Eastern Mystic comparisons to Jesus and St. Paul

  • Thread starter Thread starter Mystical_Seeker
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
What? He never delivered the Gospel. He used it like he did everything else, to build his new religion. That to me, is not truth, or wise, but the most foolish of fools. No different than others before him who have done the same.
I don’t understand what you are talking about. Osho? The OP topic?

If it’s the OP topic, what about his quote do you find unwise or not truthful?

If it is Osho you’re talking about (and not Jesus) what new religion are you talking about? The one whatever Osho was – if he was the “sex guru” then that wouldn’t be surprising because the Catholic Church is also very focused on sexual sins.

Or did you mean Jesus was the fool? The crucifix, as Paul said, is pure foolishness by human standards, but is the wisdom of God so yes he was an amazing fool, to those who didn’t know better. 👍
 
I don’t understand what you are talking about. Osho? The OP topic?

If it’s the OP topic, what about his quote do you find unwise or not truthful?

If it is Osho you’re talking about (and not Jesus) what new religion are you talking about? The one whatever Osho was – if he was the “sex guru” then that wouldn’t be surprising because the Catholic Church is also very focused on sexual sins.

Or did you mean Jesus was the fool? The crucifix, as Paul said, is pure foolishness by human standards, but is the wisdom of God so yes he was an amazing fool, to those who didn’t know better. 👍
Hi, I was referencing Osho, along with others of his kind who use Christianity to further their personal religions and ambitions.

The problem I have with the OP is that of overlaying. Osho has overlaid his own philosophy over Christian teachings. Making what he is teaching neither Christian or Eastern (Hindu, Buddhist, etc). So while to you he sounds profound, I hear the charlatan.

Also, it is a commonalty among followers of such as Osho, to compare the one they are following to Jesus. Sorry, there is one Jesus.

BTW, Osho was called the sex guru because he advocated free sex, ala the free love of the 1960s. Which is another reason to be skeptical about him, as he was not teaching Christian morals. So for Osho, any inner self truth and the divine, would be exactly what? The answer to that is whatever feels good. Hedonism is not what the Holy Spirit brings us to.
 
Hi, I was referencing Osho, along with others of his kind who use Christianity to further their personal religions and ambitions.

The problem I have with the OP is that of overlaying. Osho has overlaid his own philosophy over Christian teachings. Making what he is teaching neither Christian or Eastern (Hindu, Buddhist, etc). So while to you he sounds profound, I hear the charlatan.

Also, it is a commonalty among followers of such as Osho, to compare the one they are following to Jesus. Sorry, there is one Jesus.
That’s interesting. I didn’t know anything about Osho, or whether he was alive this century or many ago; I had just picked up on his quote.

If he is using Jesus’s ideas and painting his own “wrapper” on them, then I kind of feel happy that I’m seeing through the wrapper. Another Good Thing is that at least he does hide some “good seeds” inside what he does.

I see quotes go by all day on FB and other places, and I just look for truth in them. I’d like to know the backgrounds of who said them, but I only have so much resource so I don’t spend time looking into them.

I actually think there is value in the “overlay” concept, but I think I get what you’re saying – like painting a clown face on Jesus so that he can sell them to clowns, metaphorically?
BTW, Osho was called the sex guru because he advocated free sex, ala the free love of the 1960s. Which is another reason to be skeptical about him, as he was not teaching Christian morals. So for Osho, any inner self truth and the divine, would be exactly what? The answer to that is whatever feels good. Hedonism is not what the Holy Spirit brings us to.
Yes, this helps explain the pushing back, and why it was objectionable to some that I compared something he said to Jesus’s teachings.

But I’m not giving up on the OP challenge to recognize that whatever the source, this snippet contains ideas that could be construed as similar to some that Jesus espouses. If they were that way by design, that explains it even better than my way of explaining it.
 
That’s interesting. I didn’t know anything about Osho, or whether he was alive this century or many ago; I had just picked up on his quote.

If he is using Jesus’s ideas and painting his own “wrapper” on them, then I kind of feel happy that I’m seeing through the wrapper. Another Good Thing is that at least he does hide some “good seeds” inside what he does.

I see quotes go by all day on FB and other places, and I just look for truth in them. I’d like to know the backgrounds of who said them, but I only have so much resource so I don’t spend time looking into them.

