Showing posts with label "contemplative life". Show all posts
Showing posts with label "contemplative life". Show all posts

2022/04/14

[Spiritual Practice] Maintaining Silence — The Contemplative Life.

Maintaining Silence — The Contemplative Life.



Maintaining Silence



In monastic communities there is often an emphasis placed on maintaining silence throughout one’s day. A monk’s day is often filled with structured periods of manual labor, personal time for reading/study/personal practice, and communal spiritual practice. Various communities may place more or less emphasis on the degree of personal silence that must be maintained, but it is usually encouraged that most of the day is spent without speaking. The following is from the Rule of St. Benedict, a primary sourcebook for much of Catholic monasticism.













“Let us follow the Prophet’s counsel: I said, I have resolved to keep watch over my ways that I may never sin with my tongue. I have put a guard on my mouth. I was silent and was humbled, and I refrained even from good words (Ps 38[39]:2-3). Here the prophet indicates that there are times when good words are to be left unsaid out of esteem for silence… Indeed, so important is silence that permission to speak should seldom be granted even to mature disciples, no matter how good or holy or constructive their talk…”













Thus, simply maintaining silence during extended periods of one’s day is considered a spiritual practice in many monastic traditions. Highly related to maintaining personal silence is the practice of extended solitude, for instance in a Hermitage or Poustinia, or for non-monks at a retreat house.

My Books —Anthony Coleman - The Contemplative Life.

My Books — The Contemplative Life.




The Contemplative Life.
Exploring contemplative spirituality in the 21st Century...

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Resting in the Ground


“...let us remind ourselves that another, metaphysical, consciousness is still available to modern man. It starts not from the thinking and self-aware subject but from Being, ontologically seen to be beyond and prior to the subject-object division. Underlying the subjective experience of the individual self there is an immediate experience of Being… It has in it none of the split and alienation that occurs when the subject becomes aware of itself as quasi-object. The consciousness of Being is an immediate experience that goes beyond reflexive awareness. It is not ‘consciousness of’ but pure consciousness, in which the subject as such disappears. Posterior to this immediate experience of a ground which transcends experience emerges the subject with its self-awareness.”

Thomas Merton

“We are each like a well that has a source in a common underground stream which supplies all. The deeper down I go, the closer I come to the source which puts me in contact with all other life.”

John Welch


Apophatic spiritual practice, and the experience that flows from it, is often seen as the pinnacle of the contemplative journey. Resting in the Ground is a comparison of various forms of apophatic practice as understood by practitioners from the world’s major contemplative traditions. “God as Ground of Being,” a phrase popularized by Paul Tillich, but attested to by religious texts throughout history, is used as a synthesizing interpretive concept for understanding what is being experienced during apophatic practice.

Major meditative practices and traditions explored include Centering Prayer and the Christian Contemplative Tradition, Mantram and the Vedanta Tradition, Yoga, Zazen, Jhana and the Buddhist Tradition, Dhikr and the Islamic Contemplative Tradition, Kabbalah and the Jewish Contemplative Tradition, and the Taoist Contemplative Tradition.

Also included are reflections on the potential of practicing with agnosticism toward the Ground of Being, how cataphatic experiences may be related to apophatic practice, the embedding of meditation within wider spiritual paths, interpretations of what is sometimes called the “Higher Self” or the “egoless-ego” potentially achieved through meditative practice, and a vision for religious community based on shared silence and the space to practice from within one’s own framework. Resting in the Ground is expected to be released in late 2023.

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A Great Tragedy


“Love makes the ego lose itself in the object it loves, and yet at the same time it wants to have the object as its own. This is a contradiction and a great tragedy of life.”

– D.T. Suzuki, Essays in Zen Buddhism

Tony, unsatisfied with life, decides to leave for a new town.
Perhaps the road will help Tony figure himself out.

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The Evangelical Experience


I am a former Evangelical Christian. Although I am grateful for many ways this tradition has shaped me, I eventually outgrew this conservative brand of faith. In 2015, The Evangelical Experience was published. The book is broadly broken into two sections. In the first section I attempted to describe modern Evangelicalism from an insider’s perspective. Major topics include an overview of Evangelical doctrine, lenses through which Evangelicals view Jesus, uses and views of Scripture, matters of debate within the religion, and the primary marks of Evangelical culture. The effects of accepting Evangelical doctrine, both positive and negative, are also addressed here.

The second section of the book documents my own journey into, and ultimately, out of, the faith. Here I included the stories of my conversion, development, experience in seminary, deconversion, and thoughts on possible ways to move forward. As an appendix I included a journal entry written in the midst of my deconversion which details many of the reasons I felt forced to leave the faith.

Hopefully this book can be a resource for those outside the church who are looking for a better understanding of Evangelical Christianity. I also hope it can be a resource for current Evangelicals who have some of the same doubts and may be exploring other religious options.

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An Introduction to Centering Prayer




An Introduction to Centering Prayer is a short tract which introduces the reader to the discipline of Centering Prayer.

Topics discussed include: (1) The History of Centering Prayer, especially its connection to the anonymous 14th Century work The Cloud of Unknowing; (2) The Method of Centering Prayer as presented by Thomas Keating, including observations and commentary on each of the steps; (3) possible Theological Paradigms to understand the practice with including the Divine Therapy model, the "Union with God" model, and the True Self/False Self model; (4) Natural Effects of the prayer, including control of the mind, distance between "you" and your thoughts, decreased worry and anxiety, non-attachment, and present moment awareness; (5) Centering in the World and the use of the sacred word during the active life; and (6) The Shape of the Journey, especially emphasizing the possible experience of "dark nights" which are associated with this practice.

This tract is simply intended to provide a very brief overview of the practice and lead the reader to further study. A list of Centering Prayer resources is also included, and several of these resources are also found on the Centering Prayer page of this site.


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Jesus as Apocalyptic Prophet in the Gospel of Matthew




The topic addressed in Jesus as Apocalyptic Prophet in the Gospel of Matthew is extremely controversial. One position in Historical Jesus studies, arguably the dominant scholarly position, is that Jesus of Nazareth is best described as an “Apocalyptic Prophet.” Those who promote this position believe that when Jesus proclaimed the “Kingdom of God at hand,” he was expecting an imminent, universal final judgment followed by the arrival of the eschatological Kingdom of God – an eternal, idyllic existence which could be entered only by the righteous. On this view, a central part of Jesus’ message surrounded preparing oneself for this imminent final judgment.

In this tract, I present an eschatological reading of the Gospel of Matthew. Other topics addressed include: (1) defining the term “apocalyptic,” (2) the expectations of the early Church as demonstrated by various New Testament documents, (3) a reading list of scholars who have come to similar conclusions, and (4) potential implications for the life of faith.

