Showing posts with label PerennialSufi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PerennialSufi. Show all posts

2022/05/08

In Search of The Sacred With Seyyed Hossein Nasr | PDF | Sufism | Relationship Between Religion And Science

In Search of The Sacred With Seyyed Hossein Nasr | PDF | Sufism | Relationship Between Religion And Science

In Search of The Sacred With Seyyed Hossein Nasr


2022/05/01

Paths To The Heart: Sufism and the Christian East - Cutsinger, James S.

Paths To The Heart: Sufism and the Christian East - Kindle edition by Cutsinger, James S.. Religion & Spirituality Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.

https://archive.org/details/pathstoheartsufi0000unse






Paths To The Heart: Sufism and the Christian East 
Kindle Edition
by James S. Cutsinger (Author) 
Publication date 2002

Topics 
Orthodox Eastern Church -- Relations -- Islam, Islam -- Relations -- Orthodox Eastern Church, Islam -- Relations -- Christianity, Christianity and other religions -- Islam
===
Description
This book is a collection of essays concerning the mystical and contemplative dimensions of Eastern Christianity and Islam presented at the October 2001 conference on Hesychasm and Sufism at the University of South Carolina. Contributions from internationally recognized spiritual leaders and scholars include Kallistos Ware; Seyyed Hossien Nasr; John Chryssavgis; Reza Shah-Kazemi; Huston Smith; Williams Chittick and more.

Despite the long and well-known history of conflict between Christians and Muslims, their mystical traditions especially in the Christian East and in Sufism, have shared for centuries many of the same spiritual methods and goals. One thinks, for example, of the profound similarities between the practices of the Jesus Prayer among the Hesychast masters of the Philokalia and the Sufi practices of dhikr or invocation.

These commonalities suggest the possibility for a deeper kind of religious dialogue than is customary in our day, a dialogue which seeks to foster what Frithjof Schuon has called inward or "esoteric" ecumenism, and which, while respecting the integrity of traditional dogmas and rites, "calls into play the wisdom which can discern the one sole Truth under the veil of different forms."

The purpose of this book, the first major publication of its kind, is to promote precisely this more inward kind of ecumenical perspective. These essays point to a spiritual heart in which the deeper meaning of Christian and Muslim beliefs and practices come alive, and where spiritual pilgrims may discover, beyond the level of seemingly contradictory forms, an inner commonality with those who follow other paths.

===










































Table of Contents for Paths to the Heart


Foreword

Dimensions of the Heart

How Do We Enter the Heart?
Kallistos Ware

St Seraphim of Sarov in Sufic Perspective
Gray Henry

The Heart of the Faithful is the Throne ofthe All-Merciful
Seyyed Hossein Nasr


The Path of Remembrance

On the Cosmology of Dhikr
William C. Chittick

Presence, Participation, Performance: TheRemembrance of God in the Early Hesychast Fathers
Vincent Rossi

Paths of Continuity: Contemporary Witnesses ofthe Hesychast Experience
John Chryssavgis


Toward an Esoteric Ecumenism

The Metaphysics of Interfaith Dialogue:Sufi Perspectives on the Universality of theQuranic Message
Reza Shah-Kazemi

A Unity with Distinctions: Parallels in theThought of St Gregory Palamas and Ibn Arabi
Peter Samsel

Hesychia: An Orthodox Opening to EsotericEcumenism
James S. Cutsinger


Conclusions

The Long Way Home
Huston Smith

Panel Discussion


Contributors
===
Excerpts from Paths to the Heart

Excerpted from Chapter 1:

How Do We Enter the Heart?
by Kallistos Ware, Bishop of Diokleia

Within the heart is an unfathomable depth.

—The Macarian Homilies

Le Point Vierge

     In the experience of almost everyone there have surely been certain texts—passages in poetry or prose—which, once heard or read, have never been forgotten. For most of us, these decisive texts are probably few in number; but, rare though they may be, they have permanently altered our lives, and they have helped to make us what we are. One such text, so far as my own life journey is concerned, is a paragraph on le point vierge, “the virgin point”, in Thomas Merton’s Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander (definitely my firm favorite among his many books):
At the center of our being is a point of nothingness which is untouched by sin and by illusion, a point of pure truth, a point or spark which belongs entirely to God, which is never at our disposal, from which God disposes of our lives, which is inaccessible to the fantasies of our own mind or the brutalities of our own will. This little point of nothingness and of absolute poverty is the pure glory of God in us. It is so to speak his name written in us, as our poverty, as our indigence, as our dependence, as our sonship. It is like a pure diamond, blazing with the invisible light of heaven. It is in everybody, and if we could see it we would see these billions of points of light coming together in the face and blaze of a sun that would make all the darkness and cruelty of life vanish completely. . . . I have no program for this seeing. It is only given. But the gate of heaven is everywhere.(1)
     Here Thomas Merton is seeking to elucidate the moment of disclosure which came to him on 18 March 1958, and which he recorded in his journal on the following day: “Yesterday, in Louisville, at the corner of 4th and Walnut, suddenly realized that I loved all the people and that none of them were or could be totally alien to me. As if waking from a dream—the dream of my separateness.” (2) It is noteworthy that, when attempting later on in his Conjectures to understand what was clearly for him an experience of intense visionary insight, Merton makes use of a term, le point vierge, which he had derived from Sufi sources. He had come across this phrase in the writings of the renowned French Orientalist Louis Massignon, with whom he had been in correspondence during the year 1960. Massignon in his turn employed the phrase when expounding the mystical psychology of the tenth-century Muslim saint and martyr al-Hallâj, whose custom it was to say, “Our hearts are a virgin that God’s truth alone opens.” (3)
     Significantly al-Hallâj refers in this context to the heart. This word does not actually occur in the passage quoted above from Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander, but Merton is in fact describing precisely what the Christian East has in view when it speaks in its ascetic and mystical theology about the “deep heart” (see Psalm 63:7 [64:6]). By “the virgin point” Massignon, interpreting al-Hallâj, means “the last, irreducible, secret center of the heart”, “the latent personality, the deep subconscious, the secret cell walled up [and hidden] to every creature, the ‘inviolate virgin’”, which “remains unformed” until visited by God; to discover this virgin point is to return to our origin. (4) Thus le point vierge or the innermost heart is, in the words of Dorothy C. Buck, the place “where God alone has access and human and Divine meet”; it embodies “the sacredness hidden in the depth of every human soul”. (5)
     This is exactly what is signified by the “deep heart” in the neptic(6) theology of the Orthodox Church. St Mark the Monk (? fifth century), for example, speaks of “the innermost, secret and uncontaminated chamber of the heart . . . the innermost and untroubled treasury of the heart, where the winds of evil spirits do not blow”. According to Mark the Monk, it is to this hidden temenos that Christ is alluding when he states, “The Kingdom of God is within you” (Luke 17:21), and when he talks about “the good treasure of the heart” (Luke 6:45). (7) A similar understanding of the heart is beautifully expressed by the Roman Catholic Benedictine Henri le Saux, who wrote under the name Swami Abishiktananda, when he terms it “the place of our origin . . . in which the soul is, as it were, coming from the hands of God and waking up to itself”. (8) In the words of another Roman Catholic author, the Dominican Richard Kehoe, “The ‘heart’ is the very deepest and truest self, not attained except through sacrifice, through death.” (9)
     It is immediately apparent that St Mark the Monk, al-Hallâj, and Merton share in common an all-important conviction concerning the character of this deep or innermost heart. For all three of them it is something pure, inviolate, inaccessible to evil; and specifically for this reason it can rightly be described as “the virgin point”. Thus Mark says of the “secret chamber of the heart” that it is “uncontaminated”, “untroubled”, a hidden sanctuary “where the winds of evil spirits do not blow”. For al-Hallâj it is opened by “God’s truth alone”. Likewise Merton insists that it is “untouched by sin and by illusion, a point of pure truth, a point or spark which belongs entirely to God”. While the outer levels of the heart are a battleground between the forces of good and evil, this is not true of the innermost depth of the heart. As “the virgin point” the deep heart belongs only to God. It is pre-eminently the place of Divine immanence, the locus of God’s indwelling.

