Showing posts with label Thomas Merton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Merton. Show all posts

2021/09/16

Confessions: The Making of a Post-Denominational Priest: Fox, Matthew

Confessions: The Making of a Post-Denominational Priest: Fox, Matthew: 9780060629656: Amazon.com: Books


Confessions: The Making of a Post-Denominational Priest Paperback – April 1, 1997
by Matthew Fox  (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars    12 ratings
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Publication date
April 1, 1997
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Harper San Francisco (April 1, 1997)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 301 pages


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Matthew Fox, the excommunicated Catholic priest who is perhaps the foremost articulator of creation spirituality, offers a meditative, almost conversational autobiography. It's the story of a vital and iconoclastic man who still loves his former church and who desperately wanted, while he was still part of it, to revitalize it in order to better address the spiritual challenges of postmodernity. Fox feels strongly that both the planet and the Church stand at an epochal crossroads, that one culture is dying as another struggles to be born. As he describes his growing differences with Rome, he writes movingly of the community of like-minded or receptive people that surrounded and sustained him, exhibiting the best Christian tradition of discipleship and critical inquiry. Despite their efforts and his own struggle to maintain both his integrity of thought and his vows of obedience to his Dominican order, Fox was first silenced and then expelled. He has, since 1994, found an ecclesial home as an Episcopal priest. This highly charged autobiography of a priestly life will stand as a lasting memorial to the difficulty of maintaining certain articles of faith and dogma at a time of shifting cultural paradigms. Fox's portrait of himself as he realizes that the truth he is pursuing is incompatible with the truth that his church can allow him to believe is likely to become a classic. (Apr.)

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"In Confessions, Matthew Fox recounts his personal, intellectual, and spiritual journey from altar boy to Dominican priest to theologian, and the story of how he eventually found it necessary to stand up to the Vatican. It also tells the story of our times and the Catholic church's efforts at renewal at the Vatican Council, the abortion of that movement by two subsequent papacies (John Paul II and Benedict XVI), and the price many have paid for that betrayal. Fox was but one of 105 theologians silenced, condemned, and deprived of their livelihood by a papacy that "destroyed theology" and theological discourse, but was the most visible one in North America. After breaking with the Roman Catholic Church, Fox was confirmed as an Episcopal priest, and began working to reclaim spirituality from the bonds of organized religion while reinventing meaningful ritual through his "Cosmic Mass," geared particularly to the younger generation. Confessions describes the alternative programs and theological perspectives Fox brought forth in his thirty-two books and alternative pedagogy for reinventing education. Confessions is a remarkable story of activism for our times. Three new chapters in th
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Review
This highly charged autobiography of a priestly life will stand as a lasting memorial to the difficulty of maintaining certain articles of faith and dogma at a time of shifting cultural paradigms. Fox's portrait of himself as he realizes that the truth he is pursuing is incompatible with the truth that his church can allow him to believe is likely to become a classic. --Publishers Weekly
"'Hearing Matt Fox talk, I feel less lonely in the universe, ' said a street priest fifteen years ago. We should all feel less lonely now with this exhilarating, deeply companionable book in our hands. The unfolding story of this irrepressible spiritual revolutionary enlivens the mind and emboldens the heart--must reading for anyone interested in courage, creativity, and the future of religion."
--Joanna Macy, author of World as Lover, World as Self

"Traditionally, when big government in the church tries to silence a good soul, it indicates that the soul is often far ahead of the times. Matthew Fox is such a person. He writes simply, powerfully, about his life as a visionary. He continues now, as before, to give out the twenty-first-century keys to the kingdom."
--Clarissa Pinkola Estés, PhD., author of Women Who Run with the Wolves

"Matthew Fox has created a new mythic context for leading us out of our contemporary religious and spiritual confusion into a new clarity of mind and peace of soul, by affirming rather than abandoning any of our traditional beliefs."
--Thomas Berry, author of The Great Work

"Matthew Fox is one of our greatest and most essential teachers. In his updated Confessions he takes us on a journey into the depths of his heart and mind and shares the fierce ordeals and saving revelations that have shaped his pioneering work. Read this unique book and share it with others."
--Andrew Harvey, author of The Hope: A Guide to Sacred Activism

"Jung developed the idea that when the unconscious of any tribe, group, or community, is disturbed in its collective functioning 'there is always a medicine man who has a dream concerning the matter.' Matthew Fox is such a man. He recognizes that healing is a natural part of the via transformativia and that it is a priestly function to contribute, through compassion and social justice, to the healing of the collectivity."
--Steven Herrmann, PhD, MFT, author of Spiritual Democracy: The Wisdom of Early American Visionaries for the Journey Forward

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Biography
Matthew Fox is an internationally acclaimed spiritual theologian, Episcopal priest, and activist. He holds a doctorate, summa cum laude, in the History and Theology of Spirituality from the Institut Catholique de Paris and has devoted 45 years to developing and teaching the tradition of Creation Spirituality, which is rooted in ancient Judeo-Christian teaching, inclusive of today’s science and world spiritual traditions; welcoming of the arts and artists; wisdom centered, prophetic, and committed to eco-justice, social justice and gender justice.

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Top reviews from the United States
Claudia.PoetryPainter
5.0 out of 5 stars Matthew Fox carries on the study of Christian Spiritiuality where Thomas Merton left off.
Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2015
Verified Purchase
An amazing life journey reflecting the major changes in our culture and Christian church in the second half of the 20th century.
Matthew Fox continued living a life focused on "a lived Christian experience" from where Thomas Merton left off in 1968 when he passed away.
Merton advised Fox (letter) to go to Paris to get graduate training in Christian Spirituality which he did from 1968 - 1970. This formative educational experience in Paris changed Matthew Fox's life and vocational calling as it did previous Christian scholars in the 16th C. who lived in Paris (Ignatus of Loyola and John Calvin).
Matthew Fox is a brilliant scholar and writer and has extensively researched many of historical Christian church leaders to glean their wisdom and experience in Christian Spirituality found in their context of the Roman Catholic Church.
I was constantly amazed at Matthew Fox's in-dept study, prolific writing, teaching, and leadership because he did not have the easy access to source material that we enjoy today. Another common trait he shared with Thomas Merton; living an extremely productive live without today's technology in the midst of demanding religious vocational callings.
5 people found this helpful
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Steven H Propp
TOP 100 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars THE DEVELOPER OF "CREATION SPIRITUALITY" TELLS HIS STORY
Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2012
Matthew Fox (born 1940) is a theologian and bestselling advocate of "Creation Spirituality." He became a Catholic priest of the Dominican order, but was removed in 1992, and has subsequently become an Episcopalian priest. He has written many other books, including  Creation Spirituality: Liberating Gifts for the Peoples of the Earth .

