. Retrieved 2017-03-14.
  8. ^ Hanson, J.W. (1888). "Destroy Soul and Body in Hell"The Bible Hell (4th ed.). Boston: Universalist Publishing House. The immortal soul is not meant, but the life. As though Jesus had said: 'Fear Not those who can only kill the body, but rather him, who if he chose could annihilate the whole being.'
  9. ^ "Five Principles of Faith"Historic and Universalist Professions of Faith. Auburn University. Archived from the original on 2016-08-15. Retrieved 2017-04-24.
  10. ^ Plain Guide to Universalism Archived 2016-08-26 at the Wayback Machine Chapter 2, Section III, Auburn: "There are some Universalists who hold to punishment after death, nevertheless, we are glad to hail them as Universalists. They agree with us in our views of the great consummation, — all punishment, in their view, is disciplinary, and they denounce punishment, either in this world or the next, having any other object, as cruel and unjust."
  11. ^ J. W. Hanson, citing Assemani Bib. Orientalis, III, p. 324.
  12. ^ Ramelli, Ilaria (2019). A Larger Hope?, Volume 1: Universal Salvation from Christian Beginnings to Julian of Norwich. Cascade Books. ISBN 978-1-61097-884-2.
  13. ^ McMillen, Jacob How & When The Idea of Eternal Torment Invaded Church Doctrine, Brazen church.
  14. ^ Tatian, "XIII. & XIV", Address to the Greeks, retrieved 3 August 2017
  15. ^ Edward Beecher, History of opinions on the scriptural doctrine of retribution, Tentmaker. "What, then, was the state of facts as to the leading theological schools of the Christian world, in the age of Origen, and some centuries after? It was, in brief, this: There were at least six theological schools in the Church at large. Of these six schools, one, and only one, was decidedly and earnestly in favor of the doctrine of future eternal punishment. One was in favor of the annihilation of the wicked. Two were in favor of the doctrine of universal restoration on the principles of Origen, and two in favor of universal restoration on the principles of Theodore of Mopsuestia."
  16. ^ ""Eternal" Punishment (Matthew 25:46) Is NOT Found In The Greek New Testament"Tentmaker.
  17. ^ Gregg, Steve. All You ever Wanted to Know about Hell pp. 130–31
  18. ^ Vincent, Marvin. "Note on Olethron Aionion (eternal destruction)"Word Studies in the New Testament. Auburn. Archived from the original on 21 May 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2012.
  19. ^ Talbott, Thomas (Spring 2017). "Heaven and Hell in Christian Thought". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyTheists who accept the traditional idea of everlasting punishment, or even the idea of an everlasting separation from God, must either reject the idea that God wills or desires to save all humans and thus desires to reconcile them all to himself (see proposition (1) in section 1 above) or reject the idea that God will successfully accomplish his will and satisfy his own desire in this matter.
  20. ^ "Christian Universalism"The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge. New York, London: Funk & Wagnalls. 12: 96 – via Christian classics ethereal library.
  21. ^ "George de Benneville". UUA. Archived from the original on 2011-10-04. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  22. ^ "Elhanan Winchester" Archived 2008-08-20 at the Wayback Machine. UUA.
  23. ^ "Biographies: Elehan Winchester". TentMaker.
  24. ^ "Hosea Ballou". UUA. Archived from the original on 2011-10-04. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  25. ^ "Hannah Whitall Smith". Tentmaker. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  26. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions". Unity online. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  27. ^ "Who Are The UU Christians?". UU Christian fellowship. Archived from the original on 2011-10-04. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  28. ^ DeRose, Keith. "Universalism and the Bible". Yale.
  29. ^ "Evangelical Universalism – Oxymoron". Jason Clark church, February 25, 2008.
  30. ^ Parry, Robin (2009-08-29). "I am the Evangelical Universalist"Theological scribbles. Google Blogspot. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  31. ^ MacDonald, Gregory (a pseudonym). 2006. The Evangelical Universalist. ISBN 1-59752-365-8
  32. ^ "Forum". Evangelical universalist. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  33. ^ Amirault, Gary. "Tentmaker Ministries battles for the Victorious Gospel of Jesus Christ". Tentmaker Ministries. Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  34. ^ "From The Candlestick to the Throne, Part 33, The Church in Ephesus" (section "I Will Remove Your Candlestick"). Kingdom Bible studies. "the teaching or doctrine of reconciliation, sonship and the kingdom".
  35. ^ "Chapter 7 The Feast of Tabernacles". God's kingdom ministries.
  36. ^ "Coming into Light prt 1". To Seek The Light blog.
  37. ^ "ID69" Archived 2008-07-19 at the Wayback Machine and "ID349" Archived 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine. Hearing the truth of God.
  38. ^ "ID269" Archived 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine Hearing the Truth of God.
  39. ^ "Free Moral Agent-Eby", Tentmaker.
  40. ^ "ID116" Archived 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine. Hearing the truth of God.
  41. ^ "Kingdom". Sigler. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  42. ^ Non-Christian. Savior of the world.
  43. ^ "(section "Christian Universalism 'Endorsed' by Jesus Seminar" Archived 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ "Metaphysical Bible" Archived 2008-08-28 at the Wayback Machine, New Beginning Ministries.
  45. ^ Oneness True Spiritual Life" Archived 2008-09-10 at the Wayback Machine
  46. ^ "Conclusion" and "Reincarnation". Savior of the World.
  47. ^ "Pastor compares church". SPTimes, July 14, 2007.
  48. ^ "You are not your DNS" Archived 2008-08-28 at the Wayback Machine. New beginnings ministryies.
  49. ^ "The Liberal Catholic Act of Faith"Liberal Catholic. Tripod. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  50. ^ "Unity". Bible.ca
  51. ^ "Who we are: Teachings". Unity Online.
  52. ^ "New Thought Ministries of Oregon". Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  53. ^ "Brian's rejection that he is a Universalist", Out of Ur, Christianity today, 2006 May, Archived 2009-08-08 at the Wayback Machine.
  54. ^ "Mark Driscoll criticizes fellow Evangelical Brian McLaren for his "denial of hell" and other liberal theological ideas." The resurgence. Archived 2011-05-24 at the Wayback Machine
  55. ^ "McLaren discusses his struggle" with the doctrine of eternal hell and his unwillingness to embrace and preach it. Belief net.
  56. ^ "Videos of many conference speakers"[permanent dead link]. Restoration nation TV.
  57. ^ "Meet the Messengers" Archived 2008-07-05 at the Wayback Machine. Discovery.
  58. ^ Robert Rutherford blog.
  59. ^ "Our Journey" Archived 2008-07-06 at the Wayback Machine. Indian Hills Church.
  60. ^ "'Inclusionism' deemed heresy"The Washington Times. 2004-04-20. Retrieved 2011-11-09.