1.  Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander (New York: Doubleday, 1966), p. 142.
2.  The Intimate Merton: His Life from His Journals, ed. Patrick Hart and Jonathan Montaldo (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 2001), p. 124.
3.  See Sidney H. Griffith, “Merton, Massignon, and the Challenge of Islam”, in Merton and Sufism: The Untold Story: A Complete Compendium, ed. Rob Baker and Gray Henry (Louisville: Fons Vitae, 1999), pp. 63-64.
4.  Griffith, p. 65.
5.   “Mary and the Virgin Heart: A Reflection on the Writings of Louis Massignon and Hallaj”, Sufi, 24 (1994-95), p. 8; Sufi, 28 (1995-96), p. 8.
6.   “Neptic”: from the word nepsis, meaning sobriety, vigilance, spiritual insight. “Neptic theology”, in the Eastern Orthodox Church, includes the realms of both “ascetical theology” and “mystical theology”, as these are understood in the Roman Catholic tradition. For the importance of the term nepsis, note the
Greek title of The Philokalia, a classic collection of Orthodox spiritual writings from the fourth to the fifteenth centuries: “The Philokalia of the Holy Neptic [Fathers]”.
7.  Mark the Monk (alias Mark the Ascetic or Marcus Eremita), “On Baptism”, §§4, 5, 11 (Patrologia Graeca [PG] 65: 996C, 1005 BCD, 1016 D), ed. Georges-Matthieu de Durand, Sources chrétiennes 445 (Paris: Cerf, 1999), pp. 322, 342-43, 368.
8.  Abishiktananda, Prayer (London: SPCK, 1972), p. 54.
9.   “The Scriptures as Word of God”, in The Eastern Churches Quarterly, VII, Supplementary Issue on “Tradition and Scripture” (1947), p. 78.




===
4.7 out of 5 stars 15 ratings

Part of: Perennial Philosophy (47 books)

Despite the long and well-known history of conflict between Christians and Muslims, their mystical traditions especially in the Christian East and in Sufism, have shared for centuries many of the same spiritual methods and goals. 
The purpose of this book, the first major publication of its kind, is to promote precisely this more inward kind of ecumenical perspective. 
These essays point to a spiritual heart in which the deeper meaning of Christian and Muslim beliefs and practices come alive, and 
where spiritual pilgrims may discover, beyond the level of seemingly contradictory forms, an inner commonality with those who follow other paths.

289 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
... opens the way for a deep healing of the wounds of ignorance that have arisen ... between ... two great traditions. -- Alan Godlas, Professor of Islamic Studies, University of Georgia

Professor Cutsinger is to be congratulated for having organized such a memorable interchange of opinions. -- Martin Lings, formerly Keeper of Oriental Manuscripts in the British Museum and author of Mohammed: His Life According to the Earliest Sources

The essays in Paths ... evidence a rare combination of intellectual rigor, breadth of spirit, and deep personal faith. -- Scott C. Alexander, Director of Catholic-Muslim Studies, Catholic Theological Union

This book is a spiritual treasure to be read and to be lived. -- Albert J. Raboteau, Henry W. Putnam Professor of Religion, Princeton University

[An] informative study of the common threads and traits shared between the traditions of the Christian East and Islamic Sufism. -- The Midwest Book Review --This text refers to the paperback edition.


About the Author 
James S. Cutsinger

A widely recognized authority on the Sophia Perennis and the Perennialist school of comparative religious thought, Professor Cutsinger is best known for his work on the German philosopher Frithjof Schuon. He serves as secretary to the Foundation for Traditional Studies, and he is currently editing the Collected Works of Frithjof Schuon. In addition he is editing an anthology of Christian Mystical writings entitled "Not of this World," as part of World Wisdom's "Treasures of the World's Religion's" series.

The recipient of numerous teaching awards, he was honored in 1999 as a Michael J. Mungo University Teacher of the Year. He offers courses at both the undergraduate and graduate levles in Religious Studies, and he is a frequent contributor to USC's Honors College, where he has taken the lead in developing a series of courses in the study of Great Books.

Professor Cutsinger is a nationally known advocate of Socratic Teaching based on the classics. His consulting work has included curriculum development and design, contributions to great books seminars for professionals, and workshops in discussion-based pedagogy. He has also served as director of three National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminars.

--This text refers to the paperback edition.

Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B004FN1LW4
Publisher ‏ : ‎ World Wisdom (August 1, 2010)
Publication date ‏ : ‎ August 1, 2010
Print length ‏ : ‎ 289 pages
4.7 out of 5 stars 15 ratings

Customer reviews


Michael

5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful bookReviewed in the United States on February 22, 2013
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Any Traditionalist would be insane not to pick up this book. Even though I don't belong to either tradition discussed, the parallels are beyond a shadow of a doubt. It's also a great conversation starter between someone who is Orthodox and another who is Muslim. Often Muslims are demonized in the West, and I hope this helps to shed some of that.

6 people found this helpful

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GEORGE W ENGELHARD

5.0 out of 5 stars meditative prayersReviewed in the United States on September 27, 2018
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Loved the meditative prayers at the end of Huston Smith's contribution!!!

3 people found this helpful

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Sarah B

5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in the United States on June 25, 2016
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A heavenly gift... Replete with meaning.

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Ishraqi

5.0 out of 5 stars A Spiritual Harmony Among TraditionsReviewed in the United States on April 27, 2008

Reading "Paths of the Heart" was a true learning experience. 
In an age of strained relations between Christians and Muslims (and a time in which widespread ignorance of each others Traditions exist) this book could prove immensely helpful. If you know anything about Eastern Orthodoxy in the English speaking world you have probably heard of Bishop Kallistos Ware. Bishop Ware presents an excellent chapter on the Jesus Prayer and the way of entering the heart. The same can be said of Seyyed Hossein Nasr - That is, if you are at all knowledge regarding Islam in America you have probably read one of his books or at least heard of him before. Nasr's chapter on the Mercy of God alone is worth the price of the book.

If anyone is interested in previewing a chapter of this book before they purchase it I would recommend checking out James Cutsingers web page. On his page you can find the chapter " Hesychia, an Orthodox Opening to Esoteric Ecumenism" - [wont let me put the web address just Google " James Cutsinger, Hesychia, an Orthodox... "]





To comment on a previous review: 
Yes, Hesychasm is not recognized as "mainstream Christianity" in most Western denominations 
but it is perfectly mainstream among Orthodox Christians (including those living in the west). It's also compatible with the teachings of many of the great Catholic Mystics and Saints. 

Read "The Invocation of the Name of Jesus As Practiced in the Western Church" by Rama Coomaraswamy for evidence of this.

