Mysticism - mĭsˈtĭsĭzəm [Gr.,=the practice of those who are initiated into the mysteries], the practice of putting oneself into, and remaining in, direct relation with
God, the Absolute, or any unifying principle of life. Mysticism is inseparably linked with religion. Because of the nature of mysticism, firsthand objective studies of it are virtually impossible, and students must confine themselves to the accounts of mystics, autobiographical and biographical, or, as the mystics themselves say, they must experience for themselves. The terms mystic and mysticism are used very broadly in English, being extended to mean magic, occultism, or the esoteric.
The Nature of Mysticism There are certain common fallacies current about mysticism: that mystics are not "practical" and that they are revolutionary; on the contrary, many of the greatest mystics have been both intensely active as well as submissive to authority of whatever sort. Nor is the "solitary thinker" necessarily, or even usually, a mystic. There is no accepted explanation of mysticism, and few psychologists have interested themselves in its practice. William
James studied the nature of mysticism but reached no conclusion that satisfied him. A significant philosophical evaluation of mysticism was made by Henri
Bergson. There are two general tendencies in the speculation of mystics—to regard God as outside the soul, which rises to its God by successive stages, or to regard God as dwelling within the soul and to be found by delving deeper into one's own reality. The idea of transcendence, as held most firmly by mystics, is the kernel of the ancient mystical system,
Neoplatonism, and of
Gnosticism. Their explanation of the connection between God and humans by emanation is epoch-making in the philosophy of contemplation. Among those who think of God, or the Supreme Reality, as being within the soul are the Quakers (see
Friends, Religious Society of) and the adherents of
Vedanta. The language of mysticism is always difficult and usually symbolic. This is readily seen in the Song of Songs in the Old Testament, in the book of Revelation in the New Testament, and in the writings of William Blake. Mystics, especially those of the Roman Catholic and the Islamic traditions, have made use of a terminology borrowed from ordinary human love. A conventional analysis is as follows: The soul undergoes a purification (the purgative way), which leads to a feeling of illumination and greater love of God (the illuminative way); after a period the soul may be said to enter into mystical union with God (the unitive way), which begins with the consciousness that God is present to the soul; the soul progresses through a time of quiet and an ecstatic state to a final perfect state of union with God (spiritual marriage). Late in this process there is an experience (the dark night of the soul) wherein the contemplative finds himself completely deserted by God, by hope, and, indeed, even by the power to pray; it lasts sometimes for years. Visions, voices, ecstasies may accompany any or none of the states of contemplation before the final union. It is because of these external and nonessential manifestations that the erroneous idea has arisen that all enthusiastic and nonintellectual religious movements are necessarily mystical. The positive convictions of the mystic arise from the fact that they are based on what he or she must regard as objective reality directly perceived. Great Mystics and Mystical Traditions Among the principal contemplatives of Christianity from post-Apostolic times to the Reformation are
Clement of Alexandria,
Origen, St.
Augustine, the false
Dionysius the Areopagite,
Cassian, St.
Gregory I,
Erigena, St.
Peter Damian, St.
Anselm, St.
Bernard of Clairvaux,
Hildegard of Bingen,
Joachim of Fiore,
Richard of Saint Victor,
Hugh of Saint Victor,
Hadewijch, St. Gertrude, St.
Francis,
Jacopone da Todi, St.
Bonaventure, St.
Thomas Aquinas, Ramon
Lull,
Dante,
Eckhart,
Tauler,
Suso,
Ruysbroeck,
Groote,
Thomas à Kempis,
Nicholas of Cusa,
Rolle of Hampole, Walter
Hilton,
Juliana of Norwich, Margery
Kempe, St.
Bridget of Sweden, St.
Catherine of Siena,
Gerson, St.
Bernardine of Siena, and St.
Joan of Arc. The Catholic tradition was continued by St.
Ignatius of Loyola, St.
Theresa of Ávila, St.
John of the Cross, St.
Francis de Sales, and St.
Theresa of Lisieux. Orders that have given their name to types of mysticism are
Carmelites,
Carthusians, and
Cistercians. Among great Protestant mystics are Jakob
Boehme and George
Fox, founder of Quakerism, the foremost Protestant mystical movement. In the 17th and 18th cent. much literature of the contemplative life was written by the
metaphysical poets and by Henry
More, William
Law, and others. Extremes in post-Reformation mysticism are seen in Jansenism (see under
Jansen, Cornelis) and in
quietism; and Emanuel
Swedenborg may be regarded as a Protestant mystic. Also included in the mystic tradition were the Hermetic philosophers and the Alchemists. In Judaism the mystical tradition represented by the
kabbalah was continued in the modern
Hasidism. For Islamic mysticism, see
Sufism; al-
Ghazali;
Farid ad-Din Attar; Jalal ad-Din
Rumi; Muin ad-Din Hasan
Chishti;
Hafiz;
Jami;
Sadi. For Hindu mysticism, see
Vedanta;
yoga; Aurobindo
Ghose; Chinmoy
Ghose; Dayananda
Saraswati;
Ramakrishna;
Vivekananda;
Yogananda. For Buddhism, see
Zen Buddhism;
Buddha;
Milarepa; Daisetz
Suzuki. See also
Taoism. Bibliography See R. M. Jones, Studies in Mystical Religion (1909, repr. 1970); S. N. Dasgupta, Hindu Mysticism (1927, repr. 1959); E. A. Peers, Studies of the Spanish Mystics (3 vol., 1927–60); E. Underhill, Mysticism (rev. ed. 1930, repr. 1961); J. de Marquette, Introduction to Comparative Mysticism (1949); D. T. Suzuki, Mysticism: Christian and Buddhist (1957, repr. 1971); W. T. Stace, Mysticism and Philosophy (1960); R. C. Zaehner, Hindu and Muslim Mysticism (1960, repr. 1969); G. G. Scholem, Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism (3d ed. 1961); D. Knowles, The English Mystical Tradition (1961); E. O'Brien, Varieties of Mystical Experience (1964); E. C. Butler, Western Mysticism (3d ed. 1967); L. H. Bridges, American Mysticism (1970); G. Parrinder, Mysticism in the World's Religions (1976); D. R. Blumenthal, Understanding Jewish Mysticism: A Biography of Rama Krishna (1985). The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved. |