I actually think there is value in the “overlay” concept, but I think I get what you’re saying – like painting a clown face on Jesus so that he can sell them to clowns, metaphorically?

Yes, this helps explain the pushing back, and why it was objectionable to some that I compared something he said to Jesus’s teachings.

But I’m not giving up on the OP challenge to recognize that whatever the source, this snippet contains ideas that could be construed as similar to some that Jesus espouses. If they were that way by design, that explains it even better than my way of explaining it.
🙂 thanks, you express where I’m coming from better than I do. And yes, I do think people of Osho’s kind purposefully wrap what they are pushing, to sound familiar and pleasing. It’s how all cons are successfully initiated. Works for non religious too. The package is crafted for the target.

But FB…I ignore those memes that get floated around and if they continue, I block them (not the person but the source that is shared). I don’t have time to read the candy quotes of the week, and a lot of the times they come from friends who I know are all new age, and put things “out to the universe”. Makes me gag! 😃 but I still like my space worshipping friends. 🙂

For myself, the repackaging puts me off, including when it’s done via “cult of personality” Catholics. I’d rather just go to the source of all Truth. Jesus Christ, Himself.
 
Mystical Seeker, if you read Thomas Merton you’ll find he has incorporated Eastern mysticism into Catholicism. It is something that he continues to be criticized for. The risk we see, is of course, syncretism and pluralism, both of which undermine the True Faith, and orthodoxy. But there are more than a few Catholics who try to integrate both.

I dabbled in mixing the two before I was baptized Catholic, but my religious background has me turned off to using this and that from different religions, towards making my own truth. So I stick to Church teaching, via Holy Scripture and Tradition. There are numerous Catholic mystics that can guide us to authentic Christian mysticism. St. Paul being my favorite. 🙂

However, I should say, seeking to be a mystic for the sake of being a mystic, goes against my inner compass. I see the same in the NT, when Simon Magus sought the power of Holy Spirit, as a means to acquiring a power that he coveted.

God gives to each of us the gifts He finds fit for the building of His Kingdom. If/when we seek after the gifts of the Holy Spirit for the glory of oneself, I believe strongly we are seeking the opposite of God’s Kingdom.
 
Mystical Seeker, if you read Thomas Merton you’ll find he has incorporated Eastern mysticism into Catholicism. It is something that he continues to be criticized for. The risk we see, is of course, syncretism and pluralism, both of which undermine the True Faith, and orthodoxy. But there are more than a few Catholics who try to integrate both.

I dabbled in mixing the two before I was baptized Catholic, but my religious background has me turned off to using this and that from different religions, towards making my own truth. So I stick to Church teaching, via Holy Scripture and Tradition. There are numerous Catholic mystics that can guide us to authentic Christian mysticism. St. Paul being my favorite. 🙂

However, I should say, seeking to be a mystic for the sake of being a mystic, goes against my inner compass. I see the same in the NT, when Simon Magus sought the power of Holy Spirit, as a means to acquiring a power that he coveted.

God gives to each of us the gifts He finds fit for the building of His Kingdom. If/when we seek after the gifts of the Holy Spirit for the glory of oneself, I believe strongly we are seeking the opposite of God’s Kingdom.
Simon Magus was a sorcerer and a magician. Thomas Merton, a contemplative Trappist priest and monk, was one of the great spiritual teachers from the West during the Twentieth Century. Seriously, are you comparing Thomas Merton with Simon the Sorcerer, who tried to pay money to obtain the power to lay hands?

What I think is that the mystical approach to spirituality is not for everyone. As you note, God gives to each of us the gifts he sees fit. For some of us, the way is to try to strictly follow what they believe are the doctrines of the Church. And they ought to.
 
Simon Magus was a sorcerer and a magician. Thomas Merton, a contemplative Trappist priest and monk, was one of the great spiritual teachers from the West during the Twentieth Century. Seriously, are you comparing Thomas Merton with Simon the Sorcerer, who tried to pay money to obtain the power to lay hands?
Golly. I gave a suggestion to read Merton, not avoid him. I gave a comparison of differences. I think it is obvious that one is not like the other. Personally, I enjoy his writings.

Not everyone who dabbles in mysticism are Mertons, thus my tangent into why Catholics are cautious. I didn’t mean to imply anything else, only explaining why we don’t hitch our wagons to self proclaimed mystics with questionable ambitions (which again, is not how I view Merton).
 