20 people found this helpful


John M. Cathey

5.0 out of 5 stars As an individual who takes great interest in all the topics in this bookReviewed in the United States on June 15, 2017

As an individual who takes great interest in all the topics in this book, I found the book enlightening on several grounds. For one, the collection focuses not only on what is shared and common to both the Eastern Christian Hesychast path and Sufism, but the authors feel comfortable enough to be honest about their Tradition's perspective(s), including where these two represented do not agree. As well, the collection does not shy away from the depth of its topics; there is no cutting corners; this is a full course meal.

Coming to the text with a background in Western Christianity and years of studying Sufism as well, I left the text with a new enthusiasm and interest in the Eastern Christian world. Just to read about the lofty states of some Eastern Christian saints was a grace.

4 people found this helpful

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matt

5.0 out of 5 stars Seeking the "virgin point"Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2002

A perusal of current media in print, radio and television reinforces the observation that we are living in a time when the cultures of the Middle East are portrayed as ideologically opposed to the West. At the core of our alleged differences is the role of Islamic fundamentalism with its hegemonic determination to dominate cultures both in the Middle East and abroad. Such views are not new. The "clash of civilizations" theory of Samuel Huntington had already proposed and popularized this understanding in the mid-1990s. At a time when this perspective is gaining momentum, it is helpful to seek a corrective to a myopic understanding of Islam that often accompanies Huntington's theory; namely, that Islam is nothing more than Wahhabism. Moreover, a historical reexamination of Christianity's own understanding of God can be beneficial for "Westerners" who tend to understand their own religious heritage typically through modern Protestant lenses, which often leads to the positing of false dichotomies between Islam and Christianity, seeing them as mutually exclusive with no common ground. By reconsidering the mystical theologies of each religion it can be shown that a fundamental convergence occurs in the mystical thought and experience of each tradition. In particular, this inner commonality can form the basis of a deeper conversation between Christians and Muslims than has been typical in our day, aiding in a clearer mutual understanding of the similarities that exist between the fundamental religious traditions of our cultures. To this end, Paths To The Heart is an excellent beginning.

As Thomas Merton said in his Conjectures:
"Le point vierge is in everybody, and if we could see it we would see the billions of points of light coming together in the face and blaze of a sun that would make all the darkness and cruelty of life vanish completely...I have no program for this seeing. It is only given. But the gate of heaven is everywhere."
May we seek the gate of heaven everywhere.

40 people found this helpful

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baphomette de medici

5.0 out of 5 stars the best and most essential of the two mystic traditionsReviewed in the United States on August 11, 2008

aside from gnosticism and the essences (and the more buddhistic/mazdaian silk road forms of a less patriarchical 'christianity' and already dyed heavily with the wisdom of the pre-islamic sufis!), this book distills some wisdom of the two best aspects of islam and christianity...if anything, hesychasm and certain sufi practices/paths truly transcend these worn out labels (of christianity and islam...).

if you follow the more fundamentalist viewpoint...very contracting/centrifugal, not open and expansive/centripetal, don't
raise a fuss at the ecumenical gesture this book (re)presents.

5 people found this helpful

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======
Paths to the Heart: Sufism and the Christian East

by James S. Cutsinger (Editor)

4.29 · Rating details · 31 ratings · 4 reviews
With wisdom that rings well with the heart, this volume answers the questions What do the mystical traditions of the Christian East and Sufism have in common? and Is there a dialogue that can promote a deep and lasting bond between Christianity and Islam? Amongst others, the contributors include Gray Henry, Seyyed Hossein Nasr, and Huston Smith.

Jan 31, 2013Gwen rated it really liked it
Shelves: islam-related, relgion
I picked this one up to see if there was a way to reconcile my Sufi path with my grandfather's Russian Orthodox path. This book does a pretty good job of bridging the gap. Some of the passages are much stronger than others. The first two and the one from Houston Smith were my personal favorites. I'm giving this one a four because it has quite a bit of good information in it, but at the same time I don't think this book will change anyone's mind one way or the other. In the introduction it's said that the point of the book, and the conference that it came from, was to bridge the gap between the religions. I just didn't get that sense from reading it. I'm not really sure why I feel that way though. (less)
flag1 like · Like · comment · see review



Jan 31, 2021Mark David Vinzens rated it it was amazing
Shelves: sufi
This book is a jewel of divine wisdom.
flagLike · see review



Feb 28, 2019Quan Rjpt rated it it was amazing
A collection of articles from traditional authors. my favorite has to be Chittick. Always enjoy anything written by him.
flagLike · comment · see review

ABOUT JAMES S. CUTSINGER

James S. Cutsinger

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James S. Cutsinger (Ph.D., Harvard) is Professor of Theology and Religious Thought at the University of South Carolina.

The recipient of a number of teaching awards, including most recently USC’s Michael J. Mungo Distinguished Professor of the Year for 2011, Professor Cutsinger offers courses in Religious Studies at both the undergraduate and graduate levels and directs a series of great books semi ...more



BOOKS BY JAMES S. CUTSINGER








QUOTES FROM PATHS TO THE HEAR...


“The heart is the center of the human microcosm, at once the center
of the physical body, the vital energies, the emotions, and the soul,
as well as the meeting place between the human and the celestial
realms where the spirit resides. How remarkable is this reality of the heart, that mysterious center which from the point of view of our earthly existence seems so small, and yet as the Prophet has said it is the Throne (al-‘arsh) of God the All-Merciful (ar-Rahmân), the Throne that encompasses the whole universe. Or as he uttered in another saying, “My Heaven containeth Me not, nor My Earth, but the heart of My faithful servant doth contain Me.”

It is the heart, the realm of interiority, to which Christ referred
when he said, “The kingdom of God is within you” (Lk 17:21), and it is the heart which the founders of all religions and the sacred scriptures advise man to keep pure as a condition for his salvation and deliverance. We need only recall the words of the Gospel, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God” (Mt 5:8)

[…]

In Christianity the Desert Fathers articulated the spiritual, mystical, and symbolic meanings of the reality of the heart, and these teachings led to a long tradition in the Eastern Orthodox Church known as Hesychasm, culminating with St Gregory Palamas, which is focused on the “prayer of the heart” and which includes the exposition of the significance of the heart and the elaboration of the mysticism and theology of the heart. In Catholicism another development took place, in which the heart of the faithful became in a sense replaced by the heart of Christ, and a new spirituality developed on the basis of devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Reference to His bleeding heart became common in the writings of such figures as St Bernard of Clairvaux and St Catherine of Sienna. The Christian doctrines of the heart, based as they are on the Bible, present certain universal theses to be seen also in Judaism, the most important of which is the association of the heart with the inner soul of man and the center of the human state. In Jewish mysticism the spirituality of the heart was further developed, and some Jewish mystics emphasized the idea of the “broken or contrite heart” (levnichbar) and wrote that to reach the Divine Majesty one had to “tear one’s heart” and that the “broken heart” mentioned in the Psalms sufficed. To make clear the universality of the spiritual significance of the heart across religious boundaries, while also emphasizing the development of the “theology of the heart” and methods of “prayer of the heart” particular to each tradition, one may recall that the name of Horus, the Egyptian god, meant the “heart of the world”. In Sanskrit the term for heart, hridaya, means also the center of the world, since, by virtue of the analogy between the macrocosm and the microcosm, the center of man is also the center of the universe. Furthermore, in Sanskrit the term shraddha, meaning faith, also signifies knowledge of the heart, and the same is true in Arabic, where the word îmân means faith when used for man and knowledge when used for God, as in the Divine Name al-Mu’min. As for the Far Eastern tradition, in Chinese the term xin means both heart and mind or consciousness. – Seyyed Hossein Nasr (Chapter 3: The Heart of the Faithful is the Throne of the All-Merciful)”

