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Spiritual Masters of the World's Religions
by
Victoria Kennick, Arvind Sharma, Victoria Kennick, Arvind Sharma
in
Asian Studies : Asian Religion and Philosophy
,
Asian Studies : Asian Studies
,
Asian Studies : Confucianism
2012
What is a spiritual master? Spiritual Masters of the World's Religions offers an important contribution to religious studies by addressing that question in the context of such themes as charismatic authority, role models, symbolism, and categories of religious perception. The book contains essays by scholar-practitioners on the topic of spiritual masters in Judaic, Christian, Islamic, Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Confucian, and Daoist traditions. It provides a full spectrum of exemplars, including founders, spiritual masters who highlight cultural themes, and problematic figures of modern times. To define spiritual master, the work of Max Weber, Mircea Eliade, Daniel Gold, and Bruce Lincoln is referenced to provide a balanced notion that includes both religionist and reductionist perspectives. This book takes readers from the past spiritual masters to the future of masters of any sort, posing food for thought about the future of master-disciple relationships in an emerging age of egalitarian sentiments.
The Specter of the Indian
2017
The Specter of the Indian unveils the centrality of Native
American spirit guides during the emergent years of American
Spiritualism. By pulling together cultural and political history;
the studies of religion, race, and gender; and the ghostly, Kathryn
Troy offers a new layer of understanding to the prevalence of
mystically styled Indians in American visual and popular culture.
The connections between Spiritualist print and contemporary Indian
policy provide fresh insight into the racial dimensions of social
reform among nineteenth-century Spiritualists. Troy draws
fascinating parallels between the contested belief of Indians as
fading from the world, claims of returned apparitions, and the
social impetus to provide American Indians with a means of
existence in white America. Rather than vanishing from national
sight and memory, Indians and their ghosts are shown to be ever
present. This book transports the readers into dimly lit parlor
rooms and darkened cabinets and lavishes them with detailed séance
accounts in the words of those who witnessed them. Scrutinizing the
otherworldly whisperings heard therein highlights the voices of
mediums and those they sought to channel, allowing the author to
dig deep into Spiritualist belief and practice. The influential
presence of Indian ghosts is made clear and undeniable.
Western esotericism and rituals of initiation
2007,2012
Historical exploration of Masonic rituals of initiation.
For more than three hundred years the practice of Masonic rituals of initiation has been part of Western culture, spreading far beyond the boundaries of traditional Freemasonry. Henrik Bogdan explores the historical development of these rituals and their relationship with Western esotericism. Beginning with the Craft degrees of Freemasonry-the blueprints, as it were, of all later Masonic rituals of initiation-Bogdan examines the development of the Masonic High Degrees, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn-the most influential of all nineteenth-century occultist initiatory societies-and Gerald Gardner's Witchcraft movement of the 1950s, one of the first large-scale Western esoteric New Religions Movements.
The Perfectibility of Human Nature in Eastern and Western Thought
2012,2008
How perfectible is human nature as understood in Eastern and Western philosophy, psychology, and religion? Harold Coward examines some of the very different answers to this question. He poses that in Western thought, including philosophy, psychology, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, human nature is often understood as finite, flawed, and not perfectible—in religion requiring God's grace and the afterlife to reach the goal. By contrast, Eastern thought arising in India frequently sees human nature to be perfectible and presumes that we will be reborn until we realize the goal—the various yoga psychologies, philosophies, and religions of Hinduism and Buddhism being the paths by which one may perfect oneself and realize release from rebirth. Coward uses the striking differences in the assessment of how perfectible human nature is as the comparative focus for this book.
Dark Mirrors
by
Andrei A. Orlov
in
Apocalypse of Abraham
,
Apocryphal books (Old Testament)
,
Azazel (Jewish mythology)
2011
Dark Mirrors is a wide-ranging study of two central
figures in early Jewish demonology-the fallen angels Azazel and
Satanael. Andrei A. Orlov explores the mediating role of these
paradigmatic celestial rebels in the development of Jewish
demonological traditions from Second Temple apocalypticism to later
Jewish mysticism, such as that of the Hekhalot and Shi'ur
Qomah materials. Throughout, Orlov makes use of Jewish
pseudepigraphical materials in Slavonic that are not widely known.
Orlov traces the origins of Azazel and Satanael to different and
competing mythologies of evil, one to the Fall in the Garden of
Eden, the other to the revolt of angels in the antediluvian period.
Although Azazel and Satanael are initially representatives of rival
etiologies of corruption, in later Jewish and Christian
demonological lore each is able to enter the other's stories in new
conceptual capacities. Dark Mirrors also examines the
symmetrical patterns of early Jewish demonology that are often
manifested in these fallen angels' imitation of the attributes of
various heavenly beings, including principal angels and even God
himself.