What I think is that the mystical approach to spirituality is not for everyone. As you note, God gives to each of us the gifts he sees fit. For some of us, the way is to try to strictly follow what they believe are the doctrines of the Church. And they ought to.
This is certainly the case now, but in the early days of Christianity I think this approach was pretty much all they had. They certainly didn’t have a Catechism, and if they did they wouldn’t know how to read it. It seemed like the story was told through the lives of the believers, and caught contagiously through the very demeanor of the desert fathers or whoever they were, or later by those with true poverty like St. Francis who rejected the pomp and circumstance but cleverly stayed close to the structure of the Church.

But now that everybody is “literate” we have figured a way to clutter our minds with all kinds of information, and the idea that the solution to every problem is to do a better job of thinking and acting in according with prescribed norms and training. This is the primary message I see children receiving in school, whether Catholic or public. Is that we rate ourselves on our ability to carry out cognitive tasks, and have awards for those who won. I was one of those. I won every math contest I could get hooked up with, and many other academic awards. And yet I became psychotic because I was not taugh about mysticism and conteplation, and as a 40-something cradly Catholic it kind of bothers me that the “solid food” of our spirituality has remained so well hidden. I think it’s a whole lot easier to keep us all as infants and feed us the milk of tradition and ritual, without really having a plan to progress into teaching us how to grow up.

I asked my pastor some months back, whether there was anything in the Creed that we say every week, that we actually DO have to “believe” in order to become transformed and enter into the kingdom of heaven. He couldn’t think of anything except maybe the part about Jesus coming again. I contend all of the rest is structure, and is not the central teaching of Jesus. The central teachings of Jesus include love of enemy, mercy, and being a peace maker IMO – which are much talked about in a cerebral sense but without something other than learning dogma and tradition, those have no value in and of themselves.

The Father spoke from the cloud and said about His Son, “listen to Him.” Mary’s last recorded words (save for alleged “appearances” whether they be “real” or imaginary) was “listen to Him.” So neither Jesus’s Father nor His Mother told us to worship Him, to “do what He does” or to “become an expert at what others tell you about Him.” When I started looking at the words of Jesus, especially in the gospel of John, I realized it’s about a whole lot more than knowing a bunch of dogma, and in fact knowing all that dogma is itself an impediment because it causes pride that thinks that now in the “information age” we can build a Tower of Babel that actually works. Because we have figured out technological workarounds ever since God destroyed the first one, so a human solution is now at hand. :rolleyes:

But I have to become at peace with all of this, or I can never be the witness of the comtemplative mindset I can envision having, and seek to have as a “default” method rather than some occasional “best practices” mode. :o So if I add a little about Jesus coming to divide rather than unite, and a little about many parts to one body, maybe I can learn to allow people to follow their paths even if I’ve “given my best shot” at arrogantly trying to change them. But where does that end, and a true zeal for living a gospel life and invitation to others to join me, begin? I think part of it is I have yet to learn the difference between evangelizing and prosyletizing. Haha part of my message is that others do the latter while claiming to do the former, so we really are in the “same boat” in the storm of life. 😛

Also I get a lot of mileage out of the “dishonest steward” parable, understanding that even if I think someone else is “sinning” like for example killing heretics, it was all part of what “worldly” people thought they had to do to keep the story from being destroyed, and as it turns out it worked. No matter what the Church has done, both institutionally and “wicked” individuals running it (although there are no human “good” or “bad” trees I can know by human understanding) it was what had to be done. At least it was done, and here I am eating their fruits while judging them. So that’s kind of a bind I have found myself getting into, while trying to “spread the Good News” of mysticism. :eek: If people gave their lives to protect a story that I fancy they never actually received full benefit from, that puts me in awe of the plan by God that we still have the story and the Eucharist after 2000 years of bloody history. And I look at what they’ve protected all this time like the worst kind of Protestant – like I’m going to take the Church’s Bible and then start telling them they don’t know how to read it. Gag me, really, I mean really. So by whatever means, the Church has been faithful to her mission and I have to keep that in mind when I bash her present-day processes. :sad_yes:

Whew. Thank you for reading. :cool:

MS

Edit: I just realized something about the dishonest steward. He may have impressed his master with how clever he was, but the story doesn’t say anything about the master changing his mind about dismissing him as steward. :hmmm:

.
 