“The heart is the center of the human microcosm, at once the center of the physical body, the vital energies, the emotions, and the soul, as well as the meeting place between the human and the celestial realms where the spirit resides. How remarkable is this reality of the heart, that mysterious center which from the point of view of our earthly existence seems so small, and yet as the Prophet has said it is the Throne (al-‘arsh) of God the All-Merciful (ar-Rahmân), the Throne that encompasses the whole universe. Or as he uttered in another saying, “My Heaven containeth Me not, nor My Earth, but the heart of My faithful servant doth contain Me.” It is the heart, the realm of interiority, to which Christ referred when he said, “The kingdom of God is within you” (Lk 17:21), and it is the heart which the founders of all religions and the sacred scriptures advise man to keep pure as a condition for his salvation and deliverance. We need only recall the words of the Gospel, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God” (Mt 5:8)

[…]

In Christianity the Desert Fathers articulated the spiritual, mystical, and symbolic meanings of the reality of the heart, and these teachings led to a long tradition in the Eastern Orthodox Church known as Hesychasm, culminating with St Gregory Palamas, which is focused on the “prayer of the heart” and which includes the exposition of the significance of the heart and the elaboration of the mysticism and theology of the heart. In Catholicism another development took place, in which the heart of the faithful became in a sense replaced by the heart of Christ, and a new spirituality developed on the basis of devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Reference to His bleeding heart became common in the writings of such figures as St Bernard of Clairvaux and St Catherine of Sienna. The Christian doctrines of the heart, based as they are on the Bible, present certain universal theses to be seen also in Judaism, the most important of which is the association of the heart with the inner soul of man and the center of the human state. In Jewish mysticism the spirituality of the heart was further developed, and some Jewish mystics emphasized the idea of the “broken or contrite heart” (levnichbar) and wrote that to reach the Divine Majesty one had to “tear one’s heart” and that the “broken heart” mentioned in the Psalms sufficed. To make clear the universality of the spiritual significance of the heart across religious boundaries, while also emphasizing the development of the “theology of the heart” and methods of “prayer of the heart” particular to each tradition, one may recall that the name of Horus, the Egyptian god, meant the “heart of the world”. In Sanskrit the term for heart, hridaya, means also the center of the world, since, by virtue of the analogy between the macrocosm and the microcosm, the center of man is also the center of the universe. Furthermore, in Sanskrit the term shraddha, meaning faith, also signifies knowledge of the heart, and the same is true in Arabic, where the word îmân means faith when used for man and knowledge when used for God, as in the Divine Name al-Mu’min. As for the Far Eastern tradition, in Chinese the term xin means both heart and mind or consciousness. – Seyyed Hossein Nasr (Chapter 3: The Heart of the Faithful is the Throne of the All-Merciful)”

===
   
The Long Way Home


The Essential Rene Guenon: Metaphysics, Tradition, and the Crisis of Modernity: Rene Guenon, John Herlihy, Martin Lings: 9781933316574: Books: Amazon.com

The Essential Rene Guenon: Metaphysics, Tradition, and the Crisis of Modernity: Rene Guenon, John Herlihy, Martin Lings: 9781933316574: Books: Amazon.com


The Essential Rene Guenon: Metaphysics, Tradition, and the Crisis of Modernity Paperback – October 15, 2009
by Rene Guenon (Author), John Herlihy  (Editor), & 1 more
4.6 out of 5 stars    42 ratings
Part of: Perennial Philosophy (47 books)
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A prolific writer and author of over 24 books, Rene Guenon was the founder of the Perennialist/Traditionalist school of comparative religious thought. Known for his discourses on the intellectual and spiritual bankruptcy of the modern world, symbolism, tradition, and the inner or spiritual dimension of religion, this book is a compilation of his most important writings. A key component of his thought was the assertion that universal truths manifest themselves in various forms in the world's religions and his writings on Hinduism, Taoism, and Sufism are particularly illuminating in this regard.

==
Publisher ‏ : ‎ World Wisdom; Illustrated edition (October 15, 2009)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 312 pages


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4.6 out of 5 stars

Top reviews from the United States
Gregory Shtevensh
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential
Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2018
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I'm a big fan. It can carry across disciplines. This is something that more people should know so that the happy few become happier.
2 people found this helpful
==
OAKSHAMAN
5.0 out of 5 stars A Lifetime Led Me Here.
Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2010
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The best recommendation that I can give to this book is that as I read through it I was refreshed. Then again this was also the case as I read THE ESSENTIAL FRITHJOF SCHUON from World Wisdom. With both authors I had read a considerable amount of their core writings before hand, yet I did not really feel any redundancy here. These teachings are the living heart of the perennial philosophy, so how could they ever cease to strengthen the connection to the higher Spirit?

Guenon states outright that only a very few readers in this dark age are going to possess the inherent capacity to understand his writings due to their education and upbringing. Nothing can be done about that. Somehow I seem to be able to understand what is being related. Indeed, I understood these principles long before I came on writers and teachers of the traditionalist school. Yet, those principles are related with a precision that goes far beyond my ability to express them- even in translation. Whether others resonate with them is something that I cannot predict. I would imagine that the odds are against it. Yet, you can still make the attempt. Intuitive intellection is a faculty that still exists in our world.

Another thing that struck me was an anecdote in the introduction where a Ph.D. candidate was denied permission to write his thesis on Guenon because the said writer had never done anything "original." Of course not. Rene Guenon intentionally stayed in the background as he related the teachings of the perennial philosophy to a new generation. You could just as well entitle this book "The Essential Sophia Perennis." You cannot add anything new to these teachings, you can merely pass them on with clarity to the current generation.
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James J. Omeara
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential Wisdom for the Kali Yuga
Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2010
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Recently, I found myself with some forced leisure on my hands, so I decided to make use of it by reading through the works of Rene Guenon in English, as published by Sophia Perennis. Yes, that's the kind of guy I am. In the midst of the project, this book was announced, and I was undecided; would it be redundant? In the end I decided to get it, and I'm glad I did.

First of all, the presentation is excellent -- a handsome size, sturdy binding, clear, well laid out typography, in line with the rest of World Wisdom's publications -- a pleasure to read. Some illustrations would have been nice, especially in the sections dealing with sacred symbolism, and one can always imagine a fancier format -- something along the lines of the Penguin Classics Deluxe Editions -- but these are minor points.

More importantly, the selections are well chosen; they are minimally edited but arranged to flow together almost as if they had appeared that way originally; usually two or three in a row from the same book, the books appearing somewhat chronologically but also within four "Worlds" : the Modern, the Metaphysical, the Hindu, and the Traditional. I suppose the Modern comes first, not the Metaphysical, to ease the modern reader into Guenon's metaphysical world; the Hindu is given its own due to the amount of attention Guenon devoted to it, while the Traditional has not only other traditions such as Islam but also topics that apply to traditions generally, such as rites, teachers, etc.

The selections, with few exceptions, are drawn from a handful of obvious major works; there's nothing here that's previously unpublished, or newly translated; no letters, diaries, etc. The Introduction, however, is drawn from a transcript of a lecture by Martin Lings that might be relatively inaccessible to the general reader.

