The Essential Writings of Christian Mysticism

The Essential Writings of Christian Mysticism

by Bernard McGinn
The Essential Writings of Christian Mysticism

The Essential Writings of Christian Mysticism

by Bernard McGinn

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Overview

This clear and comprehensive anthology, culled from the vast corpus of Christian mystical literature by the renowned theologian and historian Bernard McGinn, presents nearly one hundred selections, from the writings of Origen of Alexandria in the third century to the work of twentieth-century mystics such as Thomas Merton.

Uniquely organized by subject rather than by author, The Essential Writings of Christian Mysticism explores how human life is transformed through the search for direct contact with God. Part one examines the preparation for encountering God through biblical interpretation and prayer; the second part focuses on the mystics’ actual encounters with God; and part three addresses the implications of the mystical life, showing how mystics have been received over time, and how they practice their faith through private contemplation and public actions.

In addition to his illuminating Introduction, Bernard McGinn provides accessible headnotes for each section, as well as numerous biographical sketches and a selected bibliography.

Praise for The Essential Writings of Christian Mysticism
“No one is better equipped than Bernard McGinn to provide a thorough and balanced guide to this vast literature….This is an anthology which deserves to be read not only by those who study Christian history and theology, but by believers who long to deepen their own lives of prayer and service.” — Anglican Theological Review

“Bernard McGinn, a preeminent historian and interpreter of the Christian mystical tradition, has edited this fine collection of mystical writings, organizing them thematically....McGinn offers helpful introductions to each thematic section, author and entry, as well as a brief critical bibliography on mysticism. Published in the Modern Library Classic series, this is a great value.” – Christian Century

"No-one is better equipped than Professor McGinn to provide a thorough and balanced guide to this vast literature. A first-class selection, by a first-class scholar." — Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury


“This accessible anthology by the scholarly world’s leading historian of the Western Christian mystical tradition easily outstrips all others in its comprehensiveness, the aptness of its selection of texts, and in the intelligent manner of its organization.” — Denys Turner, Horace Tracy Pitkin Professor of Historical Theology, Yale Divinity School


"An immensely rich anthology, assembled and introduced by our foremost student of mysticism. Both the scholar and the disciple will find God’s plenty here." — Barbara Newman, Professor of English, Religion, and Classics, John Evans Professor of Latin, Northwestern University


"An unusually clear and insightful exposition of major texts selected by one of the greatest scholars in the field of Christian mysticism, based on his vast erudition and uniquely sensitive interpretation. Like his other books, this one too is destined to become a classic.” — Professor Moshe Idel, Hebrew University, Jerusalem

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780812974218
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication date: 12/12/2006
Series: Modern Library Classics
Pages: 592
Sales rank: 167,832
Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 8.00(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Bernard McGinn is the Naomi Shenstone Donnelly Professor Emeritus at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago. His books include Meister Eckhart: Teacher and Preacher; Meister Eckhart: The Essential Sermons; Antichrist; and the Presence of God multivolume history of Western Christian mysticism. He lives in Chicago.

Read an Excerpt



The Essential Writings of Christian Mysticism



By Edited and with an Introduction by Bernard McGinn


Random House


Edited and with an Introduction by Bernard McGinn

All right reserved.

ISBN: 0812974212



Chapter One

1.

Origen

Commentary on the Song of Songs

prologue

Origen of Alexandria (circa 180–254) was the greatest exegete of the early church. His spiritual reading of the Bible continued to influence later thinkers, despite the condemnation of aspects of his teaching in the sixth century. As Hans Urs von Balthasar, one of Origen's modern interpreters, once said, "No figure is more invisibly omnipresent in the history of Christian theology." Origen can also be described as the church's first explicit mystical theologian. While the mystical element was present in Christianity from the start, it is with the Alexandrian teacher that a formal biblically based mystical theory first emerges.

Origen was not the first to interpret the Song's account of the bridegroom and bride as the story of the love between Christ and the church, but he furthered this mystical reading by applying it to the relations between Christ and each loving soul. The following four excerpts from the prologue of what survives of his commentary show how he created the elements that were to elevate the Song to the mystical text par excellence in Christian history. The first section describes his overall characterization of the Song as a dramatic account of the process of salvation. The second shows how his dualunderstanding of human nature (inner and outer person) allowed him to translate the sensual language of the Song into a message about the spiritual senses, the powers of inner perception lost in sin but gradually restored to the soul through the action of grace. In the third selection Origen argues that there is no essential difference between the language of passionate desire (erôs in Greek; amor in Latin) and the biblical word for God's generous love poured out upon us (agapê/caritas). Finally, in the fourth selection Origen demonstrates how the three books ascribed to Solomon (a type of Christ) form the basis for a biblical paideia, or total education, by which we are brought back to God.