"…if you read Thomas Merton you’ll find he has incorporated Eastern mysticism into Catholicism. It is something that he continues to be criticized for. The risk we see, is of course, syncretism and pluralism, both of which undermine the True Faith, and orthodoxy. But there are more than a few Catholics who try to integrate both.
Perhaps I misunderstood, but I didn’t see this as a ringing endorsement of Thomas Merton either. Thomas Merton (Father Lewis) was of course a contemplative Catholic priest and monk. I’ve read a number of his books and have seen no instance of a rejection of Catholic dogma or doctrine. He was a deeply spiritual man, and my sense of this is that we don’t know what he knew. I think any judgment of him should be done with trepidity.

Why are there those who are afraid? There is no harm in learning and considering the insights of others, or at least not when one is grounded in one’s own faith. There is no compelling force that requires us to believe or accept anything unless we agree to do so. If I read the works of Karl Marx, as I did while in college, does it make me a Marxist? I don’t think so. I read the Upanishads too but never felt compelled to convert to Hinduism.

There are those of every faith with such a rigid view of dogma and doctrine that it seems to me they really are afraid of anything they perceive as a challenge to their firmly-held beliefs. This is insecurity. It appears judgmental and without mercy. It is the very opposite of evangelization.

What I would agree with is that a contemplative and mystical approach to spirituality is not suitable for everyone. Those who only feel secure by adhering strictly to what they have been taught should probably stay the course. However, I would note that when this becomes entrenched and widespread, a faith slowly withers in its attempt to conserve. This is inherent in spirituality, which is a dynamic process where the full revelation will not be revealed (and therefore cannot be understood) before the Last Judgment. What is revealed to each generation is not automatically received. It requires discernment. There are those of sufficient formation in their own beliefs who are not afraid to seek out what is revealed to each generation and what might be known by others. And in my humble opinion, Thomas Merton was such a person. The mistake is to believe that one knows all there is to know.
 
I’ve heard some cool quotes by Thomas Merton, and if there are any that relate to the OP quote or the Jesus and Paul quotes I connected to them, I’d like to hear it.

I don’t “follow” anyone in particular, except that whatever I learn I consider how it compares at all zoom levels I’m capable of comprehending (from detail to “God’s eye view” as far as I can pretend) to what Jesus teaches, and more importantly how it squares with the “law written in my heart” that Jesus tells us how to listen to.

The Holy Spirit doesn’t need to cite references, nor can it, for it guides us with inexpressible groans. For someone who actually believes in this, I would think it’s important to learn about this spring of living water which will flow from within us, as Jesus told the woman at the well about.

Jesus of Nazareth walked the earth and was crucified. He was resurrected and went to His Father, so the only record we have is what tradition and scripture tells us, and the Eucharist is the living Word, carried on.

Meanwhile, what do we do outside the Church? How do we make decisions, when we know that trying to impress God by “good behavior” is futile without the cross of Jesus. But what does that mean? To mean it means in part, that He left us with the archives and Eucharist, and gave us a “living” helper. Jesus is the way, the truth, and the light, but the Holy Spirit is the advocate or helper which will guide us to all truth.

Some people hear “truth” in a babbling brook, and have all kinds of profound insights. And that’s all good. I have insights from time to time, by considering the “babbling” of non-Catholics, which in a lot of cases either makes more sense than what I may have previously heard Catholics say, or helps put it into perspective. Worst case is I can see what a “non-Catholic” view of something is, to better appreciate the Catholic view.

I bet if I heard a catholic Gospel reading in some middle eastern language, compared to a threatening terrorist propaganda video in the same language and in similar tone of voice, I might not be able to tell truth from lies.

But when I hear two very different perspectives expressed in what comes across as “understandable English” I like to compare and contrast them.

You can add in your own example if you’d like, and you may object to my making comparisons. I have been in lock up wards for the “way I think” and asked stupid questions about religion because apparently being religious flags you for potential wacko. So through much healing by the Divine Therapist, aka the Holy Spirit is what I attribute it to since the doctors said they couldn’t fix me. Others can enjoy my thought exercise or fight it, and either way you supplement my experiences related to it.

