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2021/09/12

Jesting Pilate by Aldous Huxley | Goodreads

Jesting Pilate by Aldous Huxley | Goodreads






Jesting Pilate

by
Aldous Huxley
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3.75 · Rating details · 211 ratings · 23 reviews
The author recounts his experiences traveling through six countries, and offers his observations on their people, cultures, and customs.

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Paperback, 326 pages
Published July 17th 1994 by Da Capo Press (first published 1926)
Original Title
Jesting Pilate
ISBN
1569249318 (ISBN13: 9781569249314)
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Dec 18, 2011Ensiform rated it it was amazing
Shelves: non-fiction, travel, india
A travel memoir, obviously. India takes up half the book, the other places the last half in rapid succession. No matter – the charm of the book is Huxley's superbly balanced, thoughtful insights on everything from the caste system to Christian persecution in history, from how practical matters shape the seriousness of sin to Hollywood pabulum to cultural differences in music appreciation.

A truly learned and reasonable man, Huxley is at turns inspiring, funny, admiring and scathing. His description of India is dead-on, and it exquisitely captures that mixture of pity, contempt, understanding and reverence that the open minded Westerner comes to feel for Indian life. The book is a wholly admirable exercise in the broadening of an already open mind. (less)
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Nov 30, 2013Ahimsa rated it it was amazing
While I agree with Michael Palin's assessment that it's a strange choice of title, it's otherwise quite a fun read. The Imperialism is a bit hard to stomach, but as long you understand the whole "product of your time" concept it's not too tough to come to grips with.

In 1926, Huxley visited Indian, Burma, Malaya, Japan, China, and America--all places I have been (though China just the airports) on this trip. Reading old travel writing is cool because while some things have entirely changed, more than you'd expect are still the same. (Or same-same, as they say here.) I would rank it as one of the best travel books I've ever read, less so for the countries he visited and more for his perceptive insight and evocative writing.

After spending three days at a political campaign, he reveals how useless he finds it all.

Personally I have little use for political speaking. If I know something about the question at issue, I find it quite unnecessary to listen to an orator who repeats in a summarized, and generally garbled, from the information I already possess; knowing what I do, I am quite capable of making up my own mind on the subject under discussion without listening to his rhetorical persuasions. If, on the other hand, I know nothing, it is not to the public speaker that I turn for the information on which to base my judgment. The acquisition of full and accurate knowledge about any given subject is a lengthy and generally boring process, entailing the reading of many books, the collating of numerous opinions. It therefore follows, inevitably, that the imparting of knowledge can never be part of a public speaker's work, for the simple reason that if his speeches are boring and lengthy--and boring and lengthy they must be, if he is to give anything like a fair and full account of the facts--nobody will listen to him.

At times his writing is wonderfully vivid, transporting the reader to the scene. Consider this, for instance.

It took the Tartar traders six weeks of walking to get from Kashgar to Srinagar. They start in the early autumn when the passes are still free from the snow and rivers, swollen in summer by its melting, have subsided to fordableness. They walk into Kashmir, and from Kashmir into India. They spend the winter in India, sell what they have brought, and in the following spring, when the passes are once more open, go back into Turkestan with a load of Indian fabrics, velvet and plush and ordinary cotton, which they sell for fabulous profit.

Or this:

Or journey from Penang to Singapore bean at night. We were carried in darkness through the invisible forest. The noise of the insects among the trees was like an escape of steam. It pierced the roaring of the train as a needle might pierce butter. I had though man pre-eminent at least in the art of noise making. But a thousand equatorial cicadas could shout down a steel works; and with reinforcements they would be a match for machine guns.

After a sentence with a blind assessment that democracy was the best end case scenario, Huxley checks himself. (Note the bit about the Hapsburgs is often true too of former Soviet Republics.) All one paragraph in the book, I have inserted some section breaks to make it more readable.

The implication of course is that democracy is something excellent, an ideal to be passionately wished for. But after all is democracy really desirable. European nations certainly do not seem to be finding it so at the moment. And even self-determination is not so popular as it was. There are plenty of places in what was once the Austrian Empire where the years of Hapsburg tyranny are remembered as a golden age, and the old bureaucracy is sincerely regretted.

And what is democracy, anyhow? Can it be said that government by the people exists anywhere, except perhaps in Switzerland Certainly, the English parliamentary system cannot be described as government by the people. It is a government by oligarchs for the people and with the people's occasional advice. Do I mean anything whatever when I say that democracy is a good thing? Am I expressing a reasoned opinion? Or do I merely repeat a meaningless formula by force of habit because it was drummed into me at an early age? I wonder.

And that I am able to wonder with such a perfect detachment is due, of course, to the fact that I was born in the upper-middle, governing class of an independent, rich, and exceedingly powerful nation. Born an Indian or brought up in the slums of London, I should hardly be able to achieve so philosophical a suspense of judgment.

His vagabonding nature is made clear in the following paragraphs. Huxley's perambulations are not what he is famous for, but books like Island of Brave New World couldn't have been written by someone who traveled frequently.

I have always felt a passion for personal freedom. It is a passion which the profession of writing has enabled me to gratify. A writer is his own master, works when and where he will, and is paid by a quite impersonal entity, the public, with whom it is unnecessary for him to have any direct dealings whatever.

Professionally free, I have taken care not to encumber myself with the shackles that tie a man down to one particular plot of ground; I own nothing, nothing beyond a few books and the motorcar which enables me to move from one encampment to another.

It is pleasant to be free, when one has enough to do and think about to prevent one's ever being bored, when one's work is agreeable and seems (pleasing illusion!) worth while, when one has a clear conception of what one desires to achieve and enough strength of mind to keep one more or less undeviatingly, on the path that leads to this goal. It is pleasant to be free. But occasionally, I must confess, I regret the chains with which I have not loaded myself. In these moods I desire a house full of stuff, a plot of land with things growing on it; I feel that I should like to know one small place and its people intimately, that I should like to have known them for years, all my life. But one cannot be two incompatible things at the same time. If one desires freedom, one must sacrifice the advantages of being bound. It is, alas, only too obvious.

Upon ruminating on the theory that life is found everywhere--plants, minerals, etc. (Of course, his conclusion is much broader and refers to a root cause of much of the problems of the world--uniformed habit and customs.)

To deny life to matter and concentrate only on its measurable qualities was a sound policy that paid by results. No wonder we made a habit of it. Habits easily become a part of us. We take them for granted, as we take for granted our hands and feet, the sun, falling downstairs instead of up, colours and sounds. To break a physical habit may be as painful as an amputation; to question the usefulness of an old-established habit of thought is felt to be an outrage, an indecency, a horrible sacrilege.

His feeling upon leaving India are shared by many travelers, myself included.

I am glad to be leaving India. I have met old friends…and made new friends; I have seen many delightful and interesting things, much beauty, much that is strange, much that is grotesque and comical. Bt all the same I am glad to be going away. The reasons are purely selfish. What the eye does not see, the heart does not grieve over. It is because I do not desire to grieve that I am glad to be going. For India is depressing as no other country I have ever known. One breathes in it, not air, but dust and hopelessness.

