L
Lucretius
Guest
You’re welcome. The passage is straight out of Ascent to Mount Carmel, which can be found online here: ewtn.com/library/SOURCES/ASCENT-J.TXTIt is clear that you have an understanding of John of the Cross (probably moreso than me) and I thank you for that beautiful passage.
I’m on board with you, CaptainIt is well understood by me that there are differences in St. John’s contemplation, Jewish Kaballah, and Sufi ecstasy-I am not trying to propagate some Ramakrishna “many paths to the same summit” brand of pluralism. To that end we probably agree.
When I first read some parts of St. Thomas Aquinas’s writings, I actually thought that he had panentheistic tendencies, so I agree that people who dive right in without some background knowledge might get confused.My point is that you must see how one who has never read St. John might interpret phrases like “become God by participation” or “participate in the divine nature” might see this as ‘Hindu-esque’ because the gap between God and man is reduced.
Moksha is liberation from samsahra, correct? If I am misunderstanding, then what is the difference between moksha and gnosis? Is gnosis temporary liberation from the material world? What analogies or the like can you give to help me better understand your experiences? :bounce:Similarly, you related my experience of Gnosis with Hindu moksha when I am experiencing something quite different even if it does not appear that way to you on the surface.
Christi pax,
Lucretius