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Christian Morgenstern als MystikerGiffei, Herbert. January 1931 (has links)
Issued also as the author's inaugural dissertation, Marburg. / "Literatur-Verzeichnis": p. [164]-165.
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Christian Morgenstern als MystikerGiffei, Herbert. January 1931 (has links)
Issued also as the author's inaugural dissertation, Marburg. / "Literatur-Verzeichnis": p. [164]-165.
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A Study of Paul's Mystical ExperiencesAndry, Carl Franklin 01 January 1942 (has links)
Mysticism is the most distinctive characteristic of religion. It is considered by many religious thinkers to be the essential of religion. All religion, in order to be religion, is and must be, at least partly, mystical. Yet in spite of its great importance in religion, mysticism suffers from much confusion. Great mystics eloquently describe their mystical experiences they write volume upon volume about them. And after reading what they have to say, we are forced to ask ourselves, "What is mysticism?" Why so much confusion? If mysticism has anything of value to contribute to the world, it must be more than confusion.
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William Blake and the Mysticisms of Sense and Non-sensePeat, Raymond F. 06 1900 (has links)
134 pages
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A hermeneutics of contemplative silence: Paul Ricoeur and the heart of meaningPetersen, Michele Therese Kueter 01 December 2011 (has links)
The practice of contemplative silence, in its manifestation as a mode of capable being, is a self-consciously spiritual and ethical activity that aims at a transformation of reflexive consciousness. I assert that contemplative silence manifests a mode of capable being in which we have an awareness of the awareness of the awareness of being with being whereby we can constitute and create a shared world of meaning(s) through poetically presencing our being as being with others. The doubling and tripling of the term "awareness" refers to five contextual levels of awareness, which are analyzed, including immediate self-awareness, immediate objective awareness, reflective awareness, reflexive awareness, and contemplative awareness. The analysis culminates with the claim that contemplative silence manifests a mode of capable being, one which creates the conditions of the possibility for contemplative awareness. A hermeneutics of contemplative silence manifests a deeper level of awareness--contemplative awareness--as a poetics of presencing our human solidarity. Contemplative awareness includes both an experience and an understanding of the proper ordering of our relational realities. My claim is that contemplative awareness can and should accompany the practice of contemplative silence in order to appropriate the meaning of a silence embodied in the here and now, through the hermeneutical endeavor. Contemplative awareness elicits movement in thinking, and involves the ongoing exercise of rethinking our relational realities in and for the world.
I join three moments in the hermeneutical process--description, explanation, and interpretation--with the three moments in the traditional religious journey to spiritual and ethical maturity--the purgative, the illuminative, and the unitive. I present a conceptual framework that opens to hermeneutics, and a way to think about ongoing appropriation of a mode of capable being as growth in the human capacity to make and carry meaning. The threefold way, as it is interpreted in this study, is a heuristic model of the invariant elements of the tradition of contemplative silence. There is reflexivity to the structure, because a study of the practice is an exemplification of the practice, which produces the very practice that it is talking about.
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Magnétisme, mystique et ésotérisme chrétiens chez quelques disciples de Nizier Anthelme Philippe : Chapas, Georges Descormier, Emmanuel Lalande, Yvon Le Loup, Marcel Roche, André Dumas (1890-1940) / Magnetism, Christian mysticism and esotericism in a few disciples of Nizier Anthelme Philippe : Jean Chapas, Georges Descormiers, Emmanuel Lalande, Yvon Le Loup, Marcel Roche, André Dumas (1890-1940)Boucly, Jean-Christophe 24 March 2015 (has links)
L’étude des disciples de Philippe permet de souligner l’importance de la fonction « pharmakologique » du religieux : le magnétisme était la force mystérieuse et parfois inquiétante qui permettait de rétablir l’équilibre des fluides. Le christianisme des disciples de Philippe les portait à souligner l’importance de la prière et à imaginer un magnétisme supérieur, un « magnétisme spirituel », mais ils gardaient souvent la terminologie magnétique : il était encore question de « fluides », de « rayons » et d’ « énergies ». Les différents acteurs, très influencés par l’occultisme de leur temps, importèrent en fait des éléments exogènes au sein d’un ésotérisme occidental originellement chrétien, tels le magnétisme animal et les spéculations orientalisantes des Théosophistes anglo-saxons pour préfigurer, en fin de compte, la nébuleuse « mystique ésotérique » des courants plus ou moins liés au New Age de la deuxième partie du XXe siècle. / Studying the disciples of Philippe makes it possible to underline the importance of the "pharmakologic" function in religion: magnetism was the mysterious and sometimes troubling force that made it possible to restore balance to the fluids. The Christianism of the disciples of Philippe led them to underline the importance of prayer and to imagine a superior magnetism, a "spiritual magnetism", but they often retained the magnetic oriented terminology: there were still "fluids", "rays" and "energies". The various actors, highly influenced by the occultism of their time, actually imported exogenous elements into a Western esotericism that was originally Christian, such as animal magnetism and the Easternising speculations of the Anglo-Saxon Theosophists in order to foreshadow, in the end, the "mystic-esoteric nebulous" of trends more or less tied to the "New Age" of the second half of the 20th century.