In a section that feels surprisingly contemporary, he discusses that holiest of traveler grails--getting Off the Beaten Path.

Every tourist is haunted by the desire to "get off the Beaten Track." He wants, in the first place, to do something which other people have not done. The longing to be in some way or other unique grows with every increase of standardisation. … The tourist is like the reader of advertisements. He wants something for his money which no one else possesses….

But it is not alone to desire to achieve uniqueness that makes the tourist so anxious to leave the Beaten Track. It is not the anticipated pleasure of boasting about his achievements. The incorrigible romantic in every one of us believes, with a faith that is proof against all disappointments, that there is always something more remarkable off the Beaten Track than on it, that the things which it is difficult and troublesome to see must for that very reason be the most worth seeing.

He goes on in greater detail and while it's too long to quote, it's well worth reading. Later in the book, after describing how awful Hollywood movies are, and marveling that the very viewing of them didn't cause instant revolution among oppressed third-world nations, Huxley uncorks this gem.

A people whose own propagandists proclaim it to be mentally and morally deficient cannot expect to be looked up to.

Sad to say, the entertainment industry has only become far more stupid in the last 80 years. He then describes a situation that every reader is familiar with.

At sea I succumbed to my besetting vice of reading: to such an extent that the sand-fringed palm-crowned islands; the immense marmoreal clouds that seem for ever poised, a sculptor's delirium, on the dividing line between chaos and accomplished form, the sunsets of Bengal lights and emeralds, of primroses and ice-cream, of blood and lampblack; the dawns when an almost inky sea reflecting the Eastern roses from its blue-black surface, turns the colour of wine; the stars in the soot-black sky, the nightly flashing of far away storms beneath the horizon, the green phosphorescence on the water--all the lovely incidents of tropical seafaring float slowly past me, almost unobserved; I am absorbed in the ship's library.

And them amid what we'd now call beach reads, which he flew through at three per day, he discovers a copy of Henry Ford's My Life and Work. The genesis of Brave New World is apparent from the beginning.

I had never read it; I began and was fascinated. It is enough in a book to apply destructive common sense to the existing fabric of social organisaton and then, with the aid of constructive common sense, to build up the scattered pieces into a more seemly whole. … But when Ford started to apply common sense to the existing methods of industry and business he did it, not a book, but real life….Ford seems a greater man than Buddha.

Ruminating on the even then strong appeal of Buddhism in the West, Huxley states:

One is all for religion until one visits a really religious country.

One could disagree with the first part of that clause, but the point is well made. Hinduism gets a pass from most anti-religious, but the caste system is as terrible as any custom currently extant in the world.

Later he stops in the port town of Miri, where live pigs are unloaded for the benefit of Chinese immigrant labor. To get the pigs to chill out, Huxley reveals that they receive opium in their breakfast the morning of the delivery.

Upon landing in Manila…

I had been interviewed by nine reporters…I was asked what I thought of Manila, of the Filipino race, of the political problems of the islands--to which I could only reply by asking my interviewers what they thought about these subjects and assuring them, when they had told me, that I thought the same. My opinions were considered by all parties to be extraordinarily sound.

Upon arriving in Japan he comments on what was even then an expensive country.

Accustomed to deploring and at the same time taking advantage of the low standards of living current elsewhere in the East, the traveller who enters Japan is rudely surprised when he finds himself asked to pay … a wage which would not be despised in Europe…. I was glad, for sake of the rickshaw coolies, that it should be so; for my own, I must confess, I was sorry. To the slave-owners, slaver seems a most delightful institution.

Now to America, where he dallies on film sets in Hollywood and travels through Chicago onto New York. His thoughts on America show that it has changed far more than the East Asian countries that make up the bulk of his journey and book. I wonder what three words we'd use now. Almost certainly none of the ones he has chosen.

Now that liberty is out of date, equality an exploded notion and fraternity a proven impossibility, republics should change their mottoes. Intelligence, Sterility, Insolvency: that would do for contemporary France. But not for America. The American slogan would have to be something quite different. The national motto should fit the national facts. What I should write under America's flapping eagle would be: Vitality, Prosperity, Modernity.

And finally, upon returning full circle to London, he shares a sentiment that if we all thought that way would make the world a much more pleasant place to live.

So the journey is over and I am back again where I started, richer by much experience and poorer by many exploded convictions, many perished certainties. For convictions and certainties are too often the concomitants of ignorance. Of knowledge and experience the fruit is generally doubt….

I set out on my travels knowing, or thinking I knew, how men should live, how be governed, how educated, what they should believe. I knew which was the best form of social organisation and to what end societies had been created. I had my views on every activity of human life. Now, on my return, I find myself without any of these pleasing certainties…The better you understand the significance of any question, the more difficult it becomes to answer it.

Those who like to feel that they are always right and who attach a high importance to their own opinions should stay at home.

But proverbs are always platitudes until you have personally experience the truth of them.

Jesting Pilate is dated, and Huxley uses some concepts and words that make a modern reader cringe (including frequent use of the word coolie and at least one instance of the n word.) Allowing for cultural context, however, there is so much greatness in this book, as many an inconsequential event leads to Huxley's thoughts on life, the universe, and everything. For anyone interested in travel, human nature, or the world at large this book is must-read material; a true classic of the genre.
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Sep 27, 2015Rohini Kamath rated it it was amazing
I read this book as a child from my grandfathers collection. A fantastic account of the authors travels in the sub-continent. Funny and insightful, it will keep you engrossed through out. Oddly, theres not much in the way of description of food while in India, though a description of a particularly large and satisfying meal is present in the Burma section.
I recently spent a month travelling in Rajasthan, and read the chapters pertaining to those areas while there and was surprised to see that many of his observations still hold true. ( Bikaner and his views on some of the palaces ). Anyone visiting Mumbai will agree with his observation of the crows.
Aldous Huxley has surprisingly modern views for a book written in 1914, as an Indian reading it, I found I agreed with him on nearly everything, including his views on the Taj Mahal. ( I may be in the minority there ).
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Mar 15, 2021Catalina rated it it was amazing
A mesmerizing intertwining of travel diary and collection of thoughts and ideas, of description and reflection. A vivid, lucid and masterfully informed painting of unworldly landscapes, architecture, people and life in India, Malaya, Pacific and America, triggering reflection on human nature and society.