This is a very personal subject for me. At one point in my life, it was the topic that drove me out of seminary. Although “Jesus as Apocalyptic Prophet” is a well-known position among scholars, it seems to be virtually unknown to the lay Christian. Whatever one concludes about the historical Jesus, I believe the search for truth entails engaging with this view.


*As of March 2022, my books have all been made Public Domain. Any individual or entity may reproduce my works for sale without my explicit permission. All ebook files and manuscripts are available free of charge here. If you are able, I do ask that you purchase a copy from my Amazon page to support my work on the site.

Aldous Huxley — Blog — The Contemplative Life.

Aldous Huxley — Blog — The Contemplative Life.

Aldous Huxley

Spiritual Training
June 05, 2021 in Aldous Huxley, Comparative Mysticism

“Paradoxical as it may seem, it is, for very many persons, much easier to behave selflessly in a time of crisis than it is when life is taking its normal course in undisturbed tranquility.  When the going is easy, there is nothing to make us forget our precious selfness, nothing (except our own will to mortification and knowledge of God) to distract our minds from the distractions with which we have chosen to be identified; we are at perfect liberty to wallow in our personality to our heart’s content.  And how we wallow!  It is for this reason that all the masters of the spiritual life insist so strongly upon the importance of little things…

The saint is one who knows that every moment of our human life is a moment of crisis; for at every moment we are called upon to make an all-important decision – to chose between the way that leads to death and spiritual darkness and the way that leads towards light and life; between interests exclusively temporal and the eternal order; between our personal will, or the will of some projection of our personality, and the will of God.

In order to fit himself to deal with the emergencies of his way of life, the saint undertakes appropriate training of mind and body, just as the soldier does.  But whereas the objectives of military training are limited and very simple, namely, to make men courageous, cool-headed and co-operatively efficient in the business of killing other men, with whom, personally, they have no quarrel, the objectives of spiritual training are much less narrowly specialized.  Here the aim is primarily to bring human beings to a state in which, because there are no longer any God-eclipsing obstacles between themselves and Reality, they are able to be aware continuously of the divine Ground of their own and all other beings; secondarily, as a means to this end, to meet all, even the most trivial circumstances of daily living without malice, greed, self-assertion or voluntary ignorance, but consistently with love and understanding.  Because its objectives are not limited, because, for the lover of God, every moment is a moment of crisis, spiritual training is incomparably more difficult and searching than military training.  There are many good soldiers, few saints…

What is true of soldiers is also true of saints, but with this important difference – the aim of spiritual training is to make people selfless in every circumstance of life.”


– Aldous Huxley, The Perennial Philosophy

The Age of Noise
November 06, 2020 in Aldous Huxley

"The twentieth century is, among other things, the Age of Noise. Physical noise, mental noise and noise of desire— we hold history’s record for all of them. And no wonder; for all the resources of our almost miraculous technology have been thrown into the current assault against silence. That most popular and influential of all recent inventions, the radio, is nothing but a conduit through which pre-fabricated din can flow into our homes. And this din goes far deeper, of course, than the ear-drums. It penetrates the mind, filling it with a babel of distractions— news items, mutually irrelevant bits of information, blasts of corybantic or sentimental music, continually repeated doses of drama that bring no catharsis, but merely create a craving for daily or even hourly emotional enemas. And where, as in most countries, the broadcasting stations support themselves by selling time to advertisers, the noise is carried from the ears, through the realms of phantasy, knowledge and feeling to the ego’s central core of wish and desire. Spoken or printed, broadcast over the ether or on wood-pulp, all advertising copy has but one purpose— to prevent the will from ever achieving silence. Desirelessness is the condition of deliverance and illumination. The condition of an expanding and technologically progressive system of mass production is universal craving. Advertising is the organized effort to extend and intensify craving— to extend and intensify, that is to say, the workings of that force, which (as all the saints and teachers of all the higher religions have always taught) is the principal cause of suffering and wrong-doing and the greatest obstacle between the human soul and its divine Ground."

 

Half of the battle is just turning off the radio, the TV, the podcasts.  I’m really trying to drastically reduce all of that.  Drive in silence.  Read.  Walk without listening to a podcast.  Most of the time we can’t even hear ourselves think.  The real solutions to our problems need to come from within.  We usually already know what we need to know.  

The Mystics are Boring
December 31, 2017 in Aldous Huxley

"Nevertheless, insofar as they are saints, insofar as they possess the unitive knowledge that makes them 'perfect as their Father which is in heaven is perfect,' they are all astonishingly alike. Their actions are uniformly selfless and they are constantly recollected, so that at every moment they know who they are and what is their true relation to the universe and its spiritual Ground. Of even plain average people it may be said that their name is Legion— much more so of exceptionally complex personalities, who identify themselves with a wide diversity of moods, cravings and opinions. Saints, on the contrary, are neither double-minded nor half-hearted, but single and, however great their intellectual gifts, profoundly simple. The multiplicity of Legion has given place to one-pointedness— not to any of those evil one-pointednesses of ambition or covetousness, or lust for power and fame, not even to any of the nobler, but still all too human one-pointednesses of art, scholarship and science, regarded as ends in themselves, but to the supreme, more than human one-pointedness that is the very being of those souls who consciously and consistently pursue man’s final end, the knowledge of eternal Reality...

...Among the cultivated and mentally active, hagiography is now a very unpopular form of literature. The fact is not at all surprising. The cultivated and the mentally active have an insatiable appetite for novelty, diversity and distraction. But the saints, however commanding their talents and whatever the nature of their professional activities, are all incessantly preoccupied with only one subject— spiritual Reality and the means by which they and their fellows can come to the unitive knowledge of that Reality. And as for their actions— these are as monotonously uniform as their thoughts; for in all circumstances they behave selflessly, patiently and with indefatigable charity. No wonder, then, if the biographies of such men and women remain unread. For one well educated person who knows anything about William Law there are two or three hundred who have read Boswell’s life of his younger contemporary. Why? Because, until he actually lay dying, Johnson indulged himself in the most fascinating of multiple personalities; whereas Law, for all the superiority of his talents was almost absurdly simple and single-minded. Legion prefers to read about Legion. It is for this reason that, in the whole repertory of epic, drama and the novel there are hardly any representations of true theocentric saints."