He wrote in the Introduction to this 1996 book, "over these fifty-five years that constitute my story, some telling events have occurred culturally, religiously, perhaps even spiritually. I write this book as a witness to those events... the test I have survived may assist others today who find themselves either passing from religion to spirituality back into religion... I was asked to write an 'intellectual autobiography.' While my life and my passion have surely been about ideas... I prefer the term 'cultural autobiography.' To me this means that all ideas are culturally based and that in writing my story, I am contextualizing it in the larger story of our cultural coming of age." (Pg. 1-3)

He says, "I was high a lot of the time. The liturgy, the chanting of the office, friendships, the outdoors, studying theology, meditation---the silence and beauty of things and ideas all got me high. As my mystical experiences continued, I went looking among the priest-theologians at the priory for a spiritual director who could help me understand them. None of them could help me." (Pg. 39) He did ultimately hear a course by Louis Cognet, who said that "God becomes engaged by CREATION---not just by the incarnation. This would prove a dominant theme in my development of a creation spirituality." (Pg. 67)

He explains, "Calling my first few books after dreams and nursery rhymes ... kept the inquisitorial minds off my trail for many years. Wouldn't the Vatican thought police look silly raiding a bookstore for the dangers inherent in a book called  On Becoming a Musical, Mystical Bear: Spirituality American Style ? At least for a while, it gave me some latitude in which to roam in search of a viable spirituality." (Pg. 94)

He admits, "A dark side to being in California is the accusation of being 'New Age' or 'flaky.' I have yet to hear that accusation from anyone who has read my books or studied the tradition. And creation spirituality IS a tradition... There is a kind of intellectual laziness in the American media that wants to ascribe all mysticism to being New Age..." (Pg. 157)

As the Church hierarchy began troubling him, he confides, "I have to say that certain Catholic liberal theologians let me down and contributed to my marginalization." (Pg. 216) Later, he adds, "People ask, 'But shouldn't we stay in the church and fight?' It seems to me that SOME will have such a vocation---and it is an honorable one. I myself stayed and fought for over ten years... So I did not leave, and I did fight. But I was expelled from the bus... Let 10 percent stay and fight the church authorities... But let the other 90 percent, the rest of us, get on with the task of tomorrow and let go of the sins of yesteryear." (Pg. 243) He concludes, "When I was dismissed by the Vatican, the first thing I did was to sit down and meditate. In my meditation it came to me that the Vatican had made me a postdenominational priest in a postdenominational era." (Pg. 246)

Matthew Fox's output has slowed down a bit in recent years (although he has written  The Pope's War: Why Ratzinger's Secret Crusade Has Imperiled the Church and How It Can Be Saved , A New Reformation: Creation Spirituality and the Transformation of Christianity , etc.), but it remains of seminal interest to anyone interested in emerging trends of modern spirituality.
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4 people found this helpful
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Steven Herrmann
5.0 out of 5 stars A Post-denominational Priest
Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2010
By Steven B. Herrmann 4/4/10
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Author of "William Everson: The Shaman's Call"
MC, The Birth of a Poet: The William Everson Centennial (UC Santa Cruz, October 20, 2012)

I was asked by Anglican Episcopal Priest, Matthew Fox, to write a review of his book which I am happy to do. Fox speaks of his "story about the coming of age spirituality in the latter half of the twentieth century" (2) in the form of a "cultural autobiography" (3). 

In reading this book, one gets a sense that Fox is contextualizing his life-story in the "larger story of our coming of age" (3). In a Journal entry from Fox's approach to his fifty-third year, he writes about his decision to become an Anglican priest in vocational terms; by narrowing the vocation-question down to how he might serve the younger generation, and young one's to come, given his remaining "powers" (6), Fox says his becoming an Episcopalian was his answer to a call to assist young people to "reinvent forms of religion/spirituality" and "help creation spirituality come alive again" (12). 

By creation spirituality he means amongst other things, the fourfold path he discovered in his reading of our biblical tradition and the Christian mystics: 1) Via Positiva, delight, awe, wonder, revelry, 2) Via Negativa, darkness, silence, suffering, letting go, 3) Via Creativa, birthing, creativity, and 4) Via Transformativia, compassion, justice, healing, celebration (283). 

The early chapters of the book tell his story of coming of age. But the story heats up after the writing of his book Original Blessing. He says had a dream of a dancing, musical, mystical bear, and he later learned that worship of the bear is one of the oldest forms of worship in North America; the bear is said by indigenous peoples to have redemptive and healing powers. In reflecting on this dream, Fox thought: "What a perfect Christ-image for North American spirituality!" (93). 

The source of the controversy that eventually led to his bear-fight with the Vatican began with a talk he gave to "Dignity," an organization of gay and lesbian lay Catholics in Seattle. Little did Fox know, in giving this talk, what the reverberations would be in Rome and how the rumblings from our current Pope would send shock waves to Chicago to California and eventually be felt in his life. Fox's calling to penetrate the roots of the creation-spirituality tradition in America led him into a direct confrontation with the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) spearheaded by then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. 

Complaints reached the inquisitional Cardinal in Rome from Seattle following Fox's keynote address for the gay and lesbian Catholic group Dignity and it was not long after he set up shop at Holy Names in Oakland that Ratzinger began his condemnation of the central thesis of Original Blessing, and Fox's treatment of homosexuality in that text aroused all of the Cardinal's anxiety, as he complained to the Father General, it "is neither inspired by Scriptures, nor by the Doctrine of the Church" (168). Part of Fox's vocation as an Episcopal priest, has been to restore into creation spirituality the erotic mysticism that the Church has been lacking, including a warm embrace of feminism and homosexuality. For surely, a central part of the evolution of Western spirituality, Fox asserts, has been not only to make it more ecumenical, but to make final "peace" with our sexuality (237). 