Further reading[edit]

  • Bell, Rob ‘’Love Wins: A Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived.’’ 2011, New York City, Harper-one, ISBN 9780062049643
  • Bressler, Ann Lee (2001). The Universalist Movement in America, 1770–1880. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Ezekiel Stone Wiggins Universalism unfounded being a complete analysis and refutation of the system Published 1867 in Nepean, Ontario Universalism unfounded
  • Cassara, Ernest, ed. (1971). Universalism in America: A Documentary History of a Liberal Faith. Skinner House Books.

External links

non western spiritual autobiography - Google 검색

non western spiritual autobiography - Google 검색

My Life of Love and Truth: A Spiritual Autobiography - Barry Long | 8601423384801 | Amazon.com.au | Books

My Life of Love and Truth: A Spiritual Autobiography - Barry Long | 8601423384801 | Amazon.com.au | Books







See this image


Follow the Author

Barry Long
Follow





My Life of Love and Truth: A Spiritual Autobiography Paperback – 30 June 2013
by Barry Long (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars 32 ratings


Kindle
$14.99
Read with Our Free App
Paperback
$42.01
9 New from $42.01


This posthumous autobiography tells the story of Barry Long's life from his early years in Australia to a career as a successful newspaper editor and then how successive spiritual crises and realizations made him into a spiritual master who changed the lives of thousands of people around the world. It is a candid and sometimes painfully honest account of transformation by love and the transcendental. Liberation or spiritual freedom is not gained by trying to be like everyone else. Liberation is to have the will, the power, the simplicity to be what you are from moment to moment, without pretence and without considering what you or others think you should be or should not be. Naked of being anything, you must stand, and stand alone.
Read less




Print length

456 pages

Product description

About the Author
Barry Long (1926-2003) was a spiritual master recognized worldwide. His spiritual realization began in the late 1950s and was provoked by radical self-inquiry independent of any religious tradition. He began teaching in London a decade later in the 1960s. By the 1990s he was traveling the world speaking of love, life, truth, death, and God. A writer by trade, his many books cover every aspect of living and the spiritual life, although he is best known for his teachings on love between man and woman. His work has been published in eleven languages. In his later years, he returned to his native Australia where he continued to teach and write until his death in 2003.

Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Barry Long Books (30 June 2013)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 456 pages

4.5 out of 5 stars 32 ratings

Previous page

The Way in: The Book of Self-Discovery: A Book of Self-Discovery

Barry Long
5.0 out of 5 stars 26
Paperback
$30.15$30.15
Get it 11 - 16 NovFREE Shipping

Only 3 left in stock.

Making Love: Sexual Love the Divine Way

Barry Long
4.4 out of 5 stars 92
Paperback
$30.17$30.17
Prime FREE DeliveryWednesday, November 16

Only 1 left in stock (more on the way).

To Man in Truth: Enlightening Letters

Barry Long
4.7 out of 5 stars 5
Paperback
$23.09$23.09
Get it 11 - 16 NovFREE Shipping

Only 1 left in stock.

Meditation a Foundation Course: A Book of Ten Lessons

Barry Long
4.7 out of 5 stars 36
Paperback
$21.45$21.45
Get it 11 - 16 NovFREE Shipping

Only 4 left in stock.

To Woman in Love: A Book of Letters

Barry Long
4.6 out of 5 stars 17
Paperback
$15.26$15.26
FREE One-Day
Next page

About the author
Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.