"For materialism - if materialism means a preoccupation with the actual world in which we live - is something wholly admirable. If Western civilisation is unsatisfactory, that is not because we are interested in the actual world; it is because the majority of us are interested in such an absurdly small part of it. Our world is wide, incredibly varied and more fantastic than any product of the imagination. And yet the lives of the vast majority of men and women among the Western peoples are narrow, monotonous, and dull. We are not materialistic enough; that is the trouble. We do not interest ourselves in a sufficiency of this marvelous world of ours. [...] Every man with a little leisure and enough money for railway tickets, every man, indeed, who knows how to read, has it in his power to magnify himself, to multiply the ways in which he exists, to make his life full, significant, and interesting. [...] The remedy is more materialism and not, as false prophets from the East assert, more "spirituality" - more interest in this world, not in the other. The Other World - the world of metaphysics and religion - can never possibly be as interesting as this world, and for an obvious reason. The Other World is an invention of the human fancy and shares the limitations of its creator. " (less)
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Feb 06, 2012Thomas rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: starfish
Oeuvre digne de figurer dans une hypothétique bibliothèque idéale. Avec ce même esprit critique et caustique qu'habitait un certain Albert Londres, Aldous Huxley, à travers ce "tour du monde d'un sceptique" publié en 1926, nous rappelle aussi, par la finesse de son regard et son style précieux, un autre brillant grand voyageur, le Suisse Nicolas Bouvier et son célèbre "L'usage du monde" (d'ailleurs publié chez le même éditeur). Ces voyages en Inde, en Malaisie, en Indonésie et au Japon ne consti ...more
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Sep 02, 2020Mohammed Hammideche rated it liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: 2020, holidays-reads, voyage, inde, america
Agréable voyage avec un jeune gentleman du nom d'Aldous Huxley déjà célèbre en 1925.


Le périple à travers les Indes Britanniques, la Malaisie, le Japon, l'Amérique et une belle conclusion au retour à Londres est l'occasion pour le futur auteur du "Meilleur des Mondes" de nous embarquer avec lui et nous livrer ses impressions parfois superficielles et empreintes de préjugés mais délicieuses d'un humour très british...


Le récit est émaillé de réflexions sur l'architecture et les arts des Indes (le c ...more
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Jan 12, 2021Zoe rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: ep
[1928 edition, Doubleday, Doran, & Company, 326 pages]

In some ways outdated (being almost a century-old book), Aldous Huxley still has a lot of wisdom to share. His observations of humanity still ring true. Being unable to travel due to COVID, it was a much needed esoteric journey through the world (and the past).

I appreciate being re-reminded how travel is a form of meditation, self-reflection, and “inquiry of values”. Things greatly lacking from our hyperactive, hustle-obsessed world.
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Jan 24, 2020Irina Bandrabur rated it it was amazing
I adored this book! If you love traveling, philosophy and Huxley's work, you will too. (less)
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May 21, 2019Stephen Hayes rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: travel, tshwane-library
A travel diary of a journey undertaken nearly a century ago -- the book was first published in 1926. On his journey Huxley and his companion(s) (whose name(s) are never mentioned) visit India, Burma, Malaya, Java, Borneo, the Philippines, China, Japan and the USA.

His observations are interesting historically, because the first three countries he mentioned were still under British colonial rule, while the Philippines were under American rule. At the end of his journey he concludes that travel is broadening, that it makes one aware of human diversity, and that awareness of that diversity should make one more tolerant, but not too tolerant. His views change with each country he visits, and one can see how each one changes the way he sees things.

The first country he describes is India. As a Westerner he regards India as too "spiritual", and doesn't think that attitude has done India much good. Back then India was one country, including Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka (which he did not visit). Muslims and Hindus lived side by side. He describes a visit to the River Ganges, where about a million Hindus had gathered for an eclipse of the sun. They were there to save the sun from a serpent that threatened to eat it. Huxley writes:

To save the sun (which might, one feels, very safely be left to look after itself) a million Hindus will assemble on the banks of the Ganges. How many, I wonder, would assemble to save India? An immense energy, which, if it could be turned into political channels, might liberate and transform the country, is wasted in the name of imbecile superstitions. Religion is a luxury which India, in its present condition, cannot possibly afford. India will never be free until the Hindus and the Moslems are as tepidly enthusiastic about their religion as we are about the Church of England, If I were an Indian millionaire, I would leave all my money for the endowment of an Atheist Mission (Huxley 1994:91).

After he had visited the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) he made an observation about Christian mission and colonialism that I, as a missiologist, found interesting:

The Dutch and English were never such ardent Christians that they thought it necessary to convert, wholesale and by force, the inhabitants of the countries which they colonized. The Spaniards, on the contrary, did really believe in their extraordinary brand of Catholic Christianity; they were always crusaders as well as freebooters, missionaries as well as colonists. Wherever they went, they have left behind them their religion, and with it (for one cannot teach a religion without teaching many other things as well) their language and some of their habits (Huxley 1994:161).

When he visited the USA he describes his reaction to an advertisement for a firm of undertakers in Chicago, where the undertaker became a mortician, the coffin became a casket, and the deceased became "the loved one" -- a phenomenon that was to lead a couple of other British authors to write books about it -- The Loved One by Evelyn Waugh and The American Way of Death by Nancy Mitford.

The thing that really caught Huxley's attention, however, was the difference in values that this indicated, between the USA and Europe. The undertaker was proud of providing a necessary "service". Huxley thought that the people who really provided a necessary service did not represent higher values, as the undertaker's advertisement implied, but rather lower values. Higher values, for people in Europe, were represented by unnecessary services, like art and religion (Huxley seemed to have changed his mind about the value of religion by the end of his journey). In American modernity and materialism unnecessary services were just unnecessary.

Huxley gives us fascinating glimpses into other places, other times, other values. Travelling eastwards round the world, he thought India needed to modernised, but after crossing the international date line from the East to the West, he seemed to change his mind, and thought that America was too modern.
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May 19, 2018Carl Mucho rated it really liked it
Shelves: nonfiction, reviewed
This book had to undergo emergency drying procedures after getting soaked in water inside a backpack I had washed. It took at least a day for the book's pages to wither crisp to perfection with the heat of the sun erasing all traces of the unfortunate incident. I had set aside the entire weekend to read the book but had to begin a day later as a result.

Aldous Huxley writes thought-provoking entry after mind-blowing entry of his travels across the vast expanse of Asia (South, IndoChina Southeast, East) to America. His eye for details, wide erudition and deep sociocultural awareness help transform the book into a pair of comfortable shoes that is easy to slip into. The experiences he had in his journey are easy to absorb as one's own. His uncanny powers of observation coupled with his skills in writing ensures that the reader enjoy the rush of traveling places thousands miles apart without moving an inch. Reading is the cheapest form of travel is an idiom that he enlivens with his travel memoirs. (less)
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Aug 20, 2019Jeremy rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: biography, burma, india, philosophy
A fascinating account of a trip around the world in 1924. The emphasis is on India and the author found plenty to fault about the locals, their religions and their colonial oveloads and wasn't shy to call it out. A surprisingly modern book with many fascinating insights and observations as well as some bits that feel more like 1874 or even 1724! (less)
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Jan 13, 2021Roxana Nastase rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Surprisingly modern views for a book written in 1914. Huxley’s humour and strong sense of reality combined jn the same book are the key of a valuable reading. I enjoyed the book at maximum. 4 stars are only because India has half of the book and the others the rest of it. I’d have liked to travel more with Huxley. Bottom line 4 stars beacause it is too short:-)
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2021/09/08

Perennial Phil A LIST OF RECOMMENDED BOOKS




A LIST OF RECOMMENDED BOOKS

Quaker in yellow (7 items out of 97)

  1. AL-GHAZZALI. Confessions. Translated by Claud Field (London, 1909).

  2. ANSARI OF HERAT. The Invocations of Sheikh i4bdullah Ansari of Herat. Translated by Sardar Sir Jogendra Singh (London, 1939)‑

  3. ATTAR. Selections. Translated by Margaret Smith (London, 1932).

  4. AUGUSTINE, ST. Confessions (numerous editions). AUROBINDO, SRI. The Lift Divine, 3 vols. (Calcutta, 1939). BAKER, AUGUSTINE. Holy Wisdom (London, 1876).