This battle is part and parcel of America's fight for spiritual democracy, as instanced by the poetry and prose of Whitman. Perhaps, because Ratzinger's complaints to the Magesterium were not completely unfounded, as there is no evidence in Scripture for the divinity of homosexuality, Fox found himself in the middle of a quarrel within the Catholic Church itself that had no apparent solution in sight, short of a possible end of the tyranny of the Roman Catholic era, in preparation for a rebirth of something entirely new. Such an end does not appear to be in sight, and being a visionary by nature, Fox was far ahead of his times. There is something, I believe, in his Bear-fight with the Vatican that is sure to please, or outrage readers, and it is this very involvement with issues that are in question today that can lift our spirits and deepen us down into a more feminine earth-based wisdom: Gaia as our Mother-wisdom. By moving us to listen to the ancient wisdom and voices of the Goddess (Godhead) and Native peoples of the earth (shamans and medicine people), we will hopefully open our ears to God's cosmic music of the spheres, and learn how to dance together, before it is too late. Fox's vision of the Bear and the Cosmic Christ instills hope in the future direction of religion. Only through the transformation of religion as we have known it, will a new birth in spirituality come about. Confessions gives me hope that spiritual democracy may indeed prove to be the way of the future.
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8 people found this helpful
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Joe rated it it was amazing
Once in awhile, one reads a book that speaks DIRECTLY to one's life. This is one of those books for me. It chronicles Fox's spiritual journey, a journey that I can personally relate to although I am not a clergy person. He speaks of the same conflicts and questions that I had as a young person growing up in the same era, and he continues to speak to me in my later years. It is inspiring, challenging, and worth STUDY, for it has taken me months of reading and reflection. For those on a spiritual journey themselves, I HIGHLY RECOMMEND IT! (less)
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Margie
Feb 09, 2009Margie rated it liked it
Shelves: biographies-memoirs, religion
Very chronological autobiography. I was expecting a bit more about the development of creation spirituality or about being silenced by the Vatican and then kicked out of the Dominican order. Although those things are covered, more care seems to be given to making sure each phase of his life is covered. Enjoyable and interesting.
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James R
Jan 19, 2016James R rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
I'd not rate Matthew Fox's Confessions very highly as a general interest read. For a pretty detailed history of a time and a theological movement seen through one man's eyes, efforts and experiences though, it may be quite interesting and valuable. One thing's for sure Father Fox kept detailed journals. His life and work are surely an inspiration to spiritual and political activists for change. His insights, observations and convictions that Christianity as he knows it and practices it has relevance to the modern world, deserve thoughtful consideration. Conservatives would not agree with that last sentence. Those who already know Fox and his ideas will probably enjoy and appreciate this update of his autobiographical chronicle of his life, work, and ideas. It's not, I think, the first book of his to begin with. (less)
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Christopher
Jun 16, 2020Christopher rated it really liked it
This book was engaging, insightful, thought-provoking, and encouraging in how it presents Matthew Fox's journey of faith and his call to draw a creation-based spirituality back into religious traditions that have ignored it and marginalized other rich sources of wisdom. I appreciated the depth of his character in describing his Roman Catholic heritage, his robust intellectual and spiritual formation as a Dominican, and his conscientious and well-integrated struggle against oppressive mindsets and measures from Vatican authorities. I particularly appreciated his enduring sense of positivity, optimism, and rootedness in healthy community throughout his successes and his struggles. There's much to consider in this book, and I had to keep reminding myself that it was written 25 years ago– which makes me lament how much time may have been lost in applying his vision, but also how much has happened during that time to advance some of what he'd been advocating for decades. The notion of a "post-denominational priest" is deeply intriguing, and resonates with my sense of a need to reintegrate a healthy, expansive, unitive spirituality into movements for social and environmental healing and restoration. (less)
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Cyd
Dec 30, 2019Cyd rated it it was ok
Shelves: autobiography, catholicism, spirituality-religion
I read the revised and updated version published in 2015. I started reading it that year, and only finished it now because my wife wants to read something by Fox. I was still trying to be a religious person four years ago. . . and now I feel hardly any religious impulse, if any at all. I meditate--that's it. I find more inspiration in people who stand up for themselves and others against hatred, brutality, oppression, destruction. Fox would argue that in doing so I am practicing Creation Spirituality. Maybe. (less)
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Paula
Jun 11, 2016Paula rated it liked it
Absorbing memoir of a fiercely intelligent, deeply humble modern theologian.
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Craig
Feb 23, 2016Craig rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Great read

Speaks of the full life of Matthew Fox. The book is inspiring and worth reading. It is quite long. It will encourage you to read more of his books.
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Top reviews from other countries
Jr Finch
5.0 out of 5 stars good spiritual autobiography
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 February 2016
Verified Purchase
Lucid and enjoyable spiritual and intellectual autobiography, provides interesting reading for a disillusioned catholic. Easy to sympathise with the authors dealing with Ratzinger, Fox is a prophet for Creation Spirituality, he goes through the books he has written and his development too. Fans of Matthew Fox will appreciate it. Fans of Ratzinger well probably won't!
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Rosie Jackson
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 4 January 2021
Verified Purchase
Very rich, needs reading slowly, but excellent.
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Gemba
5.0 out of 5 stars Biography. Philosophy. Forthright leadership
Reviewed in Canada on 9 July 2018
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Very good autobiography. Brings everything up to date, including a discussion of more recent books. Fox is a very readable writer, even though the topic is sometimes demanding to follow. Personally I find him at times somewhat wild and dare I say, kooky But on the whole he is bold and persuasive. A thinker for these times.


 
Roger Barker
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Story Spoiled By Vindictive Outbursts
Reviewed in the United States on 9 March 2020
Verified Purchase
I have enjoyed many of Matthew Fox's books, and have found his work on Meister Eckhart particularly helpful. There is much in this rather long autobiography that I found interesting; but i have to say that he has let himself down too often in these pages. Frankly, he comes across as a rather fragile individual, lacking in self-confidence. Time after time he breaks the flow of the narrative to record the many occasions on which someone has paid him a great compliment, and quotes extensively from that compliment. On the other hand, he constantly berates Cardinal Ratzinger/Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI in terms that at least border on personal abuse. Yes, I understand Fox feels that he was greatly wronged by that man - I think he was. But harping on and on about it does no one any good. Time to forgive and move on, Matthew - and submit gracefully to the judgment of history.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars like me, who lived during this period as a ...
Reviewed in the United States on 1 November 2017
Verified Purchase
Truly masterful and sweeping description of his life as a Roman Catholic seminarian.prior to Vatican II, as an exiled priest during the fifty years that the Roman Catholic Church wandered in the wilderness after John XXIII, and as a present apologia for his spiritual life and a prophetic vision for a multicentric church based on creation spirituality. For someone, like me, who lived during this period as a seminarian and trusting Catholic, I can attest to his authentic insight and welcome his hopeful vision for universal ecumenism. Must read for anyone who lived through this period.
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Why a 14th-century mystic appeals to today's 'spiritual but not religious' Americans

Why a 14th-century mystic appeals to today's 'spiritual but not religious' Americans


Why a 14th-century mystic appeals to today’s ‘spiritual but not religious’ Americans

December 6, 2018 


Author
Joel Harrington

Centennial Professor of History, Vanderbilt University
Disclosure statement
A sculpture of Meister Eckhart in Germany. Lothar Spurzem , CC BY-SA

The percentage of Americans who do not identify with any religious tradition continues to rise annually. Not all of them, however, are atheists or agnostics. Many of these people believe in a higher power, if not organized religion, and their numbers too are steadily increasing.

The history of organized religion is full of schisms, heresies and other breakaways. What is different at this time is a seemingly indiscriminate mixing of diverse religious traditions to form a personalized spirituality, often referred to as “cafeteria spirituality.” This involves picking and choosing the religious ideas one likes best.

At the heart of this trend is the general conviction that all world religions share a fundamental, common basis, a belief known as “perennialism.” And this is where the unlikely figure of Meister Eckhart, a 14th-century Dominican friar famous for his popular sermons on the direct experience of God, is finding popular appeal.

Who was Meister Eckhart?

I have studied Meister Eckhart and his ideas of mysticism. The creative power that people address as “God,” he explained, is already present within each individual and is best understood as the very force that infuses all living things.

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He believed this divinity to be genderless and completely “other” from humans, accessible not through images or words but through a direct encounter within each person.A sculpture of Meister Eckhart in Germany. Lothar Spurzem, CC BY-SA

The method of direct access to the divine, according to Eckhart, depended on an individual letting go of all desires and images of God and becoming aware of the “divine spark” present within.