MS
 
Perhaps I misunderstood, but I didn’t see this as a ringing endorsement of Thomas Merton either.
Well, my fault for slurring my thoughts together in one paragraph. As I said, I enjoy Merton. A friend introduced me to him when I was in RCIA, and his writings were part of my seeing the Cathoic faith differently than I believed it to be. I was at the time, a seeker of truth, thinking in my nihilistic atheism that truth did not exist. But was only what each person dreamed. Or meditated. Or thought. I had read Ghandi’s autobiography, “My Search For Truth”. I had read Malcom X’s autobiography, which was again, one man’s search for truth. I didn’t find what I was looking for in their experiences. I did in Merton’s.
Thomas Merton (Father Lewis) was of course a contemplative Catholic priest and monk. I’ve read a number of his books and have seen no instance of a rejection of Catholic dogma or doctrine. He was a deeply spiritual man, and my sense of this is that we don’t know what he knew. I think any judgment of him should be done with
It is not my judgement that criticized Merton. I have only read other Catholic’s opinions.
Why are there those who are afraid? There is no harm in learning and considering the insights of others, or at least not when one is grounded in one’s own faith. There is no compelling force that requires us to believe or accept anything unless we agree to do so. If I read the works of Karl Marx, as I did while in college, does it make me a Marxist? I don’t think so. I read the Upanishads too but never felt compelled to convert to Hinduism.
I read, studied and practiced the sutras of Patanjali, again, in my atheism. The idea of divinity within was intriguing for a while, but my experiences and journey through life would not have me convinced the divine is found in myself. Rather, quite the opposite. (My husband says I am too hard on myself. ) But that, combined with the multiple gods of Hinduism, I just couldn’t get on board with considering a conversion to Hinduism. At the time, not interested really in converting to anything. Just interested in “belief systems”.

I don’t discourage people from reading almost anything. I keep the “almost” in there because there’s some awful writings out there.
There are those of every faith with such a rigid view of dogma and doctrine that it seems to me they really are afraid of anything they perceive as a challenge to their firmly-held beliefs. This is insecurity. It appears judgmental and without mercy. It is the very opposite of evangelization.
What I would agree with is that a contemplative and mystical approach to spirituality is not suitable for everyone. Those who only feel secure by adhering strictly to what they have been taught should probably stay the course. However, I would note that when this becomes entrenched and widespread, a faith slowly withers in its attempt to conserve. This is inherent in spirituality, which is a dynamic process where the full revelation will not be revealed (and therefore cannot be understood) before the Last Judgment. What is revealed to each generation is not automatically received. It requires discernment. There are those of sufficient formation in their own beliefs who are not afraid to seek out what is revealed to each generation and what might be known by others. And in my humble opinion, Thomas Merton was such a person. The mistake is to believe that one knows all there is to know.
Oh, I think there is quite a bit to fear in the Catholic mystical life. Have you read how they suffer? Those are special people who God calls to that life.
 
I’ve heard some cool quotes by Thomas Merton, and if there are any that relate to the OP quote or the Jesus and Paul quotes I connected to them, I’d like to hear it.

I don’t “follow” anyone in particular, except that whatever I learn I consider how it compares at all zoom levels I’m capable of comprehending (from detail to “God’s eye view” as far as I can pretend) to what Jesus teaches, and more importantly how it squares with the “law written in my heart” that Jesus tells us how to listen to.

The Holy Spirit doesn’t need to cite references, nor can it, for it guides us with inexpressible groans. For someone who actually believes in this, I would think it’s important to learn about this spring of living water which will flow from within us, as Jesus told the woman at the well about.

Jesus of Nazareth walked the earth and was crucified. He was resurrected and went to His Father, so the only record we have is what tradition and scripture tells us, and the Eucharist is the living Word, carried on.

Meanwhile, what do we do outside the Church? How do we make decisions, when we know that trying to impress God by “good behavior” is futile without the cross of Jesus. But what does that mean? To mean it means in part, that He left us with the archives and Eucharist, and gave us a “living” helper. Jesus is the way, the truth, and the light, but the Holy Spirit is the advocate or helper which will guide us to all truth.

Some people hear “truth” in a babbling brook, and have all kinds of profound insights. And that’s all good. I have insights from time to time, by considering the “babbling” of non-Catholics, which in a lot of cases either makes more sense than what I may have previously heard Catholics say, or helps put it into perspective. Worst case is I can see what a “non-Catholic” view of something is, to better appreciate the Catholic view.

I bet if I heard a catholic Gospel reading in some middle eastern language, compared to a threatening terrorist propaganda video in the same language and in similar tone of voice, I might not be able to tell truth from lies.