I. The Song of Songs as a Mystical Drama

It seems to me that this little book is an epithalamium, that is to say, a marriage-song, which Solomon wrote in the form of a drama and sang under the figure of the bride, about to wed and burning with heavenly love towards her Bridegroom, who is the Word of God. And deeply indeed did she love him, whether we take her as the soul made in his image, or as the church. But this same scripture also teaches us what words this august and perfect Bridegroom used in speaking to the soul, or to the church, who has been joined to him. And in this same little book that bears the title Song of Songs we recognize moreover things that the bride's companions said, the maidens that go with her, and also some things spoken by the Bridegroom's friends and fellows. For the friends of the Bridegroom also, in their joy at his union with the bride, have been enabled to say some things--at any rate those that they had heard from the Bridegroom himself. In the same way we find the bride speaking not to the Bridegroom only, but also to the maidens; likewise the Bridegroom's words are addressed not to the bride alone, but also to his friends. And that is what we meant just now, when we said that the marriage-song was written in dramatic form. For we call a thing a drama, such as the enaction of a story on the stage, when different characters are introduced and the whole structure of the narrative consists in their comings and goings among themselves. And this work contains these things one by one in their own order, and also the whole body of it consists of mystical utterances.

But it behoves us primarily to understand that, just as in childhood we are not affected by the passion of love, so also to those who are at the stage of infancy and childhood in their interior life--to those, that is to say, who are being nourished with milk in Christ, not with strong meat, and are only beginning "to desire the rational milk without guile" (Heb 5:12)--it is not given to grasp the meaning of these sayings. For in the words of the Song of Songs there is that food, of which the Apostle says that "strong meat is for the perfect"; and that food calls for hearers "who by ability have their senses exercised to the discerning of good and evil" (Heb 5:14). And indeed, if those whom we have called children were to come on these passages, it may be that they would derive neither profit nor much harm, either from reading the text itself, or from going through the necessary explanations. But if any man who lives only after the flesh should approach it, to such a one the reading of this scripture will be the occasion of no small hazard and danger. For he, not knowing how to hear love's language in purity and with chaste ears, will twist the whole manner of his hearing of it away from the inner spiritual man and on to the outward and carnal; and he will be turned away from the spirit to the flesh and will foster carnal desires in himself, and it will seem to be the divine scriptures that are thus urging and egging him on to fleshly lust!

II. The Inner and Outer Person and the Spiritual Senses

In the beginning of the words of Moses, where the creation of the world is described, we find reference to the making of two men, the first "in the image and likeness of God," and the second "formed of the slime of the earth" (Gen 1:26, 2:7). Paul the Apostle knew this well; and, being possessed of a very clear understanding of the matter, he wrote in his letters more plainly and with greater lucidity that there are in fact two men in every single man. He says, for instance: "For if our outward man is corrupted, yet the inward man is renewed day by day"; and again: "For I am delighted with the law of God according to the inward man" (2 Cor 4:16; Rom 7:22). And he makes some other statements of a similar kind. I think, therefore, that no one ought any longer to doubt what Moses wrote in the beginning of Genesis about the making and fashioning of two men, since he sees Paul, who understood what Moses wrote much better than we do, saying that there are two men in every one of us. Of these two men he tells us that the one, namely, the inner man, is renewed from day to day; but the other, that is, the outer, he declares to be corrupted and weakened in all the saints and in such as he was himself. If anything in regard to this matter still seems doubtful to anyone, it will be better explained in the appropriate places. But let us now follow up what we mentioned before about the inner and the outer man.

The thing we want to demonstrate about these things is that the divine scriptures make use of homonyms; that is to say, they use identical terms for describing different things. And they even go so far as to call the members of the outer man by the same names as the parts and dispositions of the inner man; and not only are the same terms employed, but the things themselves are compared with one another. For instance, a person is a child in age according to the inner man, who has in him the power to grow and to be led onward to the age of youth, and thence by successive stages of development to come to the perfect man and to be made a father. Our own intention, therefore, has been to use such terms as would be in harmony with the language of sacred scripture, and in particular with that which was written by John; for he says: "I have written to you, children, because you have known the Father; I have written to you, fathers, because you have known him who was from the beginning; I have written to you, young men, because you are strong, and the word of God abides in you, and you have overcome the wicked one" (1 Jn 2:12–14). It is perfectly clear; and I think nobody should doubt that John calls these people children or lads or young men or even fathers according to the soul's age, not the body's. Paul too says somewhere: "I could not speak to you as spiritual, but as to car- nal, little ones in Christ. I gave you milk to drink, not meat" (1 Cor 3:1). A little one in Christ is undoubtedly so called after the age of his soul, not after that of his flesh. And finally the same Paul says further: "When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man I destroyed childish things" (1 Cor 13:11). And again on another occasion he says: "Until we all meet . . . unto a perfect man; unto the measure of the age of the fullness of Christ" (Eph 4:13). He knows that those who believe will "all meet unto a perfect man" and "unto the measure of the age of the fullness of Christ." So, then, just as these different ages that we have mentioned are denoted by the same words both for the outer man and for the inner, so also will you find the names of the members of the body transferred to those of the soul; or rather the faculties and powers of the soul are to be called its members.