This would obviously make a fine introduction to Guenon, but even someone who already has the original sources will find this a useful and pleasant supplement, something to pick up and read from time to time. I am reminded of Elmer O'Brien's comment about his similar anthology, The Essential Plotinus [not to be confused with World Wisdom's own The Heart of Plotinus]: these selections are essential in the sense that Coleridge spoke of essential poetry: the passages one returns to with the greatest pleasure.
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J. Crockett
5.0 out of 5 stars 5 STARS, hard copy; 2 STARS,kindle edition!
Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2013
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Content of the book is outstanding, BUT spaces in multi-sylable words in the kindle edition are nerve racking; several on each page in part 2. This matter should be fixed quickly, so that thinking readers can take advantage of the benefits in using a kindle. It beats me how such a great manuscript can be so mis-represented because of the technique used to copy. Where are the scribes when you need them?
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Richard Hynson
5.0 out of 5 stars A treasury of thought.
Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2015
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A treasury of thought, densely packed with excerpts of Rene Guenon's wisdom. A must-read for a serious student of theology.
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Joshua Kempf
4.0 out of 5 stars I would have liked to know this
Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2017
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A compilation of chapters from Guenon's books and introductions and summaries from the editor. I think 5 out of 36 chapters are Guenon. The "summaries" are not always representative. I would have liked to know this. Cheaper than buying all his books and faster than reading them all. I love to read and would not have chosen the short cut. I like Guenon. I find this editor/author offensive.
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percy bernedo
5.0 out of 5 stars a must for anyone interested in Metaphysics
Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2014
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this book give us a sober view of our world in which quantity has replaced quality, It will also help the reader understand the primordial truth behind traditional religions.
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Brian D. Babiak
5.0 out of 5 stars An essential book
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2015
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One of the most important books I've ever read. He correctly diagnoses what's wrong with our modern world.
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franky2dita
4.0 out of 5 stars Serio e completo
Reviewed in Italy on October 28, 2012
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Un sommario accurato del pensiero del grande filosofo Renè Guènon, interessante sia per i profani che per gli esperti del settore.
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kanedaitsuki
4.0 out of 5 stars ルネ・ゲノンのアンソロジー
Reviewed in Japan on January 18, 2010
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 「近代世界」「形而上学世界」「ヒンドゥー教の世界」「伝統世界」と名づけられた4つの章に分け、ルネ・ゲノンの全作品から文章を抄録したアンソロジー。ゲノン著作集を揃えるつもりならば、あえて購入する必要はない。マーティン・リングスの「序文」が素晴らしいが、これもおそらくいずれリングス本に収録されるだろう。ある意味、ファンアイテムかも。
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From the United States
E. Kysela
5.0 out of 5 stars I don't agree with everything Guenon says but the translation is good.
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2014
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This book is really for experts. I don't agree with everything Guenon says but the translation is good.
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Samuel Bendeck Sotillos
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential Reading for the Contemporary World
Reviewed in the United States on August 10, 2010
"It is truly strange that people ask for proof concerning the possibility of a kind of [transcendent] knowledge instead of searching for it and verifying it for themselves by understanding the work necessary to acquire it." - René Guénon

"The civilization of the modern West appears in history as a veritable anomaly"--written in 1924, this statement typifies the prophetic eschatology of the French metaphysician René Guénon (1886-1951). At last such a work as this one has come to pass in order to bring together the magisterial and erudite oeuvre of Guénon, the founder, along with Frithjof Schuon (1907-1998), of what has become known as the "Traditionalist" or "Perennialist" school of thought. Other notable luminaries of this school were Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy (1877-1947) and Titus Burckhardt (1908-1984).

It may surprise readers unfamiliar with Guénon that he was referred to as the "Great Sufi" by a definitive sage of the twentieth Century, Sri Ramana Mahar­shi. Coomaraswamy, the seminal art historian, pointed out that Guénon was not an "Orientalist" but what in India would be deemed as a "master." Schuon affirmed that Guénon was intrinsically pneumatic or a jñanic type and stated that "On symbolism Guénon is unbeatable." Seyyed Hossein Nasr (b. 1933) wrote the following regarding Guénon's first book: "It was like a sudden burst of lightning, an abrupt intrusion into the modern world of a body of knowledge and a perspective utterly alien to the prevalent climate and world view and completely opposed to all that characterizes the modern mentality." The praise for Guénon is not limited to these statements, but is extended by decisive intellects and philosophers of the twentieth century.

Who René Guénon was as a person is a complex question that has puzzled the curious and frustrated the trivial, yet "individualist considerations" pertaining to his person, including biography, meant little or nothing to Guénon. A remarkable point to note is that Guénon did not put forward, or even attempt to create, a "new" or "novel" theory, nor was he interested in the "originality" of his ideas. His role and significance in the modern world was to wholeheartedly illuminate the universal metaphysics of the Primordial Tradition--known as the philosophia perennis or the perennial philosophy--"[T]ruth is one, and it is the same for all who, by whatever way, come to know it." He was to re-establish its primacy for contemporaries who were authentically seeking this uncompromised truth that was--"in conformity with the strictly traditional point of view"--known by many different names. This will appear odd to those living in the present time as novelty, not to mention monetary gain, as he noted with mathematical precision in the work The Reign of Quantity, are central motivating factors to all current activity.

Contrary to the timeless and universal tradition in the present weltanschauung is the endless talk of "change" as if present-day terrestrials have realized the inherent bankruptcy of the times--"disequilibrium cannot be a condition of real happiness." What kind of change is being suggested is not clear, yet change from the present conditions itself is surely beckoned. The "change," if we could so term it, was for Guénon not change in a future orientated "progress" but change for the realignment of the first principles underlying the traditional doctrines of the world's spiritualities. In this sense, the direction of change was not going forward or even backward but points to what is rooted in the immutable and eternal. Guénon suggested that if those in the current era could perceive the perilous end of "progress," it would unequivocally come to a halt: "If our contemporaries as a whole could see what it is that is guiding them and where they are really going, the modern world would at once cease to exist as such."

Some might question the relevance of such an obscure metaphysician in the context of today's world and suggest that establishing an "intellectual elite" to counter the perilous crisis of a disintegrating era--"the growing disorder in all domains"--is a utopian ideal, indicating his extreme naïveté or blatant ignorance. Hitherto, the large-scale crisis that Guénon astutely perceived did not only come to light and continue to unfold, but has palpitated into further disarray since he first identified and diagnosed the "intellectual myopia" or "intellectual atrophy" of an age that was well into--the Kali-Yuga or "Dark Age"--"what has no parallel is this gigantic collective hallucination by which a whole section of humanity has come to take the vainest fantasies for incontestable realities."

Along with a vital introduction by Martin Lings (1909-2005), who was a close associate of Guénon for many years while living in Egypt, there is also a key preface by John Herlihy, author of numerous books on traditional spirituality and the modern world. This work consists of four parts: The Modern World, The Metaphysical World, The Hindu World, and The Traditional World. This book also contains two helpful appendices to better acquaint those unfamiliar with Guénon. They include an overview of his life via a "Biography of René Guénon" and also a concise list of both French and English publications: "The Works of René Guénon."

