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Anyone else lean this way?
My interest started about 1976 with my interest in meditation and feeling a sense of connection. Then I discovered Thomas Merton, Pierre Teilhard De Chardin and Bede Griffiths and realized that such a view is not necessarily incompatible with Christianity.
"In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, it’s carried principally in the tradition of hesychasm, a prayer with unflagging emphasis on “putting the mind in the heart.” In the Western tradition, Meister Eckhart, the Rhineland mystics, and, in our own times, Bernadette Roberts come immediately to mind. I also see it strongly in the 14th century classic The Cloud of Unknowing."
"Richard Rohr talks about nonduality being at the center of the Christian tradition, as articulated through the belief that Jesus was both fully human and fully divine."
Cynthia Bourgeault on Christian Nonduality | The Garrison Institute.
[the WWMC sub-forum is for liberal Christians and non-liberal Christian members are not allowed to debate in this forum.]
My interest started about 1976 with my interest in meditation and feeling a sense of connection. Then I discovered Thomas Merton, Pierre Teilhard De Chardin and Bede Griffiths and realized that such a view is not necessarily incompatible with Christianity.
"In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, it’s carried principally in the tradition of hesychasm, a prayer with unflagging emphasis on “putting the mind in the heart.” In the Western tradition, Meister Eckhart, the Rhineland mystics, and, in our own times, Bernadette Roberts come immediately to mind. I also see it strongly in the 14th century classic The Cloud of Unknowing."
"Richard Rohr talks about nonduality being at the center of the Christian tradition, as articulated through the belief that Jesus was both fully human and fully divine."
Cynthia Bourgeault on Christian Nonduality | The Garrison Institute.
[the WWMC sub-forum is for liberal Christians and non-liberal Christian members are not allowed to debate in this forum.]
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I'm not at all convinced that qualified forms of nondualism are coherent, though. It's like the type of materialist who hints towards eliminativism and then draws short at the last minute and insists that they don't really mean that the mind is an illusion. There are consequences to a truly monistic ontology--either individuality is an illusion or not, but I don't think it can be sort of an illusion but actually real. (Unless you're working with a qualified dualism.)