III. Amor and Caritas

In these places, therefore, and in many others you will find that divine scripture avoided the word "passion" (erôs) and put "charity" or "affection" (agapê) instead. Occasionally, however, though rarely, it calls the passion of love by its own name, and invites and urges souls to it; as when it says in Proverbs about Wisdom: "Desire her greatly and she will preserve you; encompass her, and she shall exalt you; honor her, that she may embrace you" (Prov 4:6, 8). And in the book that is called the Wisdom of Solomon it is written of Wisdom herself: "I became a passionate lover of her beauty" (Wis 8:2). I think that the word for passionate love was used only where there seemed to be no occasion of falling. For who could see anything sensuous or unseemly in the passion for Wisdom, or in a man's professing himself her passionate lover? Whereas had Isaac been spoken of as having a passion for Rebecca or Jacob for Rachel, some unseemly passion on the part of the saints of God might have been inferred from the words, especially by those who do not know how to rise up from the letter to the spirit. Most clearly, however, even in this our little book of which we are now treating, the appellation of "passionate love" has been changed into the word "charity" in the place where it says: "I have adjured you, O daughters of Jerusalem, if you find my 'Nephew,' to tell him that I have been wounded by charity" (Song 5:8). For that is as much as to say: "I have been smitten through with the dart of His passionate love." It makes no difference, therefore, whether the sacred scriptures speak of love, or of charity, or of affection; except that the word "charity" is so highly exalted that even God himself is called Charity, as John says: "Dearly beloved, let us love one another, for charity is of God; and everyone that loves is born of God and knows God. But he that loves not knows not God, for God is Charity" (1 Jn 4:7–8).

IV. The Place of the Song of Songs Among the Works of Solomon (i.e., Christ)

Now, therefore, calling upon God the Father, who is Charity, through that same charity that is of him, let us pass on to discuss the other matters. And let us first investigate the reason why, when the churches of God have adopted three books from Solomon's pen, the Book of Proverbs has been put first, that which is called Ecclesiastes second, while the Song of Songs is found in the third place. The following are the suggestions that occur to us here.

The branches of learning by means of which men generally attain to knowledge of things are the three which the Greeks called Eth- ics, Physics and Epoptics; these we may call respectively moral, natu- ral, and inspective. Some among the Greeks, of course, add a fourth branch, logic, which we may describe as rational. Others have said that logic does not stand by itself, but is connected and intertwined throughout with the three studies that we mentioned first. For this logic is, as we say, rational, in that it deals with the meanings and proper significances and their opposites, the classes and kinds of words and expressions, and gives information as to the form of each and every saying; and this branch of learning certainly requires not so much to be separated from the others as to be mingled and woven in with them. That study is called moral, on the other hand, which inculcates a seemly manner of life and gives a grounding in habits that incline to virtue. The study called natural is that in which the nature of each single thing is considered; so that nothing in life may be done which is contrary to nature, but everything is assigned to the uses for which the Creator brought it into being. The study called inspective is that by which we go beyond things seen and contemplate something of things divine and heavenly, beholding them with the mind alone, for they are beyond the range of bodily sight.

It seems to me, then, that all the sages of the Greeks borrowed these ideas from Solomon, who had learned them by the Spirit of God at an age and time long before their own, and that they then put them forward as their own inventions and, by including them in the books of their teachings, left them to be handed down also to those that came after. But, as we said, Solomon discovered and taught these things by the wisdom that he received from God before anyone; as it is written: "And God gave understanding to Solomon and wisdom exceeding great, and largeness of heart as the sand that is on the seashore. And wisdom was multiplied in him above all the sons of men that were of old, and above all the sages of Egypt" (3 Kgs 4:29–30). Wishing, therefore, to distinguish one from another of those three branches of learning, which we called general just now (that is, the moral, the natural, and the inspective), and to differentiate between them, Solomon issued them in three books, arranged in their proper order. First, in Proverbs he taught the moral science, putting rules for living into the form of short and pithy maxims, as was fitting. Secondly, he covered the science known as natural in Ecclesiastes; in this, by discussing at length the things of nature, and by distinguishing the useless and vain from the profitable and essential, he counsels us to forsake vanity and cultivate things useful and upright. The inspective science likewise he has propounded in this little book that we now have in hand--that is, the Song of Songs.