A defining and axial feature of the traditionalist or perennialist critique of the modern and post-modern world is the reduction of the intellect or intellectus with reason or ratio. Rationalism in all its forms is essentially defined by a belief in the supremacy of reason, proclaimed as a veritable "dog­ma," and implying the denial of everything that is of a supra-individual order, notably of pure intellectual intuition; this carries with it logically the exclusion of all true metaphysical knowledge. This reductionism has given rise to a whole host of other confusions and misunderstandings such as the inversion of the "Self" with "ego" or "Personality" with "individuality," which is apropos contextualized with what has been termed the "multiple states of being":

[T]he human individual is both much more and much less than is generally supposed in the West: much more, by reason of his possibilities of indefinite extension beyond the corporeal modality, to which, in short, everything belongs that is commonly studied; but he is also much less, since far from constituting a complete self-sufficient being, he is but an outward manifestation, a fleeting appearance assumed by the true being, which in no way affects the essence of the latter in its immutability.

In his monumental essay "Eastern Metaphysics" Guénon demonstrated that the integral metaphysics of the perennial philosophy was neither of the East nor West, but found unanimously at the heart of all sapiential traditions regardless of time or place:

[I]n truth, pure metaphysics being essentially above and beyond all form and all contingency is neither Eastern nor Western but universal. The exterior forms with which it is covered only serve the necessities of exposition, to express whatever is expressible. These forms may be Eastern or Western; but under the appearance of diversity there is always a basis of unity, at least, wherever true metaphysics exists, for the simple reason that truth is one.

With regard to the universal metaphysics Guénon makes it clear that: "Exoterism and esoterism, regarded not as two distinct and more or less opposed doctrines, which would be quite an erroneous view, but as the two aspects of one and the same doctrine." This differs radically from New Age thought, which seeks to abolish transcendence in favor of immanence, and thereby loses any guarantee of truth and objectivity, that is to say the necessary "right-thinking" that is the first item on the noble Eightfold Path of Buddhism. (The opposite error, the abolition of immanence in favor of transcendence, is that of "Deism"; this renders any contact between God and man impossible.) For Guénon, as for the perennial philosophy, it is necessary that one be practicing an orthodox spiritual form and it was in this orientation that both the "outer" and "inner" dimensions of exoterism and esoterism can become available--"the same teaching is not understood in a equal degree by all who receive it...there are therefore those who in a certain sense discern the esoterism, while others, whose intellectual horizon is narrower, are limited to the exoterism."

The Essential René Guénon brings together the broad and illuminating spectrum of Guénon's corpus in a single volume like no other anthology currently available, which could very well realign the collective nucleus of sapiential wisdom to truly and integrally shift the predominant paradigm. Paradoxically, the more the current dissolution of what appears as the--"eleventh hour"--gains way, the evermore relevant and indispensable Guénon's work is. It is with our hope that this recent anthology will provide an antidotal remedy to the "intellectual myopia" of the times in order to reaffirm the sophia perennis--"multiple paths all leading to the same end." On a concluding note, although the present crisis is skillfully veiled and exclusively contextualized in economic terms, Guénon would indefatigably confirm that it is rather a prolongation of the very same Kali-Yuga accelerating in its steadfast progression: "it can be said in all truth that the `end of a world' never is and never can be anything but the end of an illusion."

-Parabola, issue "Desire", Vol. 35, No. 3, Fall 2010
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Jacob
5.0 out of 5 stars Maintain the Tradition
Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2012
This book is a compilation of Guenon's outlook on life and a fine introduction to the "traditionalist" school of religions. (It is probably best to speak of "metaphysics" instead of "religions," since on Guenon's gloss religion functions differently in the East than in the West.) Guenon begins with a searing critique of modernity. While not always explicitly stated, he attacks the modern world for embracing nominalism and reducing all reality to simple cause-and-effect. While such critiques are now quite common, one can only imagine the shock waves they caused in the 1920s. Unfortunately, this is probably the weakest section of the book because the chapters are simply snippets of individual chapters found elsewhere in Guenon's corpus. As a result the reader often feels that the "force" of the argument is missing.

The next section explicates the Hindu worldview as a case-study and alternative to Western rationalism. Upon Guenon's reading of Hinduism, the reader gets the impression that Hinduism is not simply the worship of 700 various deities, but rather a complicated system of Being, unity, and a poetic expression of various philosophical forces. Much of this section will be lost on the average reader--and it was certainly was lost on me--but there is still much that is valuable and fruitful for the reader. Guenon suggests that metaphysics is the foundation of traditional civilizations (77-78), metaphysics being defined as "beyond nature," or the "supernatural" (80).
Guenon ends his book with an extended discussion on tradition. What is interesting is that Guenon was largely unfamiliar with Eastern Orthodox Christianity, yet he explicates a traditional outlook that seems largely drawn from Orthodox textbooks. About the structure of tradition in a community he notes, "a unity of a traditional order purely and exclusively and has no need to depend upon any more or less exterior forms of organization or upon the support of any authority other than that of the doctrine itself (136). Guenon is not advocating anarchy, as will be seen below, but pointing out that tradition's essence does not depend upon the regulating function of an outside authority figure, such as a Pope.

"But," someone may object, "can you show me the divinely-inspired tradition at is point of inception?" The common-sense answer to the question, Guenon avers, is "no." Authentic traditions are very old and usually predate writing, or at least writing on a level where the material would survive the ravages of time. This does not mean that intelligent questions can never be asked of the tradition. One can legitimately, and reverently, ask the tradition, "Are later manifestations of the tradition deviations or do they faithfully embody the character of the tradition?" Or, "Do we see clear negations of earlier expressions, or do we see a general continuity throughout the ages, allowing only for linguistic, cultural, and regional differences" (unity-in-diversity)?
The book ends with a section on initiation, or "entering into the tradition." One enters the tradition by rituals seen as symbolic actions. The tradition's rites are efficacious because the "symbol-rite" produces in the initiate the power of the reality which it symbolizes" (Guenon, 226ff.). One should note, however, that this should not be seen as "magic" or "fetishism." Magic, as Guenon suggests, is the manipulation of dead matter, whereas the "rite" conveys spiritual realities through (very) material means.

Such begins the initiation into tradition, and Guenon approaches something very close to apostolic succession. He writes about an initiatic "chain" involved that transmits the spiritual realities in the physical community (255). Further, while books and texts are important, they can never substitute for this "initiatic chain." This protects the adept from occultic visions and private interpretations. Further, the intiatic chain can never be reduced to mere writing, for writing is always subjected to various interpretations. It is true, one may object, that tradition can be misinterpreted. Perhaps, but it is not misinterpreted in the same way. Traditions, particularly those of an initiatic nature, are embodied in communities which are often spread out over a geographical area, allowing the practitioners of the tradition to note what may be legitimate or illegitimate differences and practices in the locations. Further, the rites of tradition are not subject to "deconstructionism" the way a text in the tradition might be. Finally, since traditions are communal in nature, it is never a matter of "one's private interpretation." One may certainly have private interpretations of a various text, but that means nothing vis-à-vis the everyday practices of the tradition.

