This book discusses mysticism and its possible contributions to a positive common human future. It is organized into three parts - “Studies of Mystical Traditions,” “Comparative Studies of Mystical Traditions,” and “Social and Ethical Implications." The approach is philosophical and critical. The contributors differ on whether or not mystical traditions would restore peaceful living and peaceful coexistence. However, the problem before this manuscript is the growing pain and suffering caused by greed in the world, greed causing economic disequilibrium, racism and divisiveness causing social unrest resulting in mass migration and refugees’ crisis.   Through the lens of “mystical traditions," the manuscript proposes a balance approach between material and spiritual needs of people. To strengthen human spiritualty, the manuscript emphasizes practicing meditation, music, prayers, zikr, yoga, mindfulness, fasting and other methods of spiritual revival for peace within self andwith others. 
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However, the problem before this manuscript is the growing pain and suffering caused by greed in the world, greed causing economic disequilibrium, racism and divisiveness causing social unrest resulting in mass migration and refugees’ crisis.
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Part 1: Studies of Mystical Traditions.- 1: Mysticism, Visual Art, and Repairing the World in a Strife-ridden Secular Age.- 2: The Zen Arts—A Mystical Entry Point  to a World of Oneness.- 3: Jewish Mysticism: Teachings About Unity and Discord.- 4:  “The Immense Oceans of God’s Love:”  Rumi’s Oceanic Imagery.- 5: Benedictine Evangelicalism: Human Flourishing, Peacemaking, and Protestant Pedagogy Today.- 6: The Naqshbandi-Haqqani Sufi Order Approach to Peaceful Coexistence Through Mawlana Sheikh Nazim Al-Haqqani’s Words and Actions.- Part 2: Comparative Studies of Mystical Traditions.- 7: Life’s Great Questions and the Abstract Sacred: Cupitt’s New Religion of the Everyday in the Global Context.- 8: Transcending The Letter, Awakening the Mind: Maximos the Confessor and Tsong Kha Pa and The Challenge of Textual Supersessionism.- 9: On The Rasā’il of the Ikhwān al Ṣafā’ and Bonaventure’s Mind’s Road into God.- 10: Beyond Separations: Mystics Merging Across Time and Space.- 11: Al-Fana’ in Ibn ‘Arabi’s and Eckhart’s Thoughts: The Annihilation of the Many in the One.- Part 3: Social and Ethical Implications.- 12: Identity, Prejudice, and Mysticism: Exploring Sustainable Narratives of Peace Across Religious Borders.- 13:  Migration and the Mystical-theological tradition: Migration Experiences and the Experience of a Dark Night.- 14: Polishing the Mirror of the Heart: Sufi Poetic Reflections as Interfaith Inspiration for Peace.- 15: Eschatological Politics and Intellectual Jihad: Shaykh Ahmad ibn Idris legacy in Europe.- 16: Abu Hamid al-Ghazali’s on the Duties of Brotherhood as a Modern Guide for Peaceful Coexistence.- 17: Marriage in “Sharī‘a and Ḥaqīqa”:Mystical Marriage in the Thought of Maḥmūd Muḥammad Ṭāhā.- 18: Concluding Remarks.
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This book discusses mysticism and its possible contributions to a positive common human future. It is organized into three parts - “Studies of Mystical Traditions,” “Comparative Studies of Mystical Traditions,” and “Social and Ethical Implications." The approach is philosophical and critical. The contributors differ on whether or not mystical traditions would restore peaceful living and peaceful coexistence. However, the problem before this manuscript is the growing pain and suffering caused by greed in the world, greed causing economic disequilibrium, racism and divisiveness causing social unrest resulting in mass migration and refugees’ crisis.   Through the lens of “mystical traditions," the manuscript proposes a balance approach between material and spiritual needs of people. To strengthen human spiritualty, the manuscript emphasizes practicing meditation, music, prayers, zikr, yoga, mindfulness, fasting and other methods of spiritual revival for peace within self and with others. 
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"Can mysticism have constructive social and ethical implications? This splendid collection explores the quiet, unassuming trajectory of the spirit as a powerful resource with real potential for dialogue across religious cultures." —Andrii Krawchuk, University of Sudbury, Canada   "What could be more profoundly inviting, more rigorously experiential, more radically relational, than the pluralist exploration of this volume? Stereotypes of mystical undifferentiation, of its ethical indifference, of its irrelevance to the urgent crises of the world, come undone.  In the conversation performed by these beautifully readable essays an ancient and fresh, multiple and convergent, source of planetary solidarity offers itself.  It may be time, if we are not to cower before the perils of the future, to practice this connective wisdom and its enlivening peace." —Catherine Keller, Drew Theological School, USA   "This book is a rich source of inspiration and wisdom. It is as if many beautiful colors are interwoven into one unique, powerful tapestry of mystical traditions through the warp of interfaith." —Nanako Sakai, Iona University, USA
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Discusses the contribution of mysticism to a positive human future Includes perspectives from diverse religions and cultures Emphasizes using methods of spiritual revival for peace within self and with others
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783031271236
Publisert
2024-05-18
Utgiver
Vendor
Palgrave Macmillan
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Biographical note

 Muhammad Shafiq is a professor of religious studies at Nazareth College. He directs the Hickey Center for Interfaith Studies and holds the Chair for Islamic and Interfaith Studies at the International Institute for Islamic Thought. He recently published a co-edited volume with Palgrave entitled The (De)Legitimization of Violence in Sacred and Human Contexts (2021).
Thomas Donlin-Smith is a professor of religious studies at Nazareth College. He recently published a co-edited volume with Palgrave entitled The (De)Legitimization of Violence in Sacred and Human Contexts (2021).