Seven centuries ago, Eckhart embraced meditation and what is now called mindfulness. Although he never questioned any of the doctrines of the Catholic Church, Eckhart’s preaching eventually resulted in an official investigation and papal condemnation.

Significantly, it was not Eckhart’s overall approach to experiencing God that his superiors criticized, but rather his decision to teach his wisdom. His inquisitors believed the “unlearned and simple people” were likely to misunderstand him. Eckhart, on the other hand, insisted that the proper role of a preacher was to preach.

He died before his trial was complete, but his writings were subsequently censured by a papal decree.

The modern rediscovery of Eckhart

Meister Eckhart thereafter remained relatively little known until his rediscovery by German romantics in the 19th century.

Since then, he has attracted many religious and non-religious admirers. Among the latter were the 20th-century philosophers Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre, who were inspired by Eckhart’s beliefs about the self as the sole basis for action. More recently, Pope John Paul II and the current Dalai Lama have expressed admiration for Eckhart’s portrayal of the intimate relationship between God and the individual soul.

During the second half of the 20th century, the overlap of his teachings to many Asian practices played an important role in making him popular with Western spiritual seekers. Thomas Merton, a monk from the Trappist monastic order, for example, who began an exploration of Zen Buddhism later in his life, discovered much of the same wisdom in his own Catholic tradition embodied in Eckhart. He called Eckhart “my life raft,” for opening up the wisdom about developing one’s inner life.

Richard Rohr, a friar from the Franciscan order and a contemporary spirituality writer, views Eckhart’s teachings as part of a long and ancient Christian contemplative tradition. Many in the past, not just monks and nuns have sought the internal experience of the divine through contemplation.

Among them, as Rohr notes were the apostle Paul, the fifth-century theologian Augustine, and the 12th-century Benedictine abbess and composer Hildegard of Bingen.

In the tradition of Eckhart, Rohr has popularized the teaching that Jesus’ death and resurrection represents an individual’s movement from a “false self” to a “true self.” In other words, after stripping away all of the constructed ego, Eckhart guides individuals in finding the divine spark, which is their true identity.

Eckhart and contemporary perennials

Novelist Aldous Huxley frequently cited Eckhart, in his book, ‘The Perennialist Philosophy.’ RV1864/Flickr.com, CC BY-NC-ND

This subjective approach to experiencing the divine was also embraced by Aldous Huxley, best known for his 1932 dystopia, “Brave New World,” and for his later embrace of LSD as a path to self-awareness. Meister Eckhart is frequently cited in Huxley’s best-selling 1945 spiritual compendium, “The Perennialist Philosophy.”

More recently, the mega-best-selling New Age celebrity Eckhart Tolle, born Ulrich Tolle in 1948 in Germany and now based in Vancouver, has taken the perennial movement to a much larger audience. Tolle’s books, drawing from an eclectic mix of Western and Eastern philosophical and religious traditions, have sold millions. His teachings encapsulate the insights of his adopted namesake Meister Eckhart.

While many Christian evangelicals are wary of Eckhart Tolle’s non-religious and unchurched approach, the teachings of the medieval mystic Eckhart have nonetheless found support among many contemporary Catholics and Protestants, both in North America and Europe.

Fully understanding a new spiritual icon

The cautionary note, however, is in too simplistic an understanding of Eckhart’s message.

Eckhart, for instance, did not preach an individualistic, isolated kind of personal enlightenment, nor did he reject as much of his own faith tradition as many modern spiritual but not religious are wont to do.

The truly enlightened person, Eckhart argued, naturally lives an active life of neighborly love, not isolation – an important social dimension sometimes lost today.

Meister Eckhart has some important lessons for those of us trapped amid today’s materialism and selfishness, but understanding any spiritual guide – especially one as obscure as Eckhart – requires a deeper understanding of the context.



2021/09/15

Dangerous Mystic: Meister Eckhart's Path to the God Within by Joel F. Harrington | Goodreads

Dangerous Mystic: Meister Eckhart's Path to the God Within by Joel F. Harrington | Goodreads







Dangerous Mystic: Meister Eckhart's Path to the God Within

by Joel F. Harrington
4.16 · Rating details · 80 ratings · 17 reviews

Life and times of the 14th century German theologian Meister Eckhart, whose theory of a personal path to the divine inspired thinkers from Jean Paul Sartre to Thomas Merton, and most recently, Eckhart Tolle

Meister Eckhart was a medieval Christian mystic whose wisdom powerfully appeals to seekers seven centuries after his death. In the modern era, Eckhart's writings have struck a chord with thinkers as diverse as Heidegger, Merton, Sartre, John Paul II, and the current Dalai Lama. 

He is the inspiration for the bestselling New Age author Eckhart Tolle's pen name, and his fourteenth-century quotes have become an online sensation. Today a variety of Christians, as well as many Zen Buddhists, Sufi Muslims, Jewish Cabbalists, and various spiritual seekers, all claim Eckhart as their own. Meister Eckhart preached a personal, internal path to God at a time when the Church could not have been more hierarchical and ritualistic. Then and now, Eckhart's revolutionary method of direct access to ultimate reality offers a profoundly subjective approach that is at once intuitive and pragmatic, philosophical yet non-rational, and, above all, universally accessible. This "dangerous mystic's" teachings challenge the very nature of religion, yet the man himself never directly challenged the Church.

Eckhart was one of the most learned theologians of his day, but he was also a man of the world who had worked as an administrator for his religious order and taught for years at the University of Paris. His personal path from conventional friar to professor to lay preacher culminated in a spiritual philosophy that combined the teachings of an array of pagan and Christian writers, as well as Muslim and Jewish philosophers. His revolutionary decision to take his approach to the common people garnered him many enthusiastic followers as well as powerful enemies. After Eckhart's death and papal censure, many religious women and clerical supporters, known as the Friends of God, kept his legacy alive through the centuries, albeit underground until the master's dramatic rediscovery by modern Protestants and Catholics.

Dangerous Mystic grounds Meister Eckhart in a world that is simultaneously familiar and alien. In the midst of this medieval society, a few decades before the Black Death, Eckhart boldly preached to captivated crowds a timeless method, a "wayless way," of directly experiencing the divine. (less)

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Hardcover, 384 pages
Published March 20th 2018 by Penguin Press (first published 2018)
ISBN
1101981563 (ISBN13: 9781101981566)
Edition Language
English




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Jan 14, 2019robin friedman rated it it was amazing
A New Study Of Meister Eckhart

For centuries after his death the teachings of the medieval German mystic Meister Eckhart (1260 -- 1328) fell into obscurity. Beginning in the mid-19th century, Eckhart's writings were rediscovered and made widely available. Today many people of widely varying backgrounds and religious dispositions draw inspiration from Eckhart. He has been celebrated in the music of John Adams, for example, and his been a source for popular spiritual works as well as for scholarly study and reflection. I have explored Eckhart at various times of my life for years and have learned from him.