Guenon also examines the practices and symbols of various religions, which other reviewers have ably noted.
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Happy2B
5.0 out of 5 stars An Essential Read
Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2010
This is the first Guenon work that I've read. Having finished the book just this morning, I was excited to come and read other people's reviews, but, alas, there was only one, and herein lies the problem. People need to read this work and to think long and hard about it, especially now that we have more than sixty years on him from which to consider things. He saw so much so clearly and had an ability to integrate at a level surpassing the brightest among us. If only we all were even half as thoughtful as he . . . The last reviewer said he had read all the other works and then read this one. I am in the opposite situation and plan now to read all of his work. I would very much like to read them in chronological order and follow the evolution of his thought. We'll see.
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Jason Gregory (Author of Effortless Living, Fasting the Mind, Enlightenment Now, & The Science and Practice of Humility)
5.0 out of 5 stars Guenon is Essential in Studying Perennial Philosophy
Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2016
As with most perennialist scholars, Guenon explores the importance of traditionalism and the primordial religion in the face of a culture that is increasingly becoming materialistic. He articulates beautifully the difference between the excessive quantitative perspective of the Kali Yuga as opposed to the spiritual qualitative way of life. A lot of people thought Guenon was a little harsh on society and culture back in his time, but from what we see in the modern world his concerns were justified. As with all the classics on perennial philosophy, you cannot look past Guenon to further your depth and understanding.
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From the United States
Gregory Shtevensh
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential
Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2018
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I'm a big fan. It can carry across disciplines. This is something that more people should know so that the happy few become happier.
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OAKSHAMAN
5.0 out of 5 stars A Lifetime Led Me Here.
Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2010
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The best recommendation that I can give to this book is that as I read through it I was refreshed. Then again this was also the case as I read THE ESSENTIAL FRITHJOF SCHUON from World Wisdom. With both authors I had read a considerable amount of their core writings before hand, yet I did not really feel any redundancy here. These teachings are the living heart of the perennial philosophy, so how could they ever cease to strengthen the connection to the higher Spirit?

Guenon states outright that only a very few readers in this dark age are going to possess the inherent capacity to understand his writings due to their education and upbringing. Nothing can be done about that. Somehow I seem to be able to understand what is being related. Indeed, I understood these principles long before I came on writers and teachers of the traditionalist school. Yet, those principles are related with a precision that goes far beyond my ability to express them- even in translation. Whether others resonate with them is something that I cannot predict. I would imagine that the odds are against it. Yet, you can still make the attempt. Intuitive intellection is a faculty that still exists in our world.

Another thing that struck me was an anecdote in the introduction where a Ph.D. candidate was denied permission to write his thesis on Guenon because the said writer had never done anything "original." Of course not. Rene Guenon intentionally stayed in the background as he related the teachings of the perennial philosophy to a new generation. You could just as well entitle this book "The Essential Sophia Perennis." You cannot add anything new to these teachings, you can merely pass them on with clarity to the current generation.
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James J. Omeara
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential Wisdom for the Kali Yuga
Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2010
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Recently, I found myself with some forced leisure on my hands, so I decided to make use of it by reading through the works of Rene Guenon in English, as published by Sophia Perennis. Yes, that's the kind of guy I am. In the midst of the project, this book was announced, and I was undecided; would it be redundant? In the end I decided to get it, and I'm glad I did.

First of all, the presentation is excellent -- a handsome size, sturdy binding, clear, well laid out typography, in line with the rest of World Wisdom's publications -- a pleasure to read. Some illustrations would have been nice, especially in the sections dealing with sacred symbolism, and one can always imagine a fancier format -- something along the lines of the Penguin Classics Deluxe Editions -- but these are minor points.

More importantly, the selections are well chosen; they are minimally edited but arranged to flow together almost as if they had appeared that way originally; usually two or three in a row from the same book, the books appearing somewhat chronologically but also within four "Worlds" : the Modern, the Metaphysical, the Hindu, and the Traditional. I suppose the Modern comes first, not the Metaphysical, to ease the modern reader into Guenon's metaphysical world; the Hindu is given its own due to the amount of attention Guenon devoted to it, while the Traditional has not only other traditions such as Islam but also topics that apply to traditions generally, such as rites, teachers, etc.

The selections, with few exceptions, are drawn from a handful of obvious major works; there's nothing here that's previously unpublished, or newly translated; no letters, diaries, etc. The Introduction, however, is drawn from a transcript of a lecture by Martin Lings that might be relatively inaccessible to the general reader.

This would obviously make a fine introduction to Guenon, but even someone who already has the original sources will find this a useful and pleasant supplement, something to pick up and read from time to time. I am reminded of Elmer O'Brien's comment about his similar anthology, The Essential Plotinus [not to be confused with World Wisdom's own The Heart of Plotinus]: these selections are essential in the sense that Coleridge spoke of essential poetry: the passages one returns to with the greatest pleasure.
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J. Crockett
5.0 out of 5 stars 5 STARS, hard copy; 2 STARS,kindle edition!
Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2013
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Content of the book is outstanding, BUT spaces in multi-sylable words in the kindle edition are nerve racking; several on each page in part 2. This matter should be fixed quickly, so that thinking readers can take advantage of the benefits in using a kindle. It beats me how such a great manuscript can be so mis-represented because of the technique used to copy. Where are the scribes when you need them?
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Richard Hynson
5.0 out of 5 stars A treasury of thought.
Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2015
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A treasury of thought, densely packed with excerpts of Rene Guenon's wisdom. A must-read for a serious student of theology.
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Joshua Kempf
4.0 out of 5 stars I would have liked to know this
Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2017
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A compilation of chapters from Guenon's books and introductions and summaries from the editor. I think 5 out of 36 chapters are Guenon. The "summaries" are not always representative. I would have liked to know this. Cheaper than buying all his books and faster than reading them all. I love to read and would not have chosen the short cut. I like Guenon. I find this editor/author offensive.
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percy bernedo
5.0 out of 5 stars a must for anyone interested in Metaphysics
Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2014
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this book give us a sober view of our world in which quantity has replaced quality, It will also help the reader understand the primordial truth behind traditional religions.
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Brian D. Babiak
5.0 out of 5 stars An essential book
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2015
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One of the most important books I've ever read. He correctly diagnoses what's wrong with our modern world.
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DANIEL SAVESCU
5.0 out of 5 stars excelent
Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2013
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An excellent book which have to be read by anyone who cares about himself and his personal growth. Especially brethern
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Luis Garnica
4.0 out of 5 stars Good general information
Reviewed in the United States on October 31, 2012
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A very good resume of many different topics, clear, an enough for start up the knowledge from a serious source
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==

Jacob Aitken
Apr 06, 2012Jacob Aitken rated it liked it
Shelves: alternative-research, eschatology, fighting-the-new-world-order, hermeneutics, medievalism, ontology, philosophy, worldview, the-western-canon
This book is a compilation of Guenon’s outlook on life and a fine introduction to the “traditionalist” school of religions. (It is probably best to speak of “metaphysics” instead of “religions,” since on Guenon’s gloss religion functions differently in the East than in the West.) Guenon begins with a searing critique of modernity. While not always explicitly stated, he attacks the modern world for embracing nominalism and reducing all reality to simple cause-and-effect. While such critiques are now quite common, one can only imagine the shock waves they caused in the 1920s. Unfortunately, this is probably the weakest section of the book because the chapters are simply snippets of individual chapters found elsewhere in Guenon’s corpus. As a result the reader often feels that the “force” of the argument is missing.

The next section explicates the Hindu worldview as a case-study and alternative to Western rationalism. Upon Guenon’s reading of Hinduism, the reader gets the impression that Hinduism is not simply the worship of 700 various deities, but rather a complicated system of Being, unity, and a poetic expression of various philosophical forces. Much of this section will be lost on the average reader—and it was certainly was lost on me—but there is still much that is valuable and fruitful for the reader. Guenon suggests that metaphysics is the foundation of traditional civilizations (77-78), metaphysics being defined as “beyond nature,” or the “supernatural” (80).