  5. BEAUSOBRE, JULIA DE. The Woman Who Could Not Die (London and New York, 1938).

  6. BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX, ST. The Steps of Humility (Cambridge, Mass., 1940).

  7. On the Love of God (New York, 1937).

  8. Selected Letters (London, 1904). An admirably lucid account of St. Bernard's thought may be found in The Mystical Doctrine of Saint Bernard, by Professor Etienne Gilson (London and New York, 1940).

  9. BERTOCCI, PETER A. The Empirical Argument for God in Late British Philosophy (Cambridge, Mass., 1938).

  10. Bhagavad-Gita. Among many translations of this Hindu scripture the best, from a literary point of view, is that of Swami Prabhavananda and Christopher Isherwood (Los Angeles, 1944). Valuable notes, based upon the commentaries of Shankara, are to be found in Swami Nikhilananda's edition (New York, 1944), and Professor Franklin Edgerton's literal translation (Cambridge, Mass., 1944) is preceded by a long and. scholarly introduction.

  11. BINYON, L. The Flight of the Dragon (London, 1911).

  12. BOENME, JAICOB. Some good introduction is needed to the work of this important but difficult mystic. On the theological and devotional side the Danish Bishop H. L. Martensen's Jacob Boehme (trans., London, 1885) is recommended; or from a more philosophical viewpoint A. Koyré's splendid volume La Philosophie de Jacob Boehme (not yet translated, Paris, 1929) or H. H. Brinton's The Mystic Will (New York, 1930).

  13. BRAHMANANDA, Swi. Records of his teaching and a biography by Swami Prabhavananda are contained in The Eternal Com­panion (Los Angeles, 1944).

  14. CAMUS, JEAN PIERRE. The Spirit of St. Fran cois de Sales (London, n.d.).

  15. CAUSSADE, J. P. DE. Abandonment (New York, 1887). Spiritual Letters, 3 vols. (London, 1937).

  16. CHANTL, ST. JEANNE FRANcOISE. Selected Letters (London and New York, 1918).

  17. CHAPMAN, ABBOT JOHN. Spiritual Letters (London, 1935).

  18. CHUANG Tzu. Chuang Tu, Mystic, Moralist and Social Reformer. Translated by Herbert Giles (Shanghai, 1936).

  19. Musings of a Chinese Mystic (London, 1920).

  20. Chinese Philosophy in Classical Times. ,Translated by E. R. Hughes (London, 1943).

  21. The Cloud of Unknowing (with commentary by Augustine Baker). Edited with an introduction by Justice McCann (London, 1924).

  22. COOMARASWAMY, ANANDA K. Buddha and the Gospel ofBuddhism (New York, 1916).

  23. The Transformation of Nature in Art (Cambridge, Mass., 193 5)-Hinduism and Buddhism (New York, n.d.).

  24. CURTIS, A. M. The Way of Silence (Burton Bradstock, Dorset, '937).

  25. DEUSSEN, PAUL. The Philosophy of tile Upanishads (London, 1906).

  26. DIONYSIUS THE AREOPAGITE. On the Divine Names and the Mys­tical Theology. Translated with an introduction by C. E. Rolt (London, 1920).

  27. ECKHART, MEISTER. Works, translated by C. B. Evans (London, 1924).

  28. Meister Eckhart, A Modern Translation. By R. B. Blakney (New York, 1940.

  29. EVANS-WENT; W. Y. The Tibetan Book of the Dead (New York, 1927).

  30. Tibet's Great Yogi, Milarepa (New York, 1928).

  31. Tibetan Yoga and Secret Doctrines (New York, 193 5)‑

  32. The Following of Christ. Unknown author, but mistakenly attri­buted to Tauler in the first English edition (London, 1886).

  33. Fox, GEORGE. Journal (London, 1911).

  34. FROST, BnE. The Art of Mental Prayer (London, 1940). Saint John of the Cross (London, 1937).

  35. GARB JGOU-LAGRANGE, R. Christian Perfection and Contemplation (London and St. Louis, 1937).

  36. Gonnuw, DWIGHT. A Buddhist Bible (published by the editor, Thetford, Maine, 1938). This volume contains translations of several Mahayana texts not to be found, or to be found only with much difficulty, elsewhere. Among these are 'The Dia­mond Sutra,' 'The Surangama Sutra,' 'The Lankavatara Sutra,' 'The Awakening of Faith' and 'The Sutra of the Sixth Patriarch.'

  37. GUNON, RENL Man and His Becoming according to the Vedanta (London, n.d.).

  38. East and West (London, 1941).

  39. The Crisis of the Modern World (London, 1942).

  40. HEARD, GERALD. The Creed of Christ (New York, 1940).

  41. The Code of Christ (New York, 1941). Preface to Prayer (New York, 1944).

  42. HILTON, WALTER. The Scale of Perfection (London, 1927).

  43. HIJEGEL, FRIEDRICH VON. The Mystical Element in Religion as Studied in Saint Catherine of Genoa and Her Friends (London, 1923).


  44. IBN T1JFAIL. The Awakening of the Soul. Translated by Paul Bronnie (London, 1910).

  45. The Imitation of Christ. Whitford's translation, edited by E. J. Klein (New York, 1940.

  46. INGE, W. R. Christian Mysticism (London, 1899).

  47. Studies of English Mystics—including William Law (London, 1906).

  48. JOHN OF THE CROSS, ST. Works, 3 vols. (London, 1934-1935)‑

  49. JONES, RUFUS. Studies in Mystical Religion.

  50. The Spiritual Reformers in the 16th and 17th Centuries (New York, 1914).

  51. The Flowering of Mysticism (New York, 1939).

  52. JORGENSEN, JOHANNES. Saint Catherine of Siena (London, 1938). JULIANA OF NORWICH. Revelations of Divine Love (London, 1917).

  53. LAO Tzu. There are many translations of the Tao Teh King. Consult and compare those of Arthur Waley in The Way and Its Power (London, 1933), of F. R. Hughes in Chinese Philo­sophy in Classical Times (Everyman's Library) and of Ch'u Ta-Kao (London, 1927) reprinted in The Bible of the World (New York, 1939).

  54. LAW, WILLIAM. Several modern editions of his Serious Call are available. But none of Law's still finer and much more distinctly mystical works, such as The Spirit of Prayer and The Spirit of Love, have been reprinted in full in recent years. Long extacts from them may however be found in Stephen Hobhouse's Selected Mystical Writings of William Law (London, 1939) (a work which also contains some useful 'Notes and Studies in the mystical theology of William Law and Jacob Boehme') and in the same writer's William Law and Eighteenth Century Quakerism (London, 1927). Alexander Whyte also compiled a fine anthology, Characters and Characteristics of William Law (4th ed. London, 1907); while for the student there is Christopher Walton's extra­ordinary encyclopaedic collection of Notes and Materials for an adequate biography of William Law (London, 1856).