Joel Harrington's recent book, "Dangerous Mystic:Meister Eckhart's Path to the God Within" (2018) shows the author is a person who has thought deeply and learned from Eckhart. His book will be valuable both to scholars and to those readers newly approaching Eckhart. Neither a philosopher nor a theologian, Harrington is Centennial Professor of History at Vanderbilt University who has written about German history in the early modern era of the sixteenth century. In his study of Eckhart, Harrington puts his formidable skills as a historian to use.

Many fine books are available about Eckhart's thought and a still larger number are available about Medieval history. But there are few studies which have integrated the two and considered Eckhart within the context of his times. Harrington does so brilliantly and in the process helped me understand both Eckhart's teachings and his life.

The book consists of four parts each of which works to elucidate part of Eckhart's fundamental teaching of letting go. The first part, "Letting Go of the World" talks about the young Eckhart by discussing the world into which he was born. Harrington describes a culture moving towards a monetary, commercialized economy and the impact of this movement on religious belief. He describes the literature of courtly love and of spiritual search in the context of an increasingly commercial society and explores how this literature doubtlessly influenced the young nobleman and, more importantly, is reflected in Eckhart's writings and in his spiritual search. This part of the book takes Eckhart's biography through his early years as a Dominican friar at Erfurt, his home for most of his life.

The second part of the book "Letting Go of God" explores Eckhart's long period of study of scholastic philosophy in Paris where he ultimately earned the title of "Master" or "Meister" for his extensive learning (roughly equivalent to the modern-day PhD). Harrington gives background on the nature of scholastic life and of the scholastic approach to philosophy and religion. His approach places Eckhart squarely within and, indeed, a master of the scholastic philosophy of his day. Eckhart gradually became attracted to a Neoplatonic approach to philosophy rather than the Aristotelian approach more common in the schools. Eckhart questioned the ability of reason and logic to provide an approach to God and developed an approach relying more on intuition and personal experience. He conceived the project of writing his own "Summa" to rival and correct that of Aquinas. This project was never realized.

In the third part of the book "Letting Go of the Self" Harrington explores Eckart's life after leaving Paris and the academy for reasons which remain uncertain. Eckhart became a skilled administrator in the Dominican order and a preacher. He took his highly developed thought and presented it to the people, especially to religious women, rather than to fellow scholars and students. Importantly he spoke in German rather than in Latin. Harrington describes Eckhart's life as an administrator and he explores Eckhart's relationship to the movement of women's spirituality expressed by the community of beguines, including figures such as Marguerite Porete, who was burned at the stake for heresy. There is a great deal of mutual influence between Eckhart's teachings and the teachings of the beguines. In this part of the book, Harrington offers an exposition of Eckhart's basic and difficult teachings and of his frequently paradoxical style of writing. Eckhart was aware both of the limitations of human speech and of the necessity of speech for finite beings to approach understanding.

The final part of the book "Holding on to Religion" addresses both holding on and letting go. Harrington discusses the inquisition into Eckhart's thought which ultimately led to the papal condemnation of some of his writing after Eckhart's death. The condemnation was based on the alleged antinomian character of Eckhart's work, its possible radical individualism, and its alleged break from institutional Catholicism. Eckhart's reputation went into eclipse for centuries, and Harrington traces the course of the history of Eckhart's reception in the final sections of his book. With the revival of interest in Eckhart, the tension in understanding his work that began at the outset has revived: some of those who learn from Eckhart place him within the boundaries of orthodox Christian teaching while others see Eckhart as breaking away towards a new form of spirituality outside the bounds of any particular religion.

In placing Eckhart thoroughly within the context of his times and in his insightful discussions of Eckhart's teachings, Harrington's sympathies lie clearly with seeing Eckhart within the context of Christian teachings. Harrington is properly skeptical of relativistic, anything goes understandings of Eckhart. Still, Harrington recognizes that Eckhart's words and teachings in some ways break through traditional Christianity and have allowed those people influenced by Eastern religions, as well as those with a mystical bent in the Moslem and Jewish traditions, and those not professing any particular religion and in some cases not being religious at all to learn from Eckhart. Eckhart's teachings are, in their depth, broader than Christian; and yet in Harrington's account , also stress the value of adherence to a particular religious body, in Eckhart's case Christian. In an Epilogue explaining what Harrington sees as the sources of Eckhart's continued importance, Harrington concludes:

"Meister Eckhart's wayless way deliberately remained general and nonprescriptive, allowing for countless subjective variations. It would be ahistorical and presumptuous to predict his opinion of either religious exclusivism or perennialism. But based on his long life of service, we can conclude with conviction that nothing would have pleased the master more than to be considered still useful to his fellow seekers' journey to the God within."

Harrington's book has helped deepen my own understanding and appreciation of Meister Eckhart.

Robin Friedman (less)
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Jul 16, 2018Jackson Hager rated it really liked it
Shelves: read-catholicism
A good, readable introduction to Meister Eckhart, the famed German mystic. I will admit that when I picked up this book, I was nervous that this was going to be an attempt to remove Meister Eckhart from his Christian context and attempt to paint as some sort of representative of a some universal religious truth, which has been the fate of many spiritual leaders, Christian or not, in our day and age. But I was presently surprised to find that instead of falling into that trap, Harrington instead stresses the importance of placing Meister Eckhart within his specific and religious context in order to gain the best picture of the man. All in all, I would recommend this book to everyone looking for a beginning primer into one of Christian's faiths most interesting thinkers. (less)
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Mar 30, 2020Christopher rated it it was amazing
Shelves: biography
This is a very nice biography of Meister Eckhart. It a great deal of information of what was going on in the church in this time frame as well as several people who were influenced by him. Such as Martin Luther, Thomas Merton, John Paul II and the current Dali Lama. How can you not love a man that said "The eye through which I see God is the same eye through which God sees me" or " you must love all men equally, respect and regard them equally, and whatever happens to another, whether good or bad, must be the same as if it happened to you" no bad for some time around 1320 (less)
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Apr 30, 2018brightredglow rated it it was amazing
Loved it. I knew nothing about Meister Eckhart but I've been on a history obsessive roll of late. Enough so that I am not avoiding the medieval period, my usual standard "Wake me when we get to the Renaissance" period.

That's why I selected "Dangerous Mystic" by Joel Harrington to read. It was more enjoyable than I had expected. Very detailed but at same time, very readable and engaging. Author did a great job at bringing Meister Eckhart to life in context to his times and then to our own.