Guenon ends his book with an extended discussion on tradition. What is interesting is that Guenon was largely unfamiliar with Eastern Orthodox Christianity, yet he explicates a traditional outlook that seems largely drawn from Orthodox textbooks. About the structure of tradition in a community he notes, “a unity of a traditional order purely and exclusively and has no need to depend upon any more or less exterior forms of organization or upon the support of any authority other than that of the doctrine itself (136). Guenon is not advocating anarchy, as will be seen below, but pointing out that tradition’s essence does not depend upon the regulating function of an outside authority figure, such as a Pope.i (One could respond that the Holy Spirit is the principle of unity for Orthodox Christians and that would be true, but God’s actions in history are never un-interpreted and to leave it at that would beg the question. However, we may say that we identify the Holy Spirit’s actions by the transmission of that tradition in the community.)

While tradition does not need an external and legalistic authority figure to give it life, it must be noted that traditional societies are often hierarchical societies (Guenon, 151). Thus, we have priests and bishops. To note: these do not function in the role of top-down, external authorities, but as organic expressions of the traditional community (bearing in mind that tradition, on both Guenon’s gloss and the Orthodox Church’s gloss, is divinely inspired). This line of thought becomes particularly interesting when applied to the political order. Guenon, referencing his book Spiritual Authority and Temporal Power (2001), notes that kings were best seen as guardians and regulators of the tradition as it manifested itself in the social order (153). The parallels to Orthodox kings and emperors should not be overlooked: while charges of Caesaropapism abound (and have been ably rebutted by Fr John Meyendorffii), the king was not primarily responsible for the internal life of the church, though abuses did happen. Rather, he was to protect the tradition from outside invaders and threats. Guenon even suggests a connection between the “regulation” of tradition and the Latin word “rex.” (Perhaps this is why it is so difficult for democratic societies to maintain a coherent tradition, particularly in modern America. Each new democratically-elected administration is often a negation of the previous administration. This cannot be healthy for society.)

“But,” someone may object, “can you show me the divinely-inspired tradition at is point of inception?” The common-sense answer to the question, Guenon avers, is “no.” Authentic traditions are very old and usually predate writing, or at least writing on a level where the material would survive the ravages of time.iii This does not mean that intelligent questions can never be asked of the tradition. One can legitimately, and reverently, ask the tradition, “Are later manifestations of the tradition deviations or do they faithfully embody the character of the tradition?” Or, “Do we see clear negations of earlier expressions, or do we see a general continuity throughout the ages, allowing only for linguistic, cultural, and regional differences” (unity-in-diversity)?

The book ends with a section on initiation, or “entering into the tradition.” One enters the tradition by rituals seen as symbolic actions. The tradition’s rites are efficacious because the “symbol-rite” produces in the initiate the power of the reality which it symbolizes” (Guenon, 226ff.). One should note, however, that this should not be seen as “magic” or “fetishism.” Magic, as Guenon suggests, is the manipulation of dead matter, whereas the “rite” conveys spiritual realities through (very) material means.

Such begins the initiation into tradition, and Guenon approaches something very close to apostolic succession. He writes about an initiatic “chain” involved that transmits the spiritual realities in the physical community (255). Further, while books and texts are important, they can never substitute for this “initiatic chain.” This protects the adept from occultic visions and private interpretations.iv Further, the intiatic chain can never be reduced to mere writing, for writing is always subjected to various interpretations. It is true, one may object, that tradition can be misinterpreted. Perhaps, but it is not misinterpreted in the same way. Traditions, particularly those of an initiatic nature, are embodied in communities which are often spread out over a geographical area, allowing the practitioners of the tradition to note what may be legitimate or illegitimate differences and practices in the locations. Further, the rites of tradition are not subject to “deconstructionism” the way a text in the tradition might be. Finally, since traditions are communal in nature, it is never a matter of “one’s private interpretation.” One may certainly have private interpretations of a various text, but that means nothing vis-à-vis the everyday practices of the tradition.

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Tim
Mar 16, 2014Tim rated it it was amazing
Shelves: islam, islam-perennialism
Rene Guenon was in many ways a modern revivalist, with a call that was near prophetic in nature, inviting humanity to return to foundational truth that is timeless and beyond particularity. Martin Lings, in his excellent introduction states the current conditions of modernity as follows: "Unity has become a multiplicity without center or purpose, while the sublimity of a wondrous spirituality has become a pedantic display of materialism dressed in the pretensions of rationality." (16) This says a lot about the perspective from which Guenon writes, and about the mindset which is necessary to understand him.

To Guenon, who was the "founder" of what many have termed the Perennialist or Traditionalist school of thought, this multiplicity without purpose has resulted from a gradual descent in spiritual consciousness. In the "profane" or non-spiritual realm, this descent is seen in the way that spirituality itself is veiled by innumerous distractions inherent to the very structures of modernity. In the religious traditions, these veils have caused a disproportionate focus on exoteric or external religiosity at the expense of underlying meaning, which at the higher transcendent levels of all religions is recognized as beyond form, beyond symbols, beyond comprehension, but unequivocally unified.

This is not to say that Guenon and the other Perennialists disavow traditional religious orthodoxy or adherence. The very message to return to the primordial path is itself a call to realize that all true religion is of the Divine Essence, and that the different paths have been revealed to a diverse world that varies in its circumstances, contexts and environmental conditions. For this reason, the transcendent Real has chosen certain paths up the summit of the mountain, yet has made it a natural law that one must remain vertically adherent to a particular path in order to reach the vertical goal. Crossing horizontally onto another path does nothing to increase progression towards ultimate union, and in fact results in disorientation and wasted efforts.

The ability to realize that the path is different than the goal is the same ability to hold in tension the idea of the importance of orthodoxy in religious practice while being able to learn from and recognize universal meaning behind all revealed religions, rites and traditional practices. Guenon sees - per Hinduism - humanity as being in the closing phase of a particular spiritual cycle, and within this cycle Hinduism is the oldest most primordial expression, while Islam is the latest and perhaps most universal. Yet with Guenon universality as a term transcends religious notions, and the very nature of a divine religious form means that it is a part of universality and therefore has an equal share in the truth.

Guenon spends a great deal of time discussing symbols as well as the esoteric/exoteric dichotomy. He argues that Hinduism as the oldest current spiritual form is also the one that most perfectly transcends that particular duality in one unified spiritual expression. For this reason, he utilizes Hindu symbolism to illustrate universal truths and often compares them with symbols from other traditions that express the same underlying concepts.

Guenon had a varied spiritual background. He was raised Roman Catholic, initiated into Hinduism, and ultimately converted to Islam as a Sufi initiate, moving to Egypt where he was known as Shaykh 'Abd al-Wahid Yahya. His call is to eliminate multiplicity on all levels, from the formal world which distracts from the true essence, to religious reactivity in failing to transcend the apparent duality in both the way we view others and the way we fail to delve below the surface in our religious traditions.
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TR
Nov 22, 2011TR rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: spirituality, rr, sophia, buy
This is a remarkable compilation of selections from probably the greatest traditionalist/perennialist. Anyone seriously interested in spirituality and the decline of European societies must read this.
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Natasha11
Feb 17, 2013Natasha11 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Whether one agrees with his often times far out theories and speculations, one cannot doubt this man is a genius that has not received enough attention.
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Norman Bennett Jr.
Jun 10, 2020Norman Bennett Jr. rated it it was amazing
An adequate introduction to a wide range of Guenon's writing. (less)
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