  55. LEEN, EDWARD. Progress through Mental Prayer (London, 1940).

  56. MCKEON, RICHARD. Selections from Medieval Philosophers, 2 vols. (New York, 1929).

  57. The Mirror of Simple Souls. Author unknown (London, 1927).

  58. NICHOLAS OF CUSA. The Idiot (San Francisco, 1940). The Vision of God (London and New York, 1928).

  59. NICHOLSON, R. The Mystics of Islam (London, 1914).

  60. OMAN, JOHN. The Natural and the Supernatural (London, 1938).

  61. Orro, RUDOLF. India's Religion of Grace (London, 1930). Mysticism East and West (London, 1932).

  62. PATANJALI. Yoga Aphorisms. Translated with a commentary by Swami Vivekananda (New York, 1899).

  63. PLOTINUS. The Essence of Plotinus (G. H. Turnbull, New York, 1934). A good anthology of this very important and voluminous mystic.

  64. PONNELLE, L. and L. BORDET. St. Philip Neri and the Roman Society of His Time (London, 1932).

  65. POULAIN, A. The Graces of Interior Prayer (London, 1910). POURRAT, P. Christian Spirituality, 3 vols. (London, 7922). PRATT, J. B. The Pilgrimage of Buddhism (New York, 1928).

  66. QUAKERS. The Beginnings of Quakerism, by W. P. Braithwaite (London, 1912). See also George Fox, p. 348.

  67. RADHAKRISHNAN, S. The Hindu View of Life (London and New York, 1927).

  68. Indian Philosophy (London and New York, 1923-1927)-Eastern Religions and Western Thought (New York, 1939).

  69. RAMAKRISHNA, SRI. The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishn. Translated from the Bengali narrative of 'M' by Swami Nikhilananda (New York, 1942).

  70. RUMI, JALAL-IJDDIN. Masnavi. Translated by E. H. Whinfield (London, 1898).

  71. RUYSBROECK, JAN VAN. The Adornment of the Spiritual Marriage (London, 1916). Consult also the studies by Evelyn Underhill (London, 1915) and Wautier d'Aygalliers (London, 1925).

  72. SALES, ST. FRANc0Is DE. Introduction to the Devout Life (numer­ous editions).

  73. Treatise on the Love of God (new edition, Westminster, Md., 1942).

  74. Spiritual Conferences (London, 1868).

  75. See also J. P. Camus.

  76. The Secret of the Golden Flower. Translated from the Chinese by

  77. ·Richard Wilhelm. Commentary by Dr.. C. G. Jung (London and New York, 1931).

  78. SPURGEON, CAROLINE. Mysticism in English Literature (Cam­bridge, 1913).

  79. STOCKS, J. L. Time, Cause and Eternity (London, 1938). STOUT, G. F. Mind and Matter (London, 1931).

  80. Sutra Spoken by the Sixth Patriarch, Hui Neng. Translated by Wung Mou-lam (Shanghai, 1930). Reprinted in A Buddhist Bible (Thetford, 1938).

  81. SUZUKI, B. L. Mahayana Buddhism (London, 1938).

  82. SUZUKI, D. T. Studies in Zen Buddhism (London, 1927). Studies in the Lan/cavatara Sutra (Kyoto and London, 1935). Manual of Zen Buddhism (Kyoto, 1935).

  83. TAGORE, RABINDRANATH. One Hundred Poems ofKabir (London, 1915).

  84. TAULER, JOHANN. Life and Sermons (London, 1907).

  85. The Inner Way (London, 1909).

  86. Consult Inge's Christian Mysticism, Rufus Jones's Studies in Mystical Religion and Pourrat's Christian Spirituality.

  87. TENNANT, F. R. Philosophical Theology (Cambridge, 1923).

  88. Theologia Germanica. Winkworth's translation (new edition, London, 1937).

  89. TILLYARD, AELFRIDA. Spiritual Exercises (London, 1927).

  90. TRAHERNE, THOMAS. Centuries of Meditation (London, 1908). Consult Thomas Traherne, A Critical Biography, by Gladys I. Wade (Princeton, 1944).

  91. UNDERHILL, EVELYN. Mysticism (London, 1924). The Mystics of the Church (London, 1925).

  92. Upanishads. The Thirteen Principal Upanishads. Translated by R. E. Hume (New York, 1931).

  93. The Ten Principal Upanishads. Translated by Shree Purohit and W. B. Yeats (London, 1937).

  94. The Himalayas of the Soul. Translated by J. Mascaro (London, 1938).

  95. WATTS, ALAN W. The Spirit of Zen (London, 1936).

  96. WHITNEY, JANET. John Woolman, American Quaker (Boston, 1942).

  97. Elizabeth Fry, Quaker Heroine (Boston, 1936).

Perennial Phil Ch 19 GOD IS NOT MOCKED [4,1912]

Perennial Phil Ch 19 GOD IS NOT MOCKED [4,1912]
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A quick summary:

0] Meaning of the Title: "GOD IS NOT MOCKED": 

It is easy for us as believers to point the finger at those outside the church who mock God. But the most subtle mockery of God, and the most dangerous, comes from those of us sitting in church. 
We are guilty of mockery when we behave with an outward show of spirituality or godliness without an inward engagement or change of heart.
https://draft.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/933322945938724907/919902938746771082

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Why hast thou said, 'I have sinned so much,
And God in His mercy has not punished my sins'?
How many times do I smite thee, and thou knowest not!
Thou art bound in my chains from head to foot.
On thy heart is rust on rust collected
So that thou art blind to divine mysteries.
When a man is stubborn and follows evil practices,
He casts dust in the eyes of his discernment.
Old shame for sin and calling on God quit him;
Dust five layers deep settles on his mirror,
Rust spots begin to gnaw his iron,
The colour of his jewel grows less and less.

Jalal-uddin Rumi

IF there is freedom (and even Determinists consistently act as if they were certain of it) and 
if (as everyone who has qualified himself to talk about the subject has always been con­vinced) there is a spiritual Reality, which it is the final end and purpose of consciousness to know
then all life is in the nature of an intelligence test, and 
the higher the level of awareness and the greater the potentialities of the creature, the more searchingly difficult will be the questions asked. 

For, in Bagehot's words, 
'we could not be what we ought to be, 
if we lived in the sort of universe 
    we should expect. . .
  • A latent Providence
  • a confused life, 
  • an odd material world, 
  • an existence broken short in the midst and on a sudden, 
are not real diffi­culties, but real helps; 
for they, or something like them, are essential conditions of a moral life in a subordinate being.' 

Because we are free, it is possible for us to answer life's questions either well or badly. If we answer them badly, we shall bring down upon ourselves self-stultification.273 274 

Most often this self‑stultification will take subtle and not immediately detectable forms, as when our failure to answer properly makes it impos­sible for us to realize the higher potentialities of our being

Sometimes, on the contrary, the self-stultification is manifest on the physical level, and may involve not only individuals as individuals, but entire societies, which go down in catastrophe or sink more slowly into decay. 