Glad ...more
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Aug 23, 2021Eden rated it it was amazing
Shelves: nf-faith, middle-ages, nf-history
2021 bk 265. Well researched, well planned out, well written and now, well read. After our pastor referred to Meister Eckert in a series of sermons, I was interested enough to search out a biography of him. This has led to a summer of reading. Even with a background in history, I did not know the history of Eckert's time and place, nor of the religious forces at work within the Catholic church at the time. I found this a fascinating read that stretched my vocabulary and frequently caused me to lay the book aside in order to think about either Eckert's writings or the times he was in. In fact, I will admit to realizing that I needed to read this in small chunks and so it took me most of the summer. Thanks to Harrington, I have a far better idea of the man, his thoughts, and the forces at play in the times in which he lived. (less)
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May 08, 2019Caleb Abraham rated it really liked it
Excellent introduction to the life, times, and thought of Meister Eckhart, a truly fascinating and complex figure.
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Sep 19, 2020Jodina Renae rated it it was amazing
Outstanding book! As someone who has been drawn to the teachings of Meister Eckhart, this was a thorough, well-written, accessible read placing Eckhart in his historical context.
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Aug 07, 2019Ions rated it really liked it
An interesting biography about someone I never knew existed! It's refreshing hearing some Christian philosophies from the 1200s sounding almost modern. (less)
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Nov 26, 2017Roxanne rated it really liked it
This is a Goodreads win review.I do not know what to make of this book. I have never heard of this Meister Eckhart or his teachings. From what I can tell he was a very learned man and lay preacher. He had a revolutionary method at that time of having people reach a personal internal path to God, which a lot of people liked and some people did not like and could not understand.
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Jul 01, 2019Brett Folkman rated it it was amazing
I really enjoyed Joel Harrington's efforts to place Meister Eckhart into the historical context of his life. I've read Eckhart's writings, but found this treatment of the man himself, the political and social climate, etc., very helpful in trying to understand Eckhart's theology - which in my opinion - we are all guessing at, since it wasn't clearly laid out by the Meister himself. Many take a few quotes, a sentence or two that support their world view and pat themselves on the back! I think that's why he's now nearly universally looked upon as a wise sage - you can interpret his purposefully veiled statements in many ways. It was also very beneficial to understand the theological speculations that came before and after Eckhart to place his views, as we have them, into the broader context of developing theologies. I highly recommend this book for anyone who wants to get to know Meister Eckhart and not just his sayings!

Brett Folkman, Doctor of Ministry (less)
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Apr 11, 2019Phil Calandra rated it really liked it
"Dangerous Mystic...." is a biography of the great Christian Mystic, Meister Eckhart. It chronicles his life as a child, his entry into the Domincan Order and the progression of his spiritual life. This is the most comprehensive history of Meister Eckhart's life that I have read. It gives an account not only of Meister Eckhart's life but the history of the time that contributed to Eckhart's philosophy; however, this book appears to be more geared to the historian than the casual reader but I would still highly recommend it. (less)
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Sep 21, 2020The Book Grocer rated it it was amazing
Purchase Dangerous Mystic here for just $12!

This is a fascinating, concise introduction to famed German Medieval mystic, Meister Eckhart, explaining Eckhart's philosophy and large influence on Western Christian mysticism. The writing is lively and engaging.

Paul, The Book Grocer (less)
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Sep 16, 2018Mark Jurgensen rated it it was amazing
Given that this biography was written by a history professor at Vanderbilt, I was afraid the prose might be dry and slow going. Not so. While Harrington does spend considerable time discussing the cultural/social/political/religious context in which Meister Eckhart lived (the late 13th - early 14th centuries), the writing is lively and engaging. Ironically, Harrington does a better job elucidating Eckhart's main philosophical ideas than many theologically trained writers I've read. Highly recommended! (less)
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Nov 23, 2020SCDavis rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
In so far as I understand what is written of Meister Eckhart in this book, I am compelled to strive for a similar relationship with God as the one he had. That is I hope to go further down that road or rather realize how much of the road is under my feet after dwelling on the truths contained within his writings. This book helped me realize a bit more about his contribution to this goal of realization.
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May 02, 2018Gypsi rated it it was amazing
Shelves: 2018-books-read
Harrington presents a biography of Medieval mystic, Eckhart, set in historical context. This is an easily readable scholarly work which shares some of Eckhart's teaching in addition to his life. The reader is left with a full idea of who Eckhart was and why he is influencing thinkers today. (less)
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Dangerous Mystic: Meister Eckhart's Path to the God Within Kindle Edition
by Joel F. Harrington  (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition
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Review
"Masterfully executed... rich... Harrington... takes on the so-called 'mystic's mystic' with a historian's capacity to immerse the reader in the 14th century and in Eckhart's spiritual framework. He does so with a writerly elegance and elucidation that situates the medieval thinker squarely in this modern-day moment."--Chicago Tribune
"[A] wonderfully smart, readable biography of a 14th-century Dominican priest and mystic named Meister Eckhart. . . . [Harrington] is a scholar/storyteller who can tell a true tale that feels like a novel, without cheap tricks. . . . At times, Dangerous Mystic has a Name of the Rose excitement to it, a man against the grain during a time of ferment, a mind that sought to rise above it. Dangerous Mystic is likely to make Eckhart even more of a hero to more people. Good."--Philadelphia Inquirer

"Impressive. . . . This illuminating book successfully explains Meister Eckhart's philosophy and large influence on Western Christian mysticism."--Publishers Weekly

"An excellent biographical work . . . [Harrington] does an admirable job of presenting Eckhart dispassionately, as a historical figure, a theological innovator, and an impetus for modern thinkers. Extremely well-researched and fluidly written, [DANGEROUS MYSTIC] will serve as a meaningful resource for students of mysticism and of late Medieval Christianity."--Kirkus, starred review

"Calmly dazzling... a serene, intelligent, appropriately ambitious yet accessible work on one of history's most mysterious theologian mystics."--Joy Williams, Book Post

Joel Harrington here offers a characteristically subtle and elegant evocation of mediaeval spirituality at its most powerful. Meister Eckhart's noble quest for enlightenment resonates through the centuries, and here we see what made the man whose preaching sent such shock waves through the mediaeval church. ― Andrew Pettegree, author of BRAND LUTHER

A rare combination of sweeping historical narrative, penetrating biography, and profound spiritual elucidation. Joel F. Harrington elegantly shows why Meister Eckhart is reclaimed as a touchstone of humane holiness in every era - especially ours. This is a book to read, to save, and to give."
― James Carroll, author of THE CLOISTER

"In this engrossing and compelling book, Joel Harrington offers a profound, moving, and accessible portrayal of one of the greatest yet most enigmatic figures of medieval Christianity. Meister Eckhart gave expression to humanity's yearning for union with God, and for a pure and selfless knowledge of the divine. With a masterful touch, Harrington places the Dominican mystic in the changing, febrile world of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries and guides the reader through the development and expanse of Eckhart's sublime thought and interior spirituality. We encounter the men and women to whom Eckhart preached, his teachers, his friends and enemies, and popes and inquisitors, all of whom are cast in bold profile in the author's stylish and vivid prose. Eckhart's life was filled with visions, charity, politics, and controversy, and ended with papal censure. His legacy continues to be debated. This life of one of Western Christianity's great mystics is an astonishing achievement." --Bruce Gordon, author of CALVIN, Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Yale Divinity School

