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Mysticism and Ethics in Western Mystical Traditions*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2008
Extract
Having considered the role of ethics in Indian mystical teachings in a previous, related, essay I would like to consider the same question in its western religious contexts in the present paper, beginning with the Christian mystical tradition. As is the case with Asian traditions charges of moral unconcern are widely directed at Christian mystics, but they are false. Christian mystics are not indifferent to morality nor do they disconnect morality from an intrinsic relationship to their mystical quest. Augustine would already teach that the story of Leah and Rachel was an instructive allegory in which the active life represented by Leah was intrinsic to the contemplative life represented by Rachel while Gregory the Great would unambiguously assert: ‘We ascend to the heights of contemplation by the steps of the active life’, defining the active life as: ‘to dispense to all what they need and to provide those entrusted to us with the means of subsistence’. These representative early samples of the salience of ethical behaviour to the life of contemplation could be multiplied at great length, and almost without exception in the teaching of the major Christian mystics. This historical exegetical exercise, however, is in the present circumstances, both out of place and I hope unnecessary. Instead, the more general, more enigmatic, more repercussive, issues raised by the place and significance of morality within the Christian mystical tradition need attending to.
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Footnotes
This essay was originally delivered as the second of my two David Baumgardt Memorial Lectures, sponsored by the American Philosophical Association, at Harvard University on 14 November 1984. The first of my Baumgardt Lectures appeared in Religious Studies, XXVIII 2 (June 1992), 253–267.
References
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3 In very rare instances a mystic of the neo-Platonic type does not emphasize the centrality of ethics for mysticism – for example, Pseudo-Dionysius – but this rare exception only proves the general rule. Moreover, Christian neo-Platonists such as Eckhart do not follow Pseudo-Dionysius' lead in this respect.
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