The giving of correct answers is rewarded primarily by spiritual growth and progressive realization of latent potentialities, and secondarily (when cir­cumstances make it possible) by the adding of all the rest to the realized kingdom of God. 

Karma exists; but its equiva­lence of act and award is not always obvious and material, as the earlier Buddhist and Hebrew writers ingenuously imagined that it should be. The bad man in prosperity may, all unknown to himself; be darkened and corroded with inward rust, while the good man under afflictions may be in the rewarding process of spiritual growth. 

No, God is not mocked; but also, let us always remember, 
He is not understood.

Pert nella giusthia sempitérna la vista che riceve vostro mondo,
com'occ/zio per lo mar, dentro s'interna,
ckê, benc/lê dalla proda veggia ilfondo,
in pelago nol vede, e non di meno
Ii, ma cela liii l'esser profondo.

('Wherefore, in the eternal justice, 
such sight as your earth receives is engulfed, like the eye in the sea; 
for though by the shore it can see the bottom, in the ocean it cannot see it; 
yet none the less the bottom is there, but the depth hides it.')

 Love is the plummet as well as the astrolabe of God's mys­teries, 
and the pure in heart can see far down into the depths of the divine justice
to catch a glimpse, not indeed of the details of the cosmic process, but at least of its principle and nature. 
These insights permit them to say, with Juliana of Norwich, that all shall be well, that, in spite of time, all is well, and that the problem of evil has its solution in the eternity, which men can, if they so desire, experience, but can never describe. 275

But, you urge, if men sin from the necessity of their nature, they are excusable;
you do not explain, however, what you would infer from this fact.
Is it perhaps that God will be prevented from growing angry with them?
Or is it rather that they have deserved that blessedness which consists in the knowledge and love of God?
If you mean the former, I altogether agree that God does not grow angry and that all things happen by his decree.
But I deny that, for this reason, all men ought to be happy.
Surely men may be excusable and nevertheless miss happiness, and be tormented in many ways. A horse is excusable for being a horse and not a man; but nevertheless he must needs be a horse and not a man.
One who goes mad from the bite of a dog is excusable; yet it is right that he should die of suffocation.
So, too, he who cannot rule his passions, nor hold them in check out of respect for the law, while he may be excusable on the ground of weakness, is incapable of enjoying conformity of spirit and knowledge and love of God; and he is lost inevitably.
Spinoza

Horizontally and vertically, in physical and temperamental kind as well as in degree of inborn ability and native goodness, human beings differ profoundly one from another. Why? To what end and for what past causes? 

'Master, who did sin, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?' 
  1. Jesus answered, 'Neither hath this man sinned nor his parents, but that the works of God should be made manifest in him.' 
  2. The man of science, on the contrary, would say that the responsibility rested with the parents who had caused the blindness of their child either by having the wrong kind of genes, or by con­tracting some avoidable disease. 
  3. Hindu or Buddhist believers in reincarnation according to the laws of karma (the destiny which, by their actions, individuals and groups of individuals impose upon themselves, one another and their descendants) would give another answer and say that, owing to what he had done in previous existences, the blind man had predestined himself to choose the sort of parents from whom he would have to inherit blindness.276 

These three answers are not mutually incompatible. The parents are responsible for making the child what, by heredity and upbringing, he turns out to be. The soul or character incarnated in the child is of such a nature, owing to past behaviour, that it is forced to select those particular parents. 
And collaborating with the material and efficient causes is the final cause, the teleological pull from in front. This teleo­logical pull is a pull from the divine Ground of things acting upon that part of the timeless now, which a finite mind must regard as the future. 
Men sin and their parents sin; but the works of God have to be manifested in every sentient being (either by exceptional ways, as in this case of supernormal healing, or in the ordinary course of events)—have to be mani­fested again and again, with the infinite patience of eternity, until at last the creature makes itself lit for the perfect and consummate manifestation of unitive knowledge, of the state of 'not I, but God in me.'

'Karma,' according to the Hindus, 'never dispels ignorance, being under the same category with it. Knowledge alone dispels ignorance, just as light alone dispels darkness.'

In other words, the causal process takes place within time and cannot possibly result in deliverance from time. Such a deliver­ance can only be achieved as a consequence of the intervention of eternity in the temporal domain; and eternity cannot inter­vene unless the individual will makes a creative act of self-denial, thus producing, as it were, a vacuum into which eternity can flow. To suppose that the causal process in time can of itself result in deliverance from time is like supposing that water will rise into a space from which the air has not been previously exhausted.277

The right relation between prayer and conduct is not that conduct is supremely important and prayer may help it, but that prayer is supremely important and conduct tests it.

Archbishop Temple

The aim and purpose of human life is the unitive knowledge of God. 
Among the indispensable means to that end is right conduct, 
and by the degree and kind of virtue achieved, the degree of liberating knowledge may be assessed and its quality evaluated. 
In a word, the tree is known by its fruits; 
God is not mocked. [?]

Religious beliefs and practices are certainly not the only factors determining the behaviour of a given society. 
But, no less certainly, they are among the determining factors. 
At least to some extent, the collective conduct of a nation is a test of the religion prevailing within it, a criterion by which we may legitimately judge the doctrinal validity of that religion and its practical efficiency in helping individuals to advance towards the goal of human existence.

In the past the nations of Christendom persecuted in the name of their faith, fought religious wars and undertook cru­sades against infidels and heretics; 

today they have ceased to be Christian in anything but name, and 
the only religion they profess is some brand of local idolatry, such as nationalism, state-worship, boss-worship and revolutionism.

From these fruits of (among other things) historic Christianity, what infer­ences can we draw as to the nature of the tree? 
The answer has already been given in the section on 'Time and Eternity.' 
If Christians used to be persecutors and are now no longer Christians, the reason is that the Perennial Philosophy incor­porated in their religion was overlaid by wrong beliefs that led inevitably, since God is never mocked [?], to wrong actions. 

These wrong beliefs had one element in common—namely, an over-valuation of happenings in time and an under-valuation of the everlasting, timeless fact of eternity. 

Thus, belief in the supreme importance for salvation of remote historical events resulted in bloody disputes over the interpretation of the not very adequate and often conflicting records. 278 
And belief in the sacredness, nay, the actual divinity, of the ecciesiastico-politico-financial organizations, which developed after the fall of the Roman Empire, not only added bitterness to the all too human struggles for their control, but served to rationalize and justify the worst excesses of those who fought for place, wealth and power within and through the Church. 

But this is not the whole story. The same over-valuation of events in time, which once caused Christians to persecute and fight religious wars, led at last to a widespread indifference to a religion that, in spite of everything, was still in part preoccupied with eter­nity. But nature abhors a vacuum, and into the yawning void of this indifference there flowed the tide of political idolatry. The practical consequences of such idolatry, as we now see, are total war, revolution and tyranny.