Continues...




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Table of Contents

Prefacexi
Introductionxiii
Part 1Foundations of Mystical Practice
Section 1Biblical Interpretation
Introduction3
1Commentary on the Song of Songs6
2The Life of Moses13
3Sermon on Psalm 41 (Vulgate)21
4Sermons on the Song of Songs 2327
5Sermon 235
6Commentary on the Song of Songs41
Section 2Asceticism and Purgation
Introduction47
1The Life of St. Antony49
2Praktikos55
3The Life of Mary of Oignies60
4Purgation and Purgatory66
5The Ascent of Mount Carmel72
Section 3Prayer, Liturgy, and Sacraments
Introduction79
1Prayer81
2Armenian Hymn No. 186
3Conferences 9 and 1089
4The Third Ethical Discourse97
5Vision VII102
6Sermon 39105
7On the Four Stages of Prayer110
8The Way of the Pilgrim118
Section 4Inner and Outer Practices
Introduction123
1The Philokalia, "Discourse on Abba Philimon"125
2Carthusian Customs131
3Spiritual Friendship135
4Letters of Spiritual Direction140
5The Spiritual Guide144
Section 5Mystical Itineraries
Introduction149
1The Threefold Way150
2The Four Degrees of Violent Charity155
3The Mind's Journey into God162
4The Mirror of Simple Annihilated Souls172
5Sermon 39180
6The Ladder of Perfection184
Part 2Aspects of Mystical Consciousness
Section 6Living the Trinity
Introduction191
1On the Trinity193
2The Mirror of Faith197
3The Flowing Light of the Godhead202
4The One Hundred and Fifty Chapters208
5The Living Flame of Love213
Section 7Encountering Christ
Introduction221
1Sermons on the Song of Songs 74222
2Francis of Assisi and the Stigmata225
3The Clock of Wisdom231
4Revelations of Divine Love238
5Encounters with Christ246
Section 8Love and Knowledge
Introduction251
1The Golden Letter253
2Sermons on the Song of Songs 83256
3The Cloud of Unknowing262
4Two Letters on Mystical Theology269
5True Christianity276
Section 9Positive and Negative Ways to God
Introduction281
1The Mystical Theology283
2Two Songs of Praise290
3The Granum Sinapis: Poem and Commentary293
4English Poets on God in Nature298
5Hymn of the Universe303
Section 10Vision, Contemplation, and Rapture
Introduction309
1Contemplation in the Fathers311
2Augustine on Vision and Rapture316
3Dialogues 2.35324
4Hymn 18327
5Hildegard of Bingen as Visionary and Theorist of Visions331
6Contemplation and Its Forms336
7The Fire of Love341
8On the Vision of God347
9Autobiography353
10Life357
11Excerpts from The Journal360
Section 11Distress and Dereliction
Introduction365
1Moral Interpretation of Job367
2The Memorial374
3Sermon 3379
4The Dark Night of the Soul384
5Story of a Soul389
Section 12Deification and Birthing
Introduction395
1Deification Among the Fathers397
2Birthing in Patristic and Medieval Texts402
3Questions to Thalassius408
4Sermon 101412
5Theologia Deutsch421
Section 13Union with God
Introduction427
1Homily 10430
2On Loving God434
3Sermon 52438
4The Little Book of Enlightenment444
5The Interior Castle 7.1-2451
6The Spiritual Canticle460
7The Treatise on the Love of God465
8The Relation of 1654472
Part 3Implications of the Mystical Life
Section 14Mysticism and Heresy
Introduction481
1Mystical Heresy in Early Christianity483
2The Heresy of the Free Spirit489
3Meister Eckhart's Condemnation495
4The Condemnations of Quietism501
5Francois Fenelon, Explication of the Maxims of the Saints Regarding the Interior Life509
Section 15Contemplation and Action
Introduction519
1Pastoral Care 2.5521
2Sermons on the Song of Songs 50525
3Selections from Sermon 86529
4The Cloud of Unknowing535
5The Dialogue540
6New Seeds of Contemplation545
A Brief Critical Bibliography on Christian Mysticism553
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