Joel F. Harrington's Dangerous Mystic: Meister Eckhart's Path to the God Within is a bold new reading of the life and thought of the great fourteenth-century German mystic who has remained both influential and controversial since his death. Harrington situates Eckhart in his historical and intellectual context in a way accessible to the general reader, as well as thought-provoking for Eckhart scholars. This is a book that will open up the great Dominican teacher and mystical preacher to a new generation. It deserves to be widely read.
― Bernard McGinn, Naomi Shenstone Donnelly Professor (Emeritus) of historical theology and history of Christianity at the University of Chicago and author of THE PRESENCE OF GOD

Praise for THE FAITHFUL EXECUTIONER by Joel F. Harrington:

"Fascinating . . . Engrossing . . . Harrington brings out the sheer strangeness of the past . . . In The Faithful Executioner, Mr. Harrington has not only rescued the life of an individual from disgust and condescension but also, by focusing on a career in killing, brought a whole world back to life." ―The Wall Street Journal

"Remarkable . . . [A] fascinating exploration . . . this is a surprisingly modern, even topical story that poses difficult questions about capital punishment and what Harrington calls 'the human drive toward retribution.'" ―The Washington Post

"Fascinating . . . One of the pleasures of reading history is to be transported somewhere, even if we aren't sure we want to go." ―The Chronicle of Higher Education

"[A] vividly drawn portrait . . . Harrington succeeds in deftly taking us beyond Schmidt's biography to address broader questions. Finely researched and crafted." ―History Today

"Surprisingly poignant . . . A whole teeming world of Reformation Germany comes alive." ―Kirkus Reviews

"Who can imagine how an executioner feels about his trade? Joel F. Harrington has written a considered and fascinating book that helps us hear the voice of one such man, a professional torturer (and healer) who, astonishingly, kept a diary. Exploring both sixteenth-century Nuremberg and the world about the city, he re-creates the social context for the flamboyant displays of cruelty that later centuries find so hard to comprehend. Both the executioner and his victims are rescued from our condescension and restored to their own moral universe―which is not as far from ours as we like to suppose." ―Hilary Mantel, Man Booker Prize-winning author Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies

"A book as entertaining and revealing as it is improbable and outrageous. Joel F. Harrington has told a marvelous yarn, giving us not just the compelling biography of Meister Frantz but his world." ―Rick Atkinson, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943-1944

"The Faithful Executioner is much more than a description of the many imaginative and horrifying means of torturing and putting prisoners to death. It is a rare and utterly fascinating examination of the society that demands it." ―New York Journal of Books --This text refers to the hardcover edition.

Book Description

Life and times of the 14th century German spiritual leader Meister Eckhart, whose theory of a personal path to the divine inspired thinkers from Jean Paul Sartre to Thomas Merton, and most recently, Eckhart Tolle. --This text refers to the hardcover edition.
About the Author
Joel F. Harrington is a professor of history at Vanderbilt University. He is the author of The Faithful Executioner, The Unwanted Child, and A Cloud of Witnesses. --This text refers to the hardcover edition.
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Print length ‏ : ‎ 384 pages
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4.6 out of 5 stars


Top reviews from other countries
Samuel W. Johnson
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, but....
Reviewed in the United States on 5 May 2018

This is an important book for anyone with an interest in Meister Eckhart. Professor Harrington maps out the socio-historical and religious context of Eckhart's time exceedingly well, and he understands, explicates, and probably even embodies to a significant extent The Meister's message. The problem with the book is that it is written from, and frequently seeks to prove Eckhart's fidelity to, an Orthodox Christian perspective that Eckhart soars beyond.
20 people found this helpful

 
Roger L. Conner
5.0 out of 5 stars Readable, Facinating Book of History
Reviewed in the United States on 6 April 2018
Verified Purchase
Brilliant book of history even if theology isn’t your bag. Fascinating insights into our own time: They had corrupt politicians, incorrigible children and “declining morals.” Uncanny parallels to our own time.
12 people found this helpful

 
Ethan James
2.0 out of 5 stars Not enough Eckhart!
Reviewed in the United States on 19 June 2020
Verified Purchase
The title of the book is misleading. Way too much irrelevant medieval history and not enough about Eckhart's actual thought.
6 people found this helpful

 
Carol Breslin
4.0 out of 5 stars Once past the introductory chapters that provide the history of ...
Reviewed in the United States on 5 June 2018
Verified Purchase
Once past the introductory chapters that provide the history of the Middle Ages, this book becomes a challenging exploration of the life and beliefs of an original medieval religious and mystic. A compelling, challenging read.
6 people found this helpful

 
Harold R. Case
5.0 out of 5 stars Concise and Informative
Reviewed in the United States on 22 March 2020
Verified Purchase
An excellent, concise overview of Eckhart, the Dominican order, and the culturally exciting times in which he lived. A person steeped in his thinking may find repetitive.
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2021/09/09

Contemplation - Wikipedia

Contemplation - Wikipedia

Contemplation

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Kamppi Chapel in Helsingfors City Centre is a community centre, assigned for contemplation.
Nature contemplation

While in the life of the intellect 'contemplation' refers to thinking profoundly about something, 

in the religious life contemplation is a kind of inner vision or seeing, transcendent of the intellect, facilitated by means of practices such as prayer or meditation.

Definition[edit source]

The word contemplation basically means 'to think about an action before you perform it'.

Etymology[edit source]

The word contemplation is derived from the Latin word contemplatio, ultimately from the Latin word templum, a piece of ground consecrated for the taking of auspices, or a building for worship. The latter either derives from the Proto-Indo-European root *tem- ("to cut"), on notion of "place reserved or cut out", or from the root *temp- ("to stretch, string"), thus referring to a cleared (measured) space in front of an altar.[1][2] The Latin word contemplatio was used to translate the Greek word θεωρία (theōría).

Greek philosophy[edit source]

Contemplation was an important part of the philosophy of Plato; Plato thought that through contemplation, the soul may ascend to knowledge of the Form of the Good or other divine Forms.[3] Plotinus as a (neo)Platonic philosopher also expressed contemplation as the most critical of components for one to reach henosis. To Plotinus the highest contemplation was to experience the vision of God, the Monad or the One. Plotinus describes this experience in his works the Enneads. According to his student Porphyry, Plotinus stated that he had this experience of God four times.[4] Plotinus wrote about his experience in Enneads 6.9.

Judaism[edit source]

A number of sources have described the importance of contemplation in Jewish traditions, especially in Jewish meditation.[5] Contemplation was central to the teaching of the Jewish philosopher Maimonides, who taught that contemplating God involves recognizing moral perfection, and that one must interrupt contemplation to attend to the poor.[6] Contemplation has also been central to the Musar movement.[7]

Islam[edit source]

In Islamic tradition, it is said that Muhammad would go into the desert, climb a mountain known as Mount Hira, and seclude himself from the world. While on the mountain, he would contemplate life and its meaning.[8]

Bahai Faith[edit source]

Baha'u'llah and Abdu'l-Baha wrote about contemplation and meditation in regards to reflecting on beauty, the Kingdom of God, science, and the arts. Abdu'l-Baha stated that "the sign of the intellect is contemplation and the sign of contemplation is silence... he cannot both speak and meditate".[9]

Christianity[edit source]

A woman places rosary beads on a devotional image mounted on the wall beside her bed.[10] The Walters Art Museum.