                                               
                                                                                      – Aldous Huxley, The Perennial Philosophy

 

Real Simplicity
December 24, 2017 in Aldous Huxley

"In the world, when people call anyone simple, they generally mean a foolish, ignorant, credulous person. But real simplicity, so far from being foolish, is almost sublime. All good men like and admire it, are conscious of sinning against it, observe it in others and know what it involves; and yet they could not precisely define it. I should say that simplicity is an uprightness of soul which prevents self-consciousness. It is not the same as sincerity, which is a much humbler virtue. Many people are sincere who are not simple. They say nothing but what they believe to be true, and do not aim at appearing anything but what they are. But they are forever thinking about themselves, weighing their every word and thought, and dwelling upon themselves in apprehension of having done too much or too little. These people are sincere but they are not simple. They are not at their ease with others, nor others with them. There is nothing easy, frank, unrestrained or natural about them. One feels that one would like less admirable people better, who were not so stiff. 

To be absorbed in the world around and never turn a thought within, as in the blind condition of some who are carried away by what is pleasant and tangible, is one extreme as opposed to simplicity. And to be self-absorbed in all matters, whether it be duty to God or man, is the other extreme, which makes a person wise in his own conceit – reserved, self-conscious, uneasy at the least thing which disturbs his inward self-complacency. Such false wisdom, in spite of its solemnity, is hardly less vain and foolish than the folly of those who plunge headlong into worldly pleasures. The one is intoxicated by his outward surroundings, the other by what he believes himself to be doing inwardly; but both are in a state of intoxication, and the last is a worse state than the first, because it seems to be wise, though it is not really, and so people do not try to be cured. Real simplicity lies in a just milieu equally free from thoughtlessness and affectation, in which the soul is not overwhelmed by externals, so as to be unable to reflect, nor yet given up to the endless refinements, which self-consciousness induces. The soul which looks where it is going without losing time arguing over every step, or looking back perpetually, possesses true simplicity. Such simplicity is indeed a great treasure. How shall we attain to it? I would give all I possess for it; it is the costly pearl of Holy Scripture. 

The first step, then, is for the soul to put away outward things and look within so as to know its own real interest; so far all is right and natural; thus much is only wise self-love, which seeks to avoid the intoxication of the world.

In the next step the soul must add the contemplation of God, whom it fears, to that of self. This is a faint approach to the real wisdom, but the soul is still greatly self-absorbed; it is not satisfied with fearing God; it wants to be certain that it does fear him and fears lest it fears him not, going round in a perpetual circle of self-consciousness. All this restless dwelling on self is very far from the peace and freedom of real love; but that is yet in the distance; the soul needs to go through a season of trial, and were it suddenly plunged into a state of rest, it would not know how to use it.

The third step is that, ceasing from a restless self-contemplation, the soul begins to dwell upon God instead, and by degrees forgets itself in Him. It becomes full of Him and ceases to feed upon self. Such a soul is not blinded to its own faults or indifferent to its own errors; it is more conscious of them than ever, and increased light shows them in plainer form, but this self-knowledge comes from God, and therefore it is not restless or uneasy."


– Francois Fenelon, quoted in The Perennial Philosophy

 

 

Island Universes
July 01, 2016 in Aldous Huxley

Ok, one more Huxley quote and I'll be done with him for a bit.  He's just such a fascinating writer.

Here he talks about how we can't ever truly share an experience with anyone.  We are "locked inside" ourselves, and there's really nothing we can ever do about that.  Just interesting to think about...


"We live together, we act on, and react to, one another; but always and in all circumstances we are by ourselves. The martyrs go hand in hand into the arena; they are crucified alone. Embraced, the lovers desperately try to fuse their insulated ecstasies into a single self-transcendence; in vain. By its very nature every embodied spirit is doomed to suffer and enjoy in solitude. Sensations, feelings, insights, fancies – all these are private and, except through symbols and at second hand, incommunicable. We can pool information about experiences, but never the experiences themselves. From family to nation, every human group is a society of island universes."

– Aldous Huxley, The Doors of Perception

Agnostic Meditation
June 26, 2016 in Aldous Huxley

As I continue to develop this site, I am starting with the practices that I feel I know the most about.  My primary spiritual practice is Centering Prayer, what you might call "resting in God," beyond thoughts, images, ideas, and emotions.  You can check out the Centering Prayer page under the Spiritual Practice tab for more.


While I'm in my Centering Prayer writing mode, I wanted to include some extended quotations from an essay by Aldous Huxley entitled Symbol and Immediate Experience from his collection The Divine Within: Selected Writings in Enlightenment.  

What I find most interesting is not only his discussion of a certain type of mystical experience (which I find similar to what can happen during Centering Prayer), but also the idea that you don't have to hold certain religious beliefs to practice these disciplines.  The Transcendental Meditation movement has really moved in this direction and uses almost completely secular language, even though it comes from the explicitly religious Vedic tradition.

So, a few quotations.  Huxley starts by describing "the mystical experience":
 

"Very briefly, let us discuss what is the mystical experience. I take it that the mystical experience is essentially the being aware of and, while the experience lasts, being identified with a form of pure consciousness – of unstructured, transpersonal consciousness, lying, so to speak, upstream from the ordinary discursive consciousness of every day. It is a non-egotistic consciousness, which seems to underlie the consciousness of the separate ego in time. Now, why should this sort of experience be regarded as valuable? I think for two reasons: First of all, it is regarded as valuable because of the self-evident sensibility of value, as William Law would say. It is regarded as intrinsically valuable just as aesthetically the experience of beauty is regarded as valuable. It is like the experience of beauty, but so much more, so to speak. And it is valuable, secondarily, because as a matter of empirical experience it does bring about changes in thought and character and feeling which the experiencer and those about him regard as manifestly desirable. It makes possible a sense of unity, of solidarity, with the world. It brings about the possibility of a kind of universal love and compassion..."


I might alter his statement by saying that this is a mystical experience.  Huxley himself wrote about his experience on mescaline in The Doors of Perception, which he would take to be "mystical" but clearly a different sort of experience than he his describing here.  But "consciousness beyond thought" or "pure consciousness" is, in my opinion, a fair secular way to describe the state potentially reached by Centering Prayer, Transcendental Meditation, and Zen.  

Huxley goes on to discus a method of getting to this state:
 

"Now, very briefly, I must just touch on the means for reaching this state. Here, again, it has been constantly stressed that the means do not consist in mental activity and discursive reasoning. They consist in what Roger Fry, speaking about art, used to call "alert passivity," or "determined sensitiveness." This is a very remarkable phrase. You don't do anything, but you are determined to be sensitive to letting something be done within you. And one has this expressed by some of the great masters of the spiritual life in the West. St. Francois de Sales, for example, writing to his pupil, St. Jeanne de Chantal, says: 'You tell me you do nothing in prayer. But what do you want to do in prayer except what you are doing, which is, presenting and representing your nothingness and misery to God? When beggars expose their ulcers and their necessities to our sight, that is the best appeal they can make. But from what you tell me, you sometimes do nothing of this, but lie there like a shadow or statue. They put statues in palaces simply to please the prince's eyes. Be content to be that in the presence of God: he will bring the statue to life when he pleases.'"