But when I hear two very different perspectives expressed in what comes across as “understandable English” I like to compare and contrast them.

You can add in your own example if you’d like, and you may object to my making comparisons. I have been in lock up wards for the “way I think” and asked stupid questions about religion because apparently being religious flags you for potential wacko. So through much healing by the Divine Therapist, aka the Holy Spirit is what I attribute it to since the doctors said they couldn’t fix me. Others can enjoy my thought exercise or fight it, and either way you supplement my experiences related to it.

MS
I don’t disagree with anything you say here. 🙂

For myself, the Holy Spirit is indescribable. Sure, I can give what the CCC teaches, but the experience of the Holy Spirit leads to an encounter with Truth, who is Jesus Christ. A good priest who I admire says it as, “we are wounded by Christ”. That’s my experience.

So my experience is just that, of seeking for so long, and I made hundreds of comparisons, to the religion I was raised in, the religions I studied and participated in, and even to my atheism. I don’t compare very often any longer, because where the Holy Spirit has brought me, I have peace. I only wish now to immerse myself in what I didn’t know existed, for a lifetime.

So we come from different perspectives but I don’t view comparing religious ideas as objectionable on its own. I am just biased towards keeping the center on the beautiful Truth the Church has to offer.
 
Oh, I think there is quite a bit to fear in the Catholic mystical life. Have you read how they suffer? Those are special people who God calls to that life.
Yeah, sometimes I think some of those saints get to much mystical energy or whatever built up, that trying to “color within the lines” can get to them… like I wonder if Stigmata is like a kind of spiritual leak – like a relief valve on a pressure cooker. And the ones thrown around in the cells and stuff – gosh I wonder what would have happened if they got to run around outside and burn off some of that energy? One can only wonder. 😃
 
So we come from different perspectives but I don’t view comparing religious ideas as objectionable on its own. I am just biased towards keeping the center on the beautiful Truth the Church has to offer.
That’s great with me. We need people who focus on these things, and some on those things, and a few “others” like me. 😛 My son’s in seminary so I figure he’s gonna have to stick to the company line, but I give him diverse challenges and ask him questions that stir around all the philosophy they fed him, but I do hold back a little.😉

It’s ridiculous how much I crave hearing others’ points of view. Maybe it’s partly because I used to be so unaware of how “other people” made decisions (namely by feelings not information and I had no idea when they’d get triggered or why) that what I don’t know about others’ points of view has in fact hurt me in very significant and materially accountable ways. Plus I have this thing that I like to be able to find agreement where others find contention.

So yeah, it’s cool what you want to do, but if you get that I like to use allegorical connections to compare content of verious religions and belief systems, and hopefully find others who’d like to do that also, that covers my main intent here. :cool:
 
How about the secular-ish ‘guru’ who promotes the idea of “Christ Consciousness”?

None other than Deepak! As an endocrinologist using ostensibly scientific findings interwoven with his version of spiritual growth, he was quoted thus:

“Religion is belief in someone else’s experience. Spirituality is having your own experience. Atheism is no experience only measurement.”

― Deepak Chopra

I tend to agree with this generalization, more than I disagree.

MS
 
I’ve heard some cool quotes by Thomas Merton, and if there are any that relate to the OP quote or the Jesus and Paul quotes I connected to them, I’d like to hear it.MS
Here is one quote from Thomas Merton that I believe relates to what the OP’s quote says can be found in one’s interior:

“A door opens in the center of our being and we seem to fall through it to immense depths which, although they are infinite, are all accessible to us; all eternity seems to have become ours in this one placid and breathless contact…” --New Seeds of Contemplation

All I will say is Merton surely knows what he is talking about.
 
Well, my fault for slurring my thoughts together in one paragraph. As I said, I enjoy Merton. A friend introduced me to him when I was in RCIA, and his writings were part of my seeing the Cathoic faith differently than I believed it to be. I was at the time, a seeker of truth, thinking in my nihilistic atheism that truth did not exist. But was only what each person dreamed. Or meditated. Or thought. I had read Ghandi’s autobiography, “My Search For Truth”. I had read Malcom X’s autobiography, which was again, one man’s search for truth. I didn’t find what I was looking for in their experiences. I did in Merton’s.
I understand. Thanks for the clarification. I enjoyed reading your full comment and thought it interesting. Thanks.

Pax
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top