Meanwhile, on the credit side of the balance sheet, we find such items as the following: an immense increase in technical and governmental efficiency and an immense increase in scien­tific knowledge—each of them a result of the general shift of Western man's attention from the eternal to the temporal order, 
first within the sphere of Christianity and then, inevi­tably, outside it.
===

Perennial Phil Ch 16 PRAYER [6,2932]

Perennial Phil Ch 16 PRAYER [6,2932]

THE word 'prayer' is applied to at least four distinct procedures—petition, intercession, adoration, contemplation. 

  1. Petition is the asking of something for ourselves. 
  2. Intercession 중재is the asking of something for other people. 
  3. Adoration 동경is the use of intellect, feeling, will and imagination in making acts of devotion directed towards God in his personal aspect or as incarnated in human form. 
  4. Contemplation 묵상is that condition of alert passivity in which the soul lays itself open to the divine Ground within and without, the immanent and transcendent Godhead.

Psychologically, it is all but impossible for a human being to practise contemplation without preparing for it by some kind of adoration and without feeling the need to revert at more or less frequent intervals to intercession and some form at least of petition. 
On the other hand, it is both possible and easy to practise petition apart not only from contemplation, but also from adoration and, in rare cases of extreme and unmiti­gated egotism, even from intercession. 

Petitionary and inter­cessory prayer may be used—and used, what is more, with what would ordinarily be regarded as success—without any but the most perfunctory and superficial reference to God in any of his aspects. 

To acquire the knack of getting his petitions answered, a man does not have to know or love God, or even to know or love the image of God in his own mind. 
All that he requires is a burning sense of the importance of his own ego and its desires, coupled with a firm conviction that there exists, out there in the universe, something not himself which can be wheedled or dragooned into satisfying those desires. 
If I repeat 'My will be done,' with the necessary degree of faith and persistency, the chances are that, sooner or later and some­how or other, I shall get what I want. 
---
“Thy will be done” means 'may Gods will be done'. It is the will of God that should be done in the world, not man's will, because God is the one who created the heavens and the earth, man, and everything else in it that has life.

What is the meaning of 'thy will be done' in The Lord's Prayer?
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What does my will be done and They will be done ? mean?

So.. "My will be done" means that the speaker is saying that what he want (his will) is what should happen. "They will be done" means that it will happen.
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261 252    

Whether my will coincides with the will of God, and whether in getting what I want I shall get what is spiritually, morally or even materially good for me, are questions which I cannot answer in advance. 
Only time and eternity will show. 
Meanwhile we shall be well ad­vised to heed the warnings of folk-lore. Those anonymous realists who wrote the world's fairy stories knew a great deal about wishes and their fulfilment. 
They knew, first of all, that in certain circumstances petitions actually get themselves answered; but they also knew that God is not the only answerer and that if one asks for something in the wrong spirit, it may in effect be given—but given with a vengeance and not by a divine Giver. 

Getting what one wants by means of self-regarding petition is a form of hubris거만, which invites its condign and appropriate nemesis. 


As nouns the difference between arrogance and hubris is that 
arrogance is the act or habit of arrogating, or making undue claims in an overbearing manner; that species of pride which consists in exorbitant claims of rank, dignity, estimation, or power, or which exalts the worth or importance of the person to an undue degree; proud contempt of others; lordliness; haughtiness; self-assumption; presumption while 
hubris is excessive pride, presumption or arrogance (originally toward the gods).
--
nemesis. a downfall caused by an inescapable agent.
---
Thus, the folk-lore of the North American Indian is full of stories about people who fast and pray egotistically, in order to get more than a reasonable man ought to have, and who, receiving what they ask for, thereby bring about their own downfall. 

From the other side of the world come all the tales of the men and women who make use of some kind of magic to get their petitions answered —always with farcical or catastrophic consequence. Hardly ever do the Three Wishes of our traditional fairy lore lead to anything but a bad end for the successful wisher.

Picture God as saying to you, 'My son, why is it that day by day you rise and pray, and genuflect, and even strike the ground with your forehead, nay, sometimes even shed tears, while you say to Me: "My Father, my God, give me wealth!" 
If I were to give it to you, you would think yourself of some importance, you would fancy you had gained something very great. 
Because you asked for it, you have it. But take care to make good use of it. Before you had it you were humble; now that you have begun to be rich you despise the poor. 
What kind of a good is that which only makes you worse? For worse you are, since you were bad already. And that it would make you worse you knew not; hence you asked it of Me. I gave it you and I proved you; you have found—and you are found out! 
253
Ask of Me better  things than these, greater things than these. Ask of Me spiritual things. Ask of Me Myself.'
St. Augustine

O Lord, I, a beggar, ask of Thee more than a thousand kings may ask of Thee. Each one has something he needs to ask of Thee; I have come to ask Thee to give me Thyself.
Ansari of Herat

In the words of Aquinas, it is legitimate for us to pray for any­thing which it is legitimate for us to desire. There are some things that nobody has the right to desire—such as the fruits of crime or wrong-doing. 
Other things may be legitimately desired by people on one level of spiritual development, but should not be desired (and indeed cease to be desired) by those on another, higher level. 
Thus, St. François de Sales had reached a point where he could say, 'I have hardly any desires, but if I were to be born again I should have none at all. 
We should ask nothing and refuse nothing, but leave ourselves in the arms of divine Providence 신의 섭리without wasting time in any desire, except to will what God wills of us.' 
But meanwhile the third clause of the Lord's Prayer is repeated daily by mil­lions, who have not the slightest intention of letting any will be done, except their own.

The savour of wandering in the ocean of deathless life has rid me of all my asking;As the tree is in the seed, so all diseases are in this asking.
Kabir

Lord, I know not what to ask of thee. Thou only knowest what I need. Thou lovest me better than I know how to love myself. Father, give to thy child that which he himself knows not how to ask. Smite or heal, depress me or raise me up: I adore all thy purposes without knowing them. I am silent; I offer myself up in a sacrifice; I yield myself to Thee; I would have no other desire than to accomplish thy will. Teach me to pray. Pray Thyself in me.
Fénelon
254 

(A dervish was tempted by the devil to cease calling upon Allah, on the ground that Allah never answered, 'Here am I.' The Prophet Khadir appeared to him in a vision with a message from God.)

Was it not I who summoned thee to my service?
Was it not I who made thee busy with my name?
Thy calling 'Allah!' was my 'Here am I.'
Jalal-uddin Rumi

I pray God the Omnipotent to place us in the ranks of his chosen, among the number of those whom He directs to the path of safety; in whom He inspires fervour lest they forget Him; whom He cleanses from all defilement, that nothing may remain in them except Himself; yea, of those whom He indwells com­pletely, that they may adore none beside Him.
Al-G/za,a1i

About intercession, as about so many other subjects, it is William Law who writes most clearly, simply and to the point.