This alert passivity or determined sensitiveness could easily describe what we're trying to do in Centering Prayer.  Although Huxley says he is discussing a method for reaching this state, he doesn't touch on an actual methodology.  Centering Prayer, Transcendental Meditation, and Zazen each, it seems to me, have their own ways of getting you there.  In Centering Prayer you are releasing thoughts and setting an intention to be open to God; in Transcendental Meditation you are focusing the attention on a mantra; in Zazen, you are typically focusing the attention on the breath.  These practices aren't "all just the same thing," but I do think each could potentially take you to this state of consciousness beyond thought.

Huxley concludes by stating that you don't have to have any particular religious belief to experiment with this type of meditation:
 

"And of course if anyone does not want to formulate this process in theological terms he does not have to; it is possible to think of it strictly in psychological terms. I myself happen to believe that this deeper Self within us is in some way continuous with the Mind of the universe, or whatever you like to call it; but you don't necessarily have to accept this. You can practice this entirely in psychological terms and on the basis of a complete agnosticism in regard to the conceptual ideas of orthodox religion. An agnostic can practice these things and yet come to gnosis, to knowledge; and the fruits of knowledge will be the fruits of the Spirit: love, joy, and peace, and the capacity to help other people. So that we see then, there is really no conflict between the mystical approach to religion and the scientific approach, simply because one is not committed by it to any cut and dried statement about the structure of the universe..."


As we find ourselves in an increasingly secular society, this idea that you don't have to hold certain religious ideas to find a contemplative practice clearly removes a barrier for a lot of people.  I'm with Huxley in that I interpret contemplative experience in religious terms.  But I think we will continue to see contemplative practices "unbundled" from their religious contexts.  

The Perennial Philosophy: Review
June 25, 2016 in Book Reviews, Comparative Mysticism, Aldous Huxley

Drawing from primary texts across the spectrum of the world's religious traditions, in The Perennial Philosophy Aldous Huxley synthesizes mystic thought in a variety of areas.  Beginning with what the mystics believe about the nature of reality, Huxley goes on to show how this "Perennial Philosophy" plays itself out in their lives.  A fantastic springboard for exploring primary contemplative texts, there is no better book for an introduction to world mysticism.  


Overview:  Huxley begins by defining the "philosophy of the mystics," what has been called, since Gottfried Leibniz, the Perennial Philosophy because it shows itself in religious traditions across the ages.  In Huxley's words:
 

"Philosophia Perennis – the phrase was coined by Leibniz; but the thing – the metaphysic that recognizes a divine Reality substantial to the world of things and lives and minds; the psychology that finds in the soul something similar to, or even identical with, divine Reality; the ethic that places man's final end in the knowledge of the immanent and transcendent Ground of all being – the thing is immemorial and universal."


Huxley's definition brings together Western personal/theistic thought and Eastern, mostly non-personal, thought into one statement.  To speak roughly in the languages of West and East: 

In Western terms: (1) There is a God who is the Source of existence, (2) God dwells at the core of each human soul, and (3) our ultimate destiny, if we choose it, is union with God.  
In Eastern terms: (1) There is a Spiritual Ground of existence, (2) the core of each human soul is identical with the Spiritual Ground, and (3) our ultimate destiny, if we choose it, is absorption in the Ground.  


Huxley spends his first two chapters, That Art Thou and The Nature of the Ground, expanding on this definition.  In true mystic form, the nature of the Spiritual Ground which lies at the core of each created being is a mystery.  
 

"What is the That to which the thou can discover itself to be akin? To this the fully developed Perennial Philosophy has at all times and in all places given fundamentally the same answer. The divine Ground of all existence is a spiritual Absolute, ineffable in terms of discursive thought, but (in certain circumstances) susceptible of being directly experienced and realized by the human being."


In other words, God can't be defined, He can only be experienced directly.  That, my friends, is mysticism.  The God whom the worshipper may have "known" through their religious texts, doctrine, and faith tradition, suddenly becomes "unknowable."  The mystics are concerned almost exclusively with direct experience of God and how that experience transforms them; theology becomes a secondary matter.  This has, historically, often put them at odds with the official religious institutions they come from.  

After defining and expanding on the core philosophy of the mystics, Huxley spends the rest of the book looking at how this plays out in their lives.  I'll briefly look at three of these chapters:
 

Mortification, Non-Attachment, Right Livelihood:  The way to find God is to die to self.  The goal of the mystic is simply to become an empty vessel through which God may work.  Instead of identifying with the ego, the "I", the normal sense of self, the contemplative identifies with the divine "not-I," what is called the "Higher Self" in some traditions.  The life of the contemplative is thus a life of self-denial, not because self-denial is a good in and of itself, but because it is the ego, our self-will, that separates us from a life of union with God.


The Miraculous:  Here Huxley explores the existence of "miraculous events" and their connection to the mystics.  These type of events – supernatural healings, psychic powers, etc. – are often associated with contemplatives.  Surprisingly, their attitude towards the miraculous is one of indifference and can be summed up by a quote with which Huxley introduces the chapter:
 

"Can you walk on water? You have done no better than a straw. Can you fly in the air? You have done no better than a bluebottle. Conquer your heart; then you may become somebody."

– Ansari of Herat

It is salvation, deliverance, nirvana and how that experience can be lived out in the world that the contemplatives are interested in, not the cultivation of supernatural powers.  


Contemplation, Action and Social Utility:  The contemplatives believe that contemplation, the direct experience of God, is the ultimate end for which humanity is designed.  Action in the world (good works, etc.) may prepare the soul for contemplation, but action is not an end in itself.
 

"In all the historic formulations of the Perennial Philosophy it is axiomatic that the end of human life is contemplation, or the direct and intuitive awareness of God; that action is the means to that end; that a society is good to the extent that it renders contemplation possible for its members; and that the existence of at least a minority of contemplatives is necessary for the well-being of any society."


Ironically, it is also the contemplative, the one who has purified himself of self-will, that will naturally perform true positive action in the world:
 

"...action that is 'taken away from the life of prayer' is action unenlightened by contact with Reality, uninspired and unguided; consequently it is apt to be ineffective and even harmful."


