... and what it isn't.
An aphorism, attributed to cardinal Henry Newmans, says "Mysticism starts in a 'mist', centres on an 'I', and ends in 'schism.'
At its heart, 'Christian mysticism' embraces Christian life and practice genuinely lived, it's found in Scripture, and begins and ends in worship.
Here I am talking about 'mysticism' as traditionally understood, not in any fuzzy egalitarian or amorphous sense as it is generally used and understood.
St Paul speaks of the faithful as "that their hearts, being joined together in love, might be encouraged onward toward all the riches of full certainty in
understanding, for full knowledge (ἐπίγνωσιν epignōsis 'precise and correct knowledge') of the mystery of God, and of the Father, and of Christ, in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and of knowledge hid (θησαυροὶ σοφίας καὶ γνώσεως ἀπόκρυφοι thēsauros sophia kai gnōsis apokryphos)
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Today there is the allure of the talk of Meditation or Centering Prayer or Hesychasm or any other 'techniques' (a repugnant term, in this context), or look into the writings of Bonaventure or Cusa or Eckhart, Dante or Blake, or the esotericism of Valentin Tomberg, and there's nothing wrong with that, so long as one is grounded first.
Rule of thumb: The more fringe it is, the more dubious. Or rather, the more fringe, the more risky.
The key, the ground, is right disposition ...
An aphorism, attributed to cardinal Henry Newmans, says "Mysticism starts in a 'mist', centres on an 'I', and ends in 'schism.'
At its heart, 'Christian mysticism' embraces Christian life and practice genuinely lived, it's found in Scripture, and begins and ends in worship.
Here I am talking about 'mysticism' as traditionally understood, not in any fuzzy egalitarian or amorphous sense as it is generally used and understood.
St Paul speaks of the faithful as "that their hearts, being joined together in love, might be encouraged onward toward all the riches of full certainty in
understanding, for full knowledge (ἐπίγνωσιν epignōsis 'precise and correct knowledge') of the mystery of God, and of the Father, and of Christ, in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and of knowledge hid (θησαυροὶ σοφίας καὶ γνώσεως ἀπόκρυφοι thēsauros sophia kai gnōsis apokryphos)
+++
Today there is the allure of the talk of Meditation or Centering Prayer or Hesychasm or any other 'techniques' (a repugnant term, in this context), or look into the writings of Bonaventure or Cusa or Eckhart, Dante or Blake, or the esotericism of Valentin Tomberg, and there's nothing wrong with that, so long as one is grounded first.
Rule of thumb: The more fringe it is, the more dubious. Or rather, the more fringe, the more risky.
The key, the ground, is right disposition ...