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

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

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

The anonymously authored 14th century English contemplative work The Cloud of Unknowing makes clear that its form of practice is not an act of the intellect, but a kind of transcendent 'seeing,' beyond the usual activities of the mind - "The first time you practice contemplation, you'll experience a darkness, like a cloud of unknowing. You won't know what this is... this darkness and this cloud will always be between you and your God... they will always keep you from seeing him clearly by the light of understanding in your intellect and will block you from feeling Him fully in the sweetness of love in your emotions. So be sure to make your home in this darkness... We can't think our way to God... that's why I'm willing to abandon everything I know, to love the one thing I cannot think. He can be loved, but not thought."[13]

Within Western Christianity contemplation is often related to mysticism as expressed in the works of mystical theologians such as Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross as well as the writings of Margery KempeAugustine Baker and Thomas Merton.[14]

Dom Cuthbert Butler notes that contemplation was the term used in the Latin Church to refer to mysticism, and "'mysticism' is a quite modern word".[15]

Meditation[edit source]

In Christianity, contemplation refers to a content-free mind directed towards the awareness of God as a living reality.[citation needed] This corresponds, in some ways, to what in Eastern religion is called samadhi.[16][17] 


Meditation, on the other hand, for many centuries in the Western Church, referred to more cognitively active exercises, such as visualizations of Biblical scenes as in the Ignatian exercises or lectio divina in which the practitioner "listens to the text of the Bible with the 'ear of the heart', as if he or she is in conversation with God, and God is suggesting the topics for discussion."[18]

In Catholic Christianity, contemplation is given importance. The Catholic Church's "model theologian", St. Thomas Aquinas wrote: "It is requisite for the good of the human community that there should be persons who devote themselves to the life of contemplation." One of his disciples, Josef Pieper commented: "For it is contemplation which preserves in the midst of human society the truth which is at one and the same time useless and the yardstick of every possible use; so it is also contemplation which keeps the true end in sight, gives meaning to every practical act of life."[19] Pope John Paul II in the Apostolic Letter "Rosarium Virginis Mariae" referred specifically to the catholic devotion of the Holy Rosary as "an exquisitely contemplative prayer" and said that "By its nature the recitation of the Rosary calls for a quiet rhythm and a lingering pace, helping the individual to meditate on the mysteries of the Lord's life as seen through the eyes of her who was closest to the Lord. In this way the unfathomable riches of these mysteries are disclosed."[20]

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

See also[edit source]

Notes[edit source]

  1. ^ Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos: "The vision of the uncreated light, which offers knowledge of God to man, is sensory and supra-sensory. The bodily eyes are reshaped, so they see the uncreated light, "this mysterious light, inaccessible, immaterial, uncreated, deifying, eternal", this "radiance of the Divine Nature, this glory of the divinity, this beauty of the heavenly kingdom" (3,1,22;CWS p.80). Palamas asks: "Do you see that light is inaccessible to senses which are not transformed by the Spirit?" (2,3,22). St. Maximus, whose teaching is cited by St. Gregory, says that the Apostles saw the uncreated Light "by a transformation of the activity of their senses, produced in them by the Spirit" (2.3.22).[11]
  2. ^ pelagia.org: "Stillness of the body is a limiting of the body. 'The beginning of hesychia is godly rest' (3). The intermediate stage is that of 'illuminating power and vision; and the end is ecstasy or rapture of the nous towards God' (4). St. John of the Ladder, referring to outward, bodily stillness, writes: 'The lover of stillness keeps his mouth shut' (5). But it is not only those called neptic Fathers who mention and describe the holy atmosphere of hesychia, it is also those known as 'social'. Actually in the Orthodox tradition there is no direct opposition between theoria and praxis, nor between the neptic and social Fathers. The neptics are eminently social and those in community are unimaginably neptic."[12]

References[edit source]

  1. ^ "temple | Search Online Etymology Dictionary"Etymonline. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
  2. ^ Vaan, Michiel de (2018). Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages. Brill. pp. 610–611. ISBN 978-90-04-16797-1.
  3. ^ Plato: Critical Assessments, Nicholas D. Smith, Routledge, 1998. ISBN 0-415-12605-3
  4. ^ See the Life of Plotinus
  5. ^ "Meditation Grows in Popularity Among Jews : Contemplation: The rediscovery of ancient tradition makes it a port of re-entry to Judaism, proponents say"Los Angeles Times. 1993-01-30. Retrieved 2019-12-09.
  6. ^ Seeskin, Kenneth (1991). Maimonides: A Guide for Today's Perplexed. Behrman House, Inc. p. 110. ISBN 978-0-87441-509-4.
  7. ^ Morinis, Alan (2008-12-02). Everyday Holiness: The Jewish Spiritual Path of Mussar. Shambhala Publications. ISBN 978-0-8348-2221-4.
  8. ^ Bogle, Emory C. (1998). Islam: Origin and Belief. Texas University Press. p. 6ISBN 0-292-70862-9.
  9. ^ http://www.bahai.org/r/359367592
  10. ^ "Devotion (Contemplation)"The Walters Art Museum.
  11. ^ Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos (2005), Orthodox Psychotherapy, section The Knowledge of God according to St. Gregory Palamas. Birth of Theotokos Monastery, Greece, ISBN 978-960-7070-27-2
  12. ^ pelagia.org, Orthodox Psychotherapy Archived 2012-01-02 at the Wayback Machine, section on Stillness and Prayer.
  13. ^ Excerpt from the Shambhala edition, translated by Carmen Acevedo Butcher [1]
  14. ^ "Contemplation"Catholic Encyclopedia, New Advent. Retrieved March 19, 2008.
  15. ^ Western Mysticism: Augustine, Gregory and Bernard on Contemplation and the Contemplative Life, by Dom Cuthbert Butler. Dover: Mineola, NY, 2003, p.4.
  16. ^ [2], samannaphala sutta Digha-Nikaya-2
  17. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-05-04. Retrieved 2010-10-26., Patanjali, Yoga Sutras
  18. ^ A contemporary discussion of differences between meditatio and contemplatio is available in Father Thomas Keating's book on contemplative centering prayer, Open Mind, Open Heart: The Contemplative Dimension of the Gospel (1986) ISBN 0-8264-0696-3. Brief descriptions of centering prayer and lectio divinaare available online at http://www.contemplativeoutreach.org/.
  19. ^ "Says Pope a Universal Voice for the World" Archived 2008-02-05 at the Wayback Machine, Carrie Gross, February 1, 2008, Zenit.org.
  20. ^ http://www.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/apost_letters/2002/documents/hf_jp-ii_apl_20021016_rosarium-virginis-mariae.html

Further reading[edit source]

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

External links[edit source]