In other chapters, Huxley delves into personal temperament and how it affects religious action, spiritual exercises, the role of ritual and sacrament, and various related topics.  


Personal Reflections:  Some critics think that Huxley finds too much commonality and not enough diversity in world mysticism, that he "makes the pieces fit" what he believes is a common core.  While there is certainly diversity in these traditions, I think Huxley does show that, while the mystics might not speak with one voice, they do often speak in harmony.

This book was life-changing for me.  As I was coming out of conservative religion, it helped me hang on to the belief that religion may, in fact, point to something real.  That even if all of my tightly held theology had been stripped away, I might still find God.  Nihilism works for some people, but it clearly wasn't going to work for me.  And that's where I would be if I hadn't found the contemplative versions of faith that are represented in this book.   

One of the more fascinating ideas that I come back to from The Perennial Philosophy is the idea that "knowledge is a function of being."  If we change ourselves by consciously "dying to self" and becoming selfless, we can change our "knowledge" or experience of the world.  Instead of interpreting the world through the tainted lens of our own needs and wants, our self-interest, we begin to see the world with different eyes.  And the mystics insist that if we can truly cleanse ourselves of our self-interest, the fruit will be a life of love, joy, and peace.  

I can't recommend this book, or Huxley as an author, enough.  If you are interested in world mysticism, start here.  

[Spiritual Practice] Inner Listening — The Quakers - The Contemplative Life.

Inner Listening — The Contemplative Life.



Inner Listening


Inner Listening is a form of spirituality practiced among adherents of most of the world's theistic faiths. Inner Listening is usually interpreted as "listening to God," and can be facilitated by methods such as Lectio Divina or Imaginative Prayer. This form of spirituality is perhaps most associated with the Quakers.


The Quakers


The Religious Society of Friends, more commonly called The Quakers, are a Christian sect stemming from religious revival in 17th Century England. This revival, led by George Fox, emphasized individual spiritual experience over conventional religious structures. Specifically, faith is placed in the leading of what the community calls the "Inner Light."

Quakerism was, and is, a diverse religious movement and includes branches which affirm traditional Christian theology as well as branches which do not promote any doctrinal beliefs. Individual Quaker congregations also often display this diversity, and commonly contain members who approach the faith from widely different theological, or perhaps non-theological, perspectives. The common tie that unites those within the movement is a commitment to the practice of Quaker worship.


Quaker Worship

In traditional Quaker worship, a group gathers and simply sits together in silence, awaiting the guidance of the "Inner Light." Most often, the Inner Light is experienced privately and is interpreted as speaking to one's unique personal situation. Occasionally, these long periods of silence are broken by a community member who feels led to share a message with the group. This action, again, is seen as being directed by the Inner Light, which is shared by each worshiper.

A modern service typically lasts one hour, though gatherings may have lasted up to three hours in the 17th Century.



Interpretation of The Inner Light


The concept of the Inner Light, which worshipers "listen to" during worship, is interpreted in a variety of ways within the faith. The most common way Quakers talk about the Inner Light is through traditionally theistic language. Terms used to refer to the Inner Light include "that of God" which is in everyone, "God within," the "seed of God," and the "light of Christ" (for those who hold conventionally Christian beliefs).

Others may not use theological language when describing this Inner Voice, and may conceptualize it as one's Deepest Self. There is no official Quaker interpretation of what happens during worship; the uniting factor is the practice itself.



Communal Decision Making


One other unique practice within Quakerism is communal decision making. When Quaker congregations make decisions affecting the group, they typically will not move forward without the consensus of the entire congregation. Business meetings are conducted in a prayerful way and often begin with formal worship. In this way, trust in the personal leading of the Inner Light flows into trust in the communal leading of the Inner Light. If there are significant dissenting voices to a potential decision, it is often interpreted as a sign that more discernment is required. Final decisions are usually delayed until consensus is reached.




Resources



Print
Philip Gulley, Living the Quaker Way. New York: Convergent, 2013.
Pink Dandelion, The Quakers: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.
George Fox (Rufus Jones ed.), The Journal of George Fox. New York: Friends United Press, 1976.
Jim Pym, Listening to the Light. New York: Ebury, 2010.

Audio/Video
What to Expect at a Quaker Meeting
Perspective on Quaker Worship
Quakers and the Inner Light
The Quaker Practice of Discernment


For more on Quakers in the United States, visit Quaker.org. Not all local chapters/communities are represented on the national site.

[Spiritual Practice] Meditative Kabbalah — The Contemplative Life.

Meditative Kabbalah — The Contemplative Life.

Meditative Kabbalah


Kabbalah, the mystical strand within Judaism, is arguably the most esoteric of the world's major contemplative traditions. While visions, the attainment of secret wisdom and powers, numerology, the practice of decoding texts to predict future events, etc. have a limited place on the fringes in most schools of mysticism, in Kabbalah these eccentricities are more front and center. The philosophy and forms of spirituality that have developed within Kabbalah are largely dependent on a group of writings called The Zohar, the movement's fundamental text.


The Zohar


The Zohar is an extremely large collection of writings that most likely originated in the 13th Century with a Spanish Jewish mystic named Moses de Leon. Although Moses claimed to be simply transmitting ancient texts (traditionally the bulk of the Zohar is attributed to a 2nd Century Rabbi – Simon bar Yochai – with some portions being attributed to Abraham or even Adam), most scholars believe that Moses de Leon himself, perhaps with a group of other kabbalists, authored most of the writings while drawing on earlier texts. The Zohar is primarily an imaginative story which uses the text of Torah as a springboard; in this regard it shares similarities with a method of Jewish commentary on Scripture called midrash. A primary focus of the Zohar is the Sefirot.


The Sefirot


The Sefirot are conceptualized as a description of the inner workings of God – a sort of "Divine map" that portrays various aspects of God's nature and, therefore, the nature of existence. The entire schema is often referred to as the Tree of Life, and consists of 10 Sefirot.





The Sefirot include:
  • Keter – "crown" or "source," represents the unknowable essence of God
  • Chochmah – "wisdom," represents the knowledge of God
  • Binah – "understanding" or "empathy," represents divine motherly wisdom
  • Chesed – "love" or "mercy," represents the compassion of God
  • Gvurah – "judgment," represents the divine justice
  • Tiferet – "beauty" or "harmony," represents the balance of love and justice
  • Netzach – "creativity," represents the creative power of God
  • Hod – "prophecy," represents creativity made concrete
  • Yesod – "reproductive energy" or "foundation," the will of God to create
  • Malchut – "kingdom," represents the material world


Meditative Practice: The Divine Names and the Hebrew Alphabet


Various methods of meditation have been used within the Kabbalistic tradition. Although no one single method can be said to be "normative," one of the most popular forms of meditation focuses on a Divine Name and/or a sequence of Hebrew letters.