By considering yourself as an advocate with God for your neigh­bours and acquaintances, you would never find it hard to be at peace with them yourself. It would be easy for you to bear with and forgive those, for whom you particularly implored 간청하다the divine mercy and forgiveness.
William Law

Intercession중재is the best arbitrator of all differences, the best pro­moter of true friendship, the best cure and preservative against all unkind tempers, all angry and haughty passions.
William Law
255
You cannot possibly have any ill-temper, or show any unkind behaviour to a man for whose welfare you are so much con­cerned, as to be his advocate with God in private. For you cannot possibly despise and ridicule that man whom your private prayers recommend to the love and favour of God.
William Law

Intercession, then, is at once the means to, and the expression of, the love of one's neighbour. And in the same way adora­tion is the means to, and the expression of, the love of God—a love that finds its consummation in the unitive knowledge of the Godhead which is the fruit of contemplation. It is to these higher forms of communion with God that the authors of the following extracts refer whenever they use the word 'prayer.'

The aim and end of prayer is to revere, to recognize and to adore the sovereign majesty of God, through what He is in Himself rather than what He is in regard to us, and rather to love his goodness by the love of that goodness itself than for what it sends us.
Bourgoing

In prayer he (Charles de Condren) did not stop at the frontiers of his knowledge and his reasoning. He adored God and his mysteries as they are in themselves and not as he understood them.
Amelote

'What God is in Himself,' 'God and his mysteries as they are in themselves'—the phrases have a Kantian ring. But if Kant was right and the Thing in itself is unknowable, Bourgoing, Dc Condren and all the other masters of the spiritual life were engaged in a wild-goose chase. But Kant was right only as regards minds that have not yet come to enlightenment and deliverance. To such minds Reality, whether material, psychic or spiritual, presents itself as it is darkened, tinged and refracted by the medium of their own individual natures. 
156 But in those who are pure in heart and poor in spirit there is no distortion of Reality, because there is no separate selfhood to obscure or refract, no painted lantern slide of intellectual beliefs and hal­lowed imagery to give a personal and historical colouring to the 'white radiance of Eternity.' 
For such minds, as Olier says, 'even ideas of the saints, of the Blessed Virgin, and the sight of Jesus Christ in his humanity are impediments in the way of the sight of God in his purity.' The Thing in itself can be per-ceived—but only by one who, in himself, is no-thing.

By prayer I do not understand petition or supplication which, according to the doctrines of the schools, is exercised principally by the understanding, being a signification of what the person desires to receive from God. 
But prayer here specially meant is an offering and giving to God whatsoever He may justly require from us.

Now prayer, in its general notion, may be defined to be an elevation of the mind to God, or more largely and expressly thus: prayer is an actuation of an intellective soul towards God, ex­pressing, or at least implying, an entire dependence on Him as the author and fountain of all good, a will and readiness to give Him his due, which is no less than all love, all obedience, adoration, glory and worship, by humbling and annihilating the self and all creatures in his presence; and lastly, a desire and intention to aspire to an union of spirit with Him.

Hence it appears that prayer is the most perfect and most divine action that a rational soul is capable of. It is of all actions and duties the most indispensably necessary.
Augustine Baker
257
Lord, teach me to seek Thee and reveal Thyself to me when I seek Thee. For I cannot seek Thee except Thou teach me, nor find Thee except Thou reveal Thyself. Let me seek Thee in longing, let me long for Thee in seeking: let me find Thee in love and love Thee in finding.

 Lord, I acknowledge and I thank Thee that Thou hast created me in this Thine image, in order that I may be mindful of Thee, may conceive of Thee and love Thee: but that image has been so consumed and wasted away by vices and obscured by the smoke of wrong-doing that it cannot achieve that for which it was made, except Thou renew it and create it anew. Is the eye of the soul darkened by its infirm­ity, or dazzled by Thy glory? Surely, it is both darkened in itself and dazzled by Thee. Lord, this is the unapproachable light in which Thou dwellest. Truly I see it not, because it is too bright for me; and yet whatever I see, I see through it, as the weak eye sees what it sees through the light of the sun, which in the sun itself it cannot look upon. Oh supreme and unapproachable light, oh holy and blessed truth, how far art Thou from me who am so near to Thee, how far art Thou removed from my vision, though I am so near to Thine! Everywhere Thou art wholly present, and I see Thee not. In Thee I move and in Thee I have my being, and cannot come to Thee, Thou art within me and about me, and I feel Thee not.

St. Ans6lm

Oh Lord, put no trust in me; for I shall surely fail if Thou uphold me not.
St. PAilip Neri

To pretend to devotion without great humility and renunciation of all worldly tempers is to pretend to impossibilities. He that would be devout must first be humble, have a full sense of his own miseries and wants and the vanity of the world, and then his soul will be full of desire after God. A proud, or vain, or worldly-minded man may use a manual of prayers, but he cannot be de­vout, because devotion is the application of an humble heart to God as its only happiness.
William Law

The spirit, in order to work, must have all sensible images, both good and bad, removed. The beginner in a spiritual course com­mences with the use of good sensible images, and it is impossible to begin in a good spiritual course with the exercises of the spirit. 
258 
Those souls who have not a propensity to the interior must abide always in the exercises, in which sensible images are used,and these souls will find the sensible exercises very profitable to themselves and to others, and pleasing to God. And this is the way of the active life. But others, who have the propensity to the interior, do not always remain in the exercises of the senses, but after a time these will give place to the exercises of the spirit, which are independent of the senses and the imagination and con­sist simply in the elevation of the will of the intellective soul to God.... The soul elevates her will towards God, apprehended by the understanding as a spirit, and not as an imaginary thing, the human spirit in this way aspiring to a union with the Divine Spirit.
Augustine Baker

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 호소 항소 애원 they can make. But from what you tell me, you sometimes do nothing of this, but lie there like a shadow or a 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.
St. FrwzçoLc de Sales

I have come to see that I do not limit my mind enough simply to prayer, that I always want to do something myself in it, wherein I do very wrong.. . . I wish most definitely to cut off and separate my mind from all that, and to hold it with all my strength, as much as I can, to the sole regard and simple unity. By allowing the fear of being ineffectual to enter into the state of prayer, and by wishing to accomplish something myself, I spoilt it all.
St. Jeanne Chantal

So long as you seek Buddhahood, specifically exercising yourself for it, there is no attainment for you.[?]
Yung.c/&ia Thsk

29

'How does a man set himself in harmony with the Tao?' 'I am already out of harmony.'
Si/,-t'ou

How shall I grasp it? Do not grasp it. That which remains when there is no more grasping is the Self.
PancAadasi

I order you to remain simply either in God or close to God, without trying to do anything there, and without asking anything of Him, unless He urges it. 
 St. François de Sales

Adoration is an activity of the loving, but still separate, indi­viduality. Contemplation is the state of union with the divine Ground of all being. 
The highest prayer is the most passive. 

뭔가를 바라지 않는 (간절한) 기도, 
"나"라는 것이 없어지는 기도, 
"신성"에 가까와지는 기도

Inevitably; for the less there is of self, the more there is of God

That is why the path to passive or infused contempla­tion is so hard and, for many, so painful—a passage through successive or simultaneous Dark Nights, in which the pilgrim 순례자must die [?]
  • to the life of sense [?] as an end in itself
  • to the life of private and even of traditionally hallowed 신성한 thinking and be­lieving, and finally 
  • to the deep source of all ignorance and evil, the life of the separate, individualized will.[self?]