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The spirituality and mysticism of nature in the early Franciscan traditionShare, Mary Elizabeth 31 January 2004 (has links)
In this doctoral thesis, The Spirituality and Mysticism of Nature in the Early Franciscan Tradition, I have begun with an attempt to clarify the notions of spirituality and mysticism. The former, was seen as an approach to God embodied in outlook, practice and lifestyle, and the latter, mysticism, was defined as a felt awareness and knowledge of the presence of God. My hypothesis is that nature played a very important part in both the spirituality and mysticism of Saint Francis of Assisi, and in the spirituality of the movement he founded.
In a systematic attempt to investigate my theme, I began with a study of the chief places associated with Francis. They present a kind of mirror of his soul and reveal, I believe, a good deal about his outlook and way of living. They tend to be remote and solitary places, often high in the mountains or near water, often desolate and harsh and usually beautiful, and what was later to become known as `romantic'.
I turned then to the world of nature, beginning with the celestial bodies, sun, moon and the stars, and the elements of the sub-lunar world. The world of living things, fruits and flowers, animals, wild beasts and tame, fish and birds was examined. Nearly all the evidence here came from that collection of Franciscan stories and anecdotes which forms one of the great treasuries of stories in world literature.
The fourth chapter was devoted to the poetry of Francis, above all to the Praises of God and The Canticle of the Creatures. After examining the circumstances of its composition, I took the stanzas one by one and examined them in the light of what they reveal of Francis spirituality and mysticism.
The purpose of chapter five was to gather the fruits of my research and evaluate the hypothesis I proposed. I concluded that Francis, incorporated nature into his spirituality and mysticism in a very original way. I hold that Francis was a great nature mystic, and that his nature spirituality is still full of vigor and potential for the future. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / (D.Th. (Christian Spirituality))
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The spirituality and mysticism of nature in the early Franciscan traditionShare, Mary Elizabeth 31 January 2004 (has links)
In this doctoral thesis, The Spirituality and Mysticism of Nature in the Early Franciscan Tradition, I have begun with an attempt to clarify the notions of spirituality and mysticism. The former, was seen as an approach to God embodied in outlook, practice and lifestyle, and the latter, mysticism, was defined as a felt awareness and knowledge of the presence of God. My hypothesis is that nature played a very important part in both the spirituality and mysticism of Saint Francis of Assisi, and in the spirituality of the movement he founded.
In a systematic attempt to investigate my theme, I began with a study of the chief places associated with Francis. They present a kind of mirror of his soul and reveal, I believe, a good deal about his outlook and way of living. They tend to be remote and solitary places, often high in the mountains or near water, often desolate and harsh and usually beautiful, and what was later to become known as `romantic'.
I turned then to the world of nature, beginning with the celestial bodies, sun, moon and the stars, and the elements of the sub-lunar world. The world of living things, fruits and flowers, animals, wild beasts and tame, fish and birds was examined. Nearly all the evidence here came from that collection of Franciscan stories and anecdotes which forms one of the great treasuries of stories in world literature.
The fourth chapter was devoted to the poetry of Francis, above all to the Praises of God and The Canticle of the Creatures. After examining the circumstances of its composition, I took the stanzas one by one and examined them in the light of what they reveal of Francis spirituality and mysticism.
The purpose of chapter five was to gather the fruits of my research and evaluate the hypothesis I proposed. I concluded that Francis, incorporated nature into his spirituality and mysticism in a very original way. I hold that Francis was a great nature mystic, and that his nature spirituality is still full of vigor and potential for the future. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / (D.Th. (Christian Spirituality))
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A comparative study of the mysticism of Elizabeth of the Trinity (1880-1906) and the Eastern Orthodox ChurchCarratu, Catherina Maria 30 November 2003 (has links)
In this investigation key elements of the mysticism of Elizabeth of the Trinity (1880-1906) are compared and contrasted with the mysticism of the Eastern Orthodox Church, and as a result, the true nature of the relationship between their respective mysticism is elucidated. Key doctrines which exhibit a remarkable consonance are: the trinitarian foundation of their mysticism, the indwelling of the Trinity in the human soul, asceticism, desert spirituality, sacrificial love, liturgical spirituality, scriptural spirituality, deification and the doxological nature of their mysticism. Elements of divergence exist within the following: election and predestination, apophatic versus cataphatic mysticism, the Roman Catholic dogma of the immaculate conception of the virgin Mary, and the mode of God's presence in the human soul. Elizabeth's relevance for today is also considered, namely, her ecclesial mission which she now continues in heaven: to intercede for people seeking union with God and to draw people to interior recollection. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / M.Th.
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The Canticle of spiritual direction : a transformative approach to the Song of SongsLam, Judy Elise 02 1900 (has links)
This dissertation suggests the Song of Songs as a biblical paradigm for Christian spiritual
direction based on the poem’s human dynamics, theological poetics and mystical aesthetic.
The Song of Songs is paradigmatic as a journey from a state of self-neglect (depletion),
through dynamic encounters of love (transformation), to living who I am in union with the
divine I AM (deification). Identifying the human beloved as archetypal seeker and positing
transformation in love as the raison-d’être for spiritual direction, the research delineates
important implications for spiritual praxis, namely: the human subject (locus); human
yearning (focus); the human search (journey); dynamics of human transformation and
spiritual maturation (process); aspects of life-integration and union with God (purpose); and
becoming a living sacrament in the world (epiphany). With its experiential-existential
approach, The Canticle of Spiritual Direction serves as an interdisciplinary and intercultural
resource on the Song of Songs, Christian spiritual direction, and Christian mysticism. / Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology / M. Th. (Christian Spirituality)
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