The use of various Divine Names for meditation is strikingly similar to the Sufi concept of Dhikr

In this method, one chooses a name of God that is appropriate to their situation. A Kabbalist might use one of a variety of names for God in the Hebrew Scriptures such as Adonai ("Absolute Lordship"), El Shaddai ("The Almighty"), Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh ("I Am that I Am"), etc. The name is then repeated as a mantra, sometimes accompanied by various breathing techniques. 

 The interpretations of what happens during this type of meditation range from 
stilling the mind or "moving beyond thought to the experience of God" (i.e. similar to Centering Prayer
the Buddhist concept of Samadhi, etc.) to the acquisition of special powers.

 Kabbalists tend to be more prone to assigning, for lack of a better term, "magical powers" to the Divine Names or symbols than those from other contemplative faiths.

A unique meditative technique to Kabbalah is the use of Hebrew alphabetical characters as objects of concentration. In Kabbalistic cosmology, God creates the universe by combining various Hebrew letters. To create a tree, He simply combines the letters that spell "tree" in Hebrew; to create the sky, He combines the letters that spell "sky," etc. Thus it is thought that combining certain Hebrew characters as objects for meditation will produce different effects for the practitioner.


Devekut

One concept that potentially unites various practices in the Jewish mystical tradition is that of Devekut – "clinging to God." 
Through meditative practices, Torah study, following the Commandments, and the performance of good works, one seeks to join their soul to God's, or "cling to" God, both in times of prayer and in daily life.




Resources


Print
Daniel Matt, The Essential Kabbalah: The Heart of Jewish Mysticism. San Francisco: Harper Collins, 2006.
Elizabeth Clare, Kabbalah. Gardiner: Summit Press, 1997.
Rav P. S. Berg, The Essential Zohar. New York: Three Rivers, 2002.

Audio/Video
Gnosis: Secrets of the Kabbalah

[Spiritual Practice] Metta "Lovingkindness" Meditation — The Contemplative Life.

Metta "Lovingkindness" Meditation — The Contemplative Life.



Metta “Lovingkindness” Meditation


Metta, sometimes referred to as lovingkindness meditation (metta simply means "lovingkindness"), is a distinct form of Buddhist practice. By practicing metta meditation, one hopes to cultivate an attitude of lovingkindness first toward themselves, and then outwards, toward other people. This form of meditation is sometimes associated with Right Effort, the sixth branch of the traditional Buddhist Noble Eightfold Path.


Method


There are many different ways to practice lovingkindness meditation. Oftentimes metta is performed as a guided meditation, with a "script" from either a teacher or a printed resource. One of the most common forms that these guided meditations take is a progression from a lovingkindness wish for oneself, to a lovingkindness wish for another person, and finally to a lovingkindness wish for a particular group or the whole world.

In the preface to Thomas Merton's Contemplative Prayer, Thich Nhat Hanh gives a traditional example of this type of prayer:


"May I be peaceful, happy, and light in body and spirit.
May he/she be peaceful, happy, and light in body and spirit.
May they be peaceful happy, and light in body and spirit."

"May I be free from injury. May I live in safety.
May he/she be free from injury. May he/she live in safety.
May they be free from injury. May they live in safety."

"May I be free from disturbance, fear, anxiety, and worry.
May he/she be free from disturbance, fear, anxiety, and worry.
May they be free from disturbance, fear, anxiety, and worry."


Many examples of guided metta meditations are available online.



Right Effort





In Buddhist thought, part of the spiritual path is displaying "right effort," or the use of the will to develop wholesome states of mind. Lovingkindness meditation is often associated with Right Effort, as it involves a conscious use of the will aimed at cultivating a positive state.

Traditionally, right effort is directed toward four goals:



To prevent the arising of unarisen unwholesome states


To abandon unwholesome states that have already arisen


To arouse wholesome states that have not yet arisen


To maintain and perfect wholesome states already arisen


In Lovingkindness meditation, the focus is on the final two of these goals, arousing and maintaining wholesome states of mind.











Resources



Print
Various, Metta: The Practice of Lovingkindness. New York: Windhorse Publications, 2004.
Acariya Buddharakkhita, Meta: Philosophy and Practice of Universal Love. Buddhist Publication Society, 1989.
Tulku Thondup, The Heart of Unconditional Love. Boston: Shambhala, 2015.
Sharon Salzberg, Lovingkindness. Boston: Shambhala, 1995.
Bhikkhu Bodhi, The Noble Eightfold Path. Onalaska: Pariyatti, 1984.

Audio/Video
Guided Lovingkindness Meditation
Guided Metta
Bhante Vimalaramsi Explains Metta Meditation

묵상 - 위키백과, Contemplation

묵상 - 위키백과, 우리 모두의 백과사전

묵상

위키백과, 우리 모두의 백과사전.

묵상(默想, 영어contemplation)은 특정 대상을 깊게 생각하는 행위이며 종교적인 관점에서 묵상은 기도 및 명상을 수행하는 방법 중 하나이다.

The Spirit of Contemplation 알버트 토프트 제작

역사[편집]

묵상은 플라톤 철학의 중요한 부분이었다. 플라톤은 묵상을 통해 영혼이 좋은 형태 나 다른 신성한 형태의 지식으로 올라갈 것이라고 생각했다. Plotinus as a (neo) Platonic 철학자는 또한 henosis에 도달하기위한 가장 중요한 구성 요소로서 숙고를 표현했다. 플롯 티 누스 (Plotinus)에게 하나님, 모나드 또는 하나라는 비전을 경험하는 것이 가장 큰 묵상이었다. Plotinus는 Enneads의 작품에서이 묵상의 경험을 묘사한다. 그의 학생 반암 (Porphyry)에 따르면 플롯 티 누스 (Plotinus)는 그가 4 번이 경험을 했다고 말했다. Plotinus는 Enneads 6.9.xx에서 자신의 묵상에 대한 경험을 썼다 ....

개요[편집]

묵상이라는 단어는 라틴어 단어 contemplatio에서 파생된다. 그것의 뿌리는 또한 라틴어 단어 templum, 후원의 받음을 위해 봉헌 된 땅 조각, 또는 예배를위한 건물, Proto-Indo-European 기초 가 되었고 유럽에서 기초 -"스트레칭 "- 따라서 제단 앞의 정리 된 공간을 가리킨다. 라틴어 단어 contemplatio는 그리스어 θεωρία (theòría)를 묵상의 의미를 번역하는 데 사용되었다.