Follow

Barry Long



Barry Long (1926-2003) was a writer and spiritual teacher with an original and challenging way of communicating age-old truths.

Born and raised in Australia he started out as a junior journalist and became the youngest-ever editor of a Sydney Sunday tabloid, somewhat prophetically called 'Truth'. At that time spiritual truth was far from his mind, but in his early 30s, the ambitious and successful family man began to question all his values. For some years his inner pain and suffering increased. Eventually, in 1965, he fled Australia and went to India. After many adventures, alone in the Himalayas he experienced what he called a 'mystic death', or the realisation of immortality. This was the real beginning of his journey towards 'the unfathomable mystery of God or Life and that other divine mystery of true love between man and woman'.

He wrote of his insights and realisations and for thirty years gave talks and seminars in many countries. He inspired and guided many thousands of men and women without wanting to create a big organisation or attract personal fame. He was concerned with the individual, not society. He taught that the way to truth and the reality of love is through direct experience, not belief or imagination; and that freedom comes from taking responsibility for one's own life. He was fulfilled by the prospect that one day someone might hear the truth from him and be able to live it. Evidently very many did. His legacy may be seen in their lives and in the work of some of those he inspired, including other teachers, notably Eckhart Tolle.



Top reviews from other countries

Anna Mazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars enjoy travelling with a Master along the Way (before he was a Master)Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 19 May 2017
Verified Purchase

This is an extremely rare account of a Master "on the path" *before* he became a Master. Read about a normal human being (and all his faults and frailties) and enjoy his travels and experiences. Why is it rare? Two reasons: one is that once Mastery is achieved, the past is left behind (and hence never gets talked about), and two: very few people have the fore-sight or ability to diarise their travels well (so we're lucky that his journalistic nature made him keep diaries).

I had the pleasure and honor of being with BL on many occasions, and loved him as a Master; I'm glad he wrote down his thoughts along the way for us to read. Note that the contents of this book is very unlike any of his meetings, talks or other books as it's from a personal perspective and not his "teaching". I found myself enjoying his easy writing style, and wished that I'd seen more of it.

The only downside is that it ends many years before his departure, and before I first met him, so I'm keen to see the next part of his life in a sequel (please!).
Report abuse

Reader99
5.0 out of 5 stars More than a good readReviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 31 July 2013
Verified Purchase

This long awaited autobiography of Barry Long was certainly worth the wait. It is the story of Barry's great love of god, truth and woman. I am now reading it for the third time. It is the story of the life circumstances of the man who to my mind was one of the greatest teachers of our times. Many of the stories in the book have already been told at his meetings or in his other books but the autobiography tells more of the day to day and year to year life of the man and the process he went through in becoming the teacher that was Barry Long. It also tells some of the stories of those who lives intertwined with his and heard his teaching and like most autobiographies it also has photos of the author as a child and at points in his life. It includes Barry's later reflections on events in the light of the truth he had realised. I can recommend this book to anybody who has any love or yearning for truth, even if they have not heard of Barry Long before. As well as the story of Barry's life it is also a book of truth. I give the book ten glorious stars! Thank you life.
Note: This book covers his life up until the death of his second wife in 1982. Maybe a second volume will be published....

10 people found this helpfulReport abuse

Altair Anjilo N. de Almeida
5.0 out of 5 stars Powerfully moving. Profound autobiography of a Western Spiritual Master.Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 31 March 2015
Verified Purchase

Barry Long was my first Spiritual Master,and his autobiography was long awaited by me and many, many others around the world. I was privileged to have been his student from 1985, in Hampstead, London when there weren't so many people at his meetings. He was the most direct and confronting,yet compassionate teacher I have come across. This book, for me read like a novel. It is brilliantly written, by a master wordsmith. I couldn't put it down! The only difference and a major one at that, was that he was recounting his own experiences, not making up stories. This book only served to make me admire him more. It also taught me that we can never pre-judge what path a persons life may take. He was an ordinary kind of family man, with a good job, when suddenly things began to change. The call from within or without began, at a time when there weren't many Spiritual teachers to guide his way. However, as he would say, Life, Love or God will always guide you to the Truth, when the desire for it is there. For those called to the spiritual path, or even for those confused or confronted by Life or living, this book could be a turning point, an uplifting one, yet one that does not sugar coat the Spiritual journey. This was his journey.We must all make our own, yet this profoundly touching book will add fire and hopefully give you courage to face the 'demons' that arise and must be faced, if we want to live a full and honest life.
Read less

4 people found this helpfulReport abuse

Tai Xen
5.0 out of 5 stars MUST READReviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 11 August 2015
Verified Purchase

This is a MUST READ for those familiar with BL. Quite surprising in many respects. I was disappointed that it only took his story to the early 80s as I first met him in the mid 80s, and of course he died in 2003.
Report abuse

BigBear
5.0 out of 5 stars An extraordinary readReviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 10 April 2018
Verified Purchase

Honest, profound, at times disturbing, but finally uplifting. Highly recommended to anyone who meditates and / or is seeking to develop spiritually.
Report abuse