New Religious Consciousness
2018,2024
Since the mid-1960s, new religious movements--some exotic, some homegrown--have burgeoned all over the United States. A sense of self-awareness and spiritual sensitivity have found expression in the lives of large numbers of people, especially among youth. Why would this happen? What do these movements teach, and what effect do they have on the future? How does religious consciousness relate to other manifestations of social change, such as communal living, group therapy, and radical politics? Beginning in 1971, an extensive research project was undertaken by a team of sociologists, historians, and theologians seeking answers to these questions. Through a combination of interviews and participant observations, they studied new religious and quasi-religious groups in the San Francisco Bay Area, a spawning ground for upwards of one hundred such movements. The New Religious Consciousness opens with reports on three Eastern-based movements: the Healthy, Happy, Holy Organization, Hare Krishna, and Divine Light (more popularly known by the name of its leader, Maharaj Ji). Three quasi-religious movements are then considered: the New Left, the Human Potential Movement (Esalen, EST, Scientology, etc.), and Synanon. Next, three movements having their roots in Western religious traditions are examined: the Christian World Liberation Front (an offshoot of the Jesus Movement), Catholic Charismatic Renewal, and the Church of Satan (whose members believe in witchcraft). Succeeding chapters are devoted to estimating the impact of these movements on established religions and the population at large and to the history of earlier periods of religious ferment in the United States. The book concludes with provocative essays by the editors in which they present separate and differing analyses of the sources, nature, and meaning of the new religious
consciousness. A variety of perspectives are represented here: phenomenological, theological, experiential, sociological, and social psychological. The result is a book rich in insight about the nature of new religions. Taken together with a companion volume, Robert Wuthnow's The Consciousness Reformation, also published by University of California Press, The New Religious Consciousness provides the first comprehensive study of American countercultural belief systems. With contributions by: Randall H. Alfred Robert N. Bellah Charles Y. Glock Barbara Hargrove Donald Heinz Gregory Johnson Ralph Lane, Jr. Jeanne Messer Richard Ofshe Thomas Piazza Linda K. Pritchard Donald Stone Alan Tobey James Wolfe Robert Wuthnow This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1976.
The American Soul Rush
2012
Yoga. Humanistic Psychology. Meditation. Holistic Healing. These practices are commonplace today. Yet before the early 1960s they were atypical options for most people outside of the upper class or small groups of educated spiritual seekers.Esalen Institute, a retreat for spiritual and personal growth in Big Sur, California, played a pioneering role in popularizing quests for self-transformation and personalized spirituality. This \"soul rush\" spread quickly throughout the United States as the Institute made ordinary people aware of hundreds of ways to select, combine, and revise their beliefs about the sacred and to explore diverse mystical experiences. Millions of Americans now identify themselves as spiritual, not religious, because Esalen paved the way for them to explore spirituality without affiliating with established denominationsThe American Soul Rushexplores the concept of spiritual privilege and Esalen's foundational influence on the growth and spread of diverse spiritual practices that affirm individuals' self-worth and possibilities for positive personal change. The book also describes the people, narratives, and relationships at the Institute that produced persistent, almost accidental inequalities in order to illuminate the ways that gender is central to religion and spirituality in most contexts.
Thinking through Thomas Merton
2014
With the publication of The Seven Storey Mountain in 1948,
Thomas Merton became a bestselling author, writing about spiritual
contemplation in a modern context. Although Merton (1915-1968)
lived as a Trappist monk, he advocated a spiritual life that was
not a retreat from the world, but an alternative to it,
particularly to the deadening materialism and spiritual vacuity of
the postwar West. Over the next twenty years, Merton wrote for a
wide audience, bringing the wisdom of Christianity, Buddhism, and
Sufism into dialogue with the period's contemporary thought. In
Thinking through Thomas Merton , Robert Inchausti
introduces readers to Merton and evaluates his continuing relevance
for our time. Inchausti shows how Merton broke the high modernist
trance so that we might become the change we wish to see in the
world by refiguring the lost virtues of silence, contemplation, and
community in a world enamored by the will to power, virtuoso
performance, radical skepticism, and materialist metaphysics.
Merton's defense of contemplative culture is considered in light of
the postmodern thought of recent years and emerges as a compelling
alternative.
In the Company of Friends
by
Carter, John Ross
in
Asian Studies : Asian Religion and Philosophy
,
Asian Studies : Asian Studies
,
Buddhism
2012
Winner of the 2014 Frederick J. Streng Award presented by
the Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies In this work of
Buddhist-Christian reflection, John Ross Carter explores two basic
aspects of human religiousness: faith and the activity of
understanding. Carter's perspective is unique, putting people and
their experiences at the center of inquiry into religiousness. His
model and method grows out of friendship, challenging the so-called
objective approach to the study of religion that privileges
patterns, concepts, and abstraction. Carter considers the
traditions he knows best, the Protestant Christianity he was born
into and the Theravāda and Jōdo Shinshū (Pure Land) traditions of
the Sri Lankan and Japanese friends among whom he has lived,
studied, and worked. His rich, wide-ranging accounts of religious
experience include discussions of transcendence, reason,
saṃvega , shinjin , the inconceivable, and whether
lives oriented toward faith will survive in a global context with
increased pressures for individualism and secularism. Ultimately,
Carter proposes that the endeavor of interreligious understanding
is itself a religious quest.