명상과 묵상의 차이점[편집]

기독교에서 묵상이란 살아있는 현실로서의 하느님에 대한 인식을 향한 내용없는 마음을 의미한다. 이것은 어떤면에서 동양 종교에서 기도를 하는 행위인 사마 디 (samadhi)라고 불리는 것에 해당한다. 한편 서양 교회에서 수세기 동안 묵상은 이그나 티아 운동이나 개종자와 같이 성서적 장면을 시각화하는 것과 같은 것에서 활발한 수행과정으로 연습을 언급했다. 

정신 분야 전문가는 "성경의 내용을 듣고 "마음의 귀"는 마치 그 또는 그녀가 하나님과 대화하고있는 것처럼, 그리고 하나님은 토론 할 주제를 제안하고 계신다.라고 묵상의 목표를 제시했다[출처 필요]

토마스 아퀴나스는 묵상에 관하여 다음과 같이 썼다. "인간 공동체의 유익을 위해서는 묵상의 삶에 헌신하는 사람들이 있어야한다." 토마스 아퀴나스를 연구한 독일인 기독교 철학자 조셉 피퍼(Josef Pieper)는 다음과 같이 논평했다. "인간 사회의 한가운데에 보존되어있는 진실성은 한 번에 동시에 쓸모 없으며 모든 가능한 사용에 대한 척도가 된다. 따라서 진실을 유지하는 것도 고려 중이다. 눈에 보이는것에서 사라지면 이때 삶의 모든 실제 행동에 의미를 부여합니다. "[출처 필요]

같이 보기[편집]

===

熟考

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関連項目[編集]

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默觀[编辑]

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默觀(英語:Contemplation),基督教術語,意思是透過祈禱默想,來感受到上帝的力量,是一種對於上帝,單純的直覺凝視,因此能夠看見上帝的神聖本質,在神秘主義靈修有著重要的地位。

字根[编辑]

它的字根來自於拉丁語contemplatio,意思是觀看、持續的注目。拉丁語contemplatio則源自於拉丁語templum,它是在占卜之前,由占卜者劃出的空間,讓他可以在其中觀察神靈的力量。這個字譯自於希臘語θεωρία(Theoria),有割開、切斷的意思,是神聖與平凡人世之間的界線。

参见[编辑]


===

Contemplation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kamppi Chapel in Helsinki City Centre is a community centre, assigned for contemplation.
Nature contemplation

In a religious context, the practice of contemplation seeks a direct awareness of the divine which transcends the intellect, often in accordance with prayer or meditation.[1]

Etymology[edit]

The word contemplation is derived from the Latin word contemplatio, ultimately from the Latin word templum, a piece of ground consecrated for the taking of auspices, or a building for worship. The latter either derives from the Proto-Indo-European root *tem- ("to cut"), on notion of "place reserved or cut out", or from the root *temp- ("to stretch, string"), thus referring to a cleared (measured) space in front of an altar.[2][3] The Latin word contemplatio was used to translate the Greek word θεωρία (theōría).

Greek philosophy[edit]

Contemplation was an important part of the philosophy of Plato; Plato thought that through contemplation, the soul may ascend to knowledge of the Form of the Good or other divine Forms.[4] 

Plotinus as a (neo)Platonic philosopher also expressed contemplation as the most critical of components for one to reach henosis. [mystical "oneness", "union" or "unity"]

To Plotinus the highest contemplation was to experience the vision of God, the Monad or the One. Plotinus describes this experience in his works the Enneads. According to his student Porphyry, Plotinus stated that he had this experience of God four times.[5] Plotinus wrote about his experience in Enneads 6.9.

Judaism[edit]

A number of sources have described the importance of contemplation in Jewish traditions, especially in Jewish meditation.[6] Contemplation was central to the teaching of the Jewish philosopher Maimonides, who taught that contemplating God involves recognizing moral perfection, and that one must interrupt contemplation to attend to the poor.[7] Contemplation has also been central to the Musar movement.[8]

Islam[edit]

In Islamic tradition, it is said that Muhammad would go into the desert, climb a mountain known as Mount Hira, and seclude himself from the world. While on the mountain, he would contemplate life and its meaning.[9]

Bahai Faith[edit]

Baha'u'llah and Abdu'l-Baha wrote about contemplation and meditation in regards to reflecting on beauty, the Kingdom of God, science, and the arts. Abdu'l-Baha stated that "the sign of the intellect is contemplation and the sign of contemplation is silence... he cannot both speak and meditate".[10]

Christianity[edit]

A woman places rosary beads on a devotional image mounted on the wall beside her bed.[11] The Walters Art Museum.

In Eastern Christianity, contemplation (theoria) literally means to see God or to have the Vision of God.[note 1] The state of beholding God, or union with God, is known as theoria. The process of Theosis which leads to that state of union with God known as theoria is practiced in the ascetic tradition of Hesychasm. Hesychasm is to reconcile the heart and the mind into one thing (see nous).[note 2]

Contemplation in Eastern Orthodoxy is expressed in degrees as those covered in St John ClimacusLadder of Divine Ascent. The process of changing from the old man of sin into the newborn child of God and into our true nature as good and divine is called Theosis.

This is to say that once someone is in the presence of God, deified with him, then they can begin to properly understand, and there "contemplate" God. This form of contemplation is to have and pass through an actual experience rather than a rational or reasoned understanding of theory (see Gnosis). Whereas with rational thought one uses logic to understand, one does the opposite with God (see also Apophatic theology).

The anonymously authored 14th century English contemplative work The Cloud of Unknowing makes clear that its form of practice is not an act of the intellect, but a kind of transcendent 'seeing,' beyond the usual activities of the mind - "The first time you practice contemplation, you'll experience a darkness, like a cloud of unknowing. You won't know what this is... this darkness and this cloud will always be between you and your God... they will always keep you from seeing him clearly by the light of understanding in your intellect and will block you from feeling Him fully in the sweetness of love in your emotions. So be sure to make your home in this darkness... We can't think our way to God... that's why I'm willing to abandon everything I know, to love the one thing I cannot think. He can be loved, but not thought."[14]

Within Western Christianity contemplation is often related to mysticism as expressed in the works of mystical theologians such as Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross as well as the writings of Margery KempeAugustine Baker and Thomas Merton.[15]

Dom Cuthbert Butler notes that contemplation was the term used in the Latin Church to refer to mysticism, and "'mysticism' is a quite modern word".[16]

Meditation[edit]

In Christianity, contemplation refers to a content-free mind directed towards the awareness of God as a living reality.[citation needed] This corresponds, in some ways, to what in Eastern religion is called samadhi.[17][18] Meditation, on the other hand, for many centuries in the Western Church, referred to more cognitively active exercises, such as visualizations of Biblical scenes as in the Ignatian exercises or lectio divina in which the practitioner "listens to the text of the Bible with the 'ear of the heart', as if he or she is in conversation with God, and God is suggesting the topics for discussion."[19]

In Catholic Christianity, contemplation is given importance. The Catholic Church's "model theologian", St. Thomas Aquinas wrote: "It is requisite for the good of the human community that there should be persons who devote themselves to the life of contemplation." One of his disciples, Josef Pieper commented: "For it is contemplation which preserves in the midst of human society the truth which is at one and the same time useless and the yardstick of every possible use; so it is also contemplation which keeps the true end in sight, gives meaning to every practical act of life."[20] Pope John Paul II in the Apostolic Letter "Rosarium Virginis Mariae" referred specifically to the catholic devotion of the Holy Rosary as "an exquisitely contemplative prayer" and said that "By its nature the recitation of the Rosary calls for a quiet rhythm and a lingering pace, helping the individual to meditate on the mysteries of the Lord's life as seen through the eyes of her who was closest to the Lord. In this way the unfathomable riches of these mysteries are disclosed."[21]

According to Aquinas, the highest form of life is the contemplative which communicates the fruits of contemplation to others, since it is based on the abundance of contemplation (contemplari et contemplata aliis tradere) (ST, III, Q. 40, A. 1, Ad 2).

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos: "The vision of the uncreated light, which offers knowledge of God to man, is sensory and supra-sensory. The bodily eyes are reshaped, so they see the uncreated light, "this mysterious light, inaccessible, immaterial, uncreated, deifying, eternal", this "radiance of the Divine Nature, this glory of the divinity, this beauty of the heavenly kingdom" (3,1,22;CWS p.80). Palamas asks: "Do you see that light is inaccessible to senses which are not transformed by the Spirit?" (2,3,22). St. Maximus, whose teaching is cited by St. Gregory, says that the Apostles saw the uncreated Light "by a transformation of the activity of their senses, produced in them by the Spirit" (2.3.22).[12]
  2. ^ pelagia.org: "Stillness of the body is a limiting of the body. 'The beginning of hesychia is godly rest' (3). The intermediate stage is that of 'illuminating power and vision; and the end is ecstasy or rapture of the nous towards God' (4). St. John of the Ladder, referring to outward, bodily stillness, writes: 'The lover of stillness keeps his mouth shut' (5). But it is not only those called neptic Fathers who mention and describe the holy atmosphere of hesychia, it is also those known as 'social'. Actually in the Orthodox tradition there is no direct opposition between theoria and praxis, nor between the neptic and social Fathers. The neptics are eminently social and those in community are unimaginably neptic."[13]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Home : Oxford English Dictionary"www.oed.com. Retrieved 2021-09-28.
  2. ^ "temple | Search Online Etymology Dictionary"Etymonline. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
  3. ^ Vaan, Michiel de (2018). Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages. Brill. pp. 610–611. ISBN 978-90-04-16797-1.
  4. ^ Plato: Critical Assessments, Nicholas D. Smith, Routledge, 1998. ISBN 0-415-12605-3
  5. ^ See the Life of Plotinus
  6. ^ "Meditation Grows in Popularity Among Jews : Contemplation: The rediscovery of ancient tradition makes it a port of re-entry to Judaism, proponents say"Los Angeles Times. 1993-01-30. Retrieved 2019-12-09.
  7. ^ Seeskin, Kenneth (1991). Maimonides: A Guide for Today's Perplexed. Behrman House, Inc. p. 110. ISBN 978-0-87441-509-4.
  8. ^ Morinis, Alan (2008-12-02). Everyday Holiness: The Jewish Spiritual Path of Mussar. Shambhala Publications. ISBN 978-0-8348-2221-4.
  9. ^ Bogle, Emory C. (1998). Islam: Origin and Belief. Texas University Press. p. 6ISBN 0-292-70862-9.
  10. ^ "Paris Talks | Bahá'í Reference Library".
  11. ^ "Devotion (Contemplation)"The Walters Art Museum.
  12. ^ Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos (2005), Orthodox Psychotherapy, section The Knowledge of God according to St. Gregory Palamas. Birth of Theotokos Monastery, Greece, ISBN 978-960-7070-27-2
  13. ^ pelagia.org, Orthodox Psychotherapy Archived 2012-01-02 at the Wayback Machine, section on Stillness and Prayer.
  14. ^ Excerpt from the Shambhala edition, translated by Carmen Acevedo Butcher [1]
  15. ^ "Contemplation"Catholic Encyclopedia, New Advent. Retrieved March 19, 2008.
  16. ^ Western Mysticism: Augustine, Gregory and Bernard on Contemplation and the Contemplative Life, by Dom Cuthbert Butler. Dover: Mineola, NY, 2003, p.4.
  17. ^ [2], samannaphala sutta Digha-Nikaya-2
  18. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-05-04. Retrieved 2010-10-26., Patanjali, Yoga Sutras
  19. ^ A contemporary discussion of differences between meditatio and contemplatio is available in Father Thomas Keating's book on contemplative centering prayer, Open Mind, Open Heart: The Contemplative Dimension of the Gospel (1986) ISBN 0-8264-0696-3. Brief descriptions of centering prayer and lectio divina are available online at http://www.contemplativeoutreach.org/.
  20. ^ "Says Pope a Universal Voice for the World" Archived 2008-02-05 at the Wayback Machine, Carrie Gross, February 1, 2008, Zenit.org.
  21. ^ "Rosarium Virginis Mariae on the Most Holy Rosary (October 16, 2002) | John Paul II".

Further reading[edit]

  • Butler, CuthbertWestern Mysticism: Augustine, Gregory and Bernard on Contemplation and the Contemplative Life. Dover, Mineola, New York, 2003. 2nd ed. (Originally published by E.P. Dutton, London 1926). ISBN 0-486-43142-8
  • Papanikolaou, Aristotle. Being With God. University of Notre Dame Press, 2006. ISBN 0-268-03830-9
  • Plested, Marcus.The Macarian Legacy: The Place of Macarius-Symeon in the Eastern Christian Tradition. Oxford Theological Monographs, 2004. ISBN 0-19-926779-0
  • Staniloae, DumitruThe Experience of God: Revelation and Knowledge of the Triune God. Orthodox Dogmatic Theology, Volume 1. Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 2005. ISBN 0-917651-70-7

External links[edit]


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