Claremont Colleges Digital Libraries

Nag Hammadi Archive

Description and organization

The Nag Hammadi codices, ancient manuscripts containing over fifty religious and philosophical texts hidden in an earthenware jar for 1,600 years, were accidentally discovered in upper Egypt in the year 1945. A group of farmers came across an entire collection of books written in Coptic, the very language spoken by Egyptian Christians. The excavations, prepared by James M. Robinson, the former director of the Institute for Antiquity and Christianity and Professor Emeritus at The Claremont Graduate School, did not occur until 1975 due to travel restrictions and a breakdown in political relations between the United States and Egypt.

This immensely important discovery included a large number of primary Gnostic scriptures. One text in particular received much attention – the Gospel according to Thomas, which was originally called ‘the secret words of Jesus written by Thomas’. These texts, scriptures such as the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philip, and the Gospel of Truth, were once thought to have been entirely destroyed during the early Christian struggle to define « orthodoxy. »  The discovery and translation of the Nag Hammadi library, completed in the 1970’s, has provided momentum to a major reassessment of early Christian history and the nature of Gnosticism.

The images in this collection record the environments surrounding excavations, visiting dignitaries, and the scholars working on the codices. Today, the codices are conserved at the Coptic Museum in Cairo and due to their antiquity and exposure are no longer completely legible. Photographs fortuitously taken in the late 1970’s are one of the only means of deciphering the writing contained in these ancient texts.

The Nag Hammadi codices images in this collection are the Institute for Antiquity and Christianity’s J-Series negatives taken by Basile Psiroukis in September 1973. They are an earlier and different set of photos than the ones published by E. J. Brill from 1973-79 as The Facsimile Edition of the Nag Hammadi Codices. These earlier J-series negatives include the photographer’s notes and contain many differences, large and small, from the Brill photos. Every effort has been made to match these negatives to the later UNESCO photographs published by E. J. Brill. Additional series’ of the codices are soon to be digitized and will be added to the collection.

(Text by the organizers)

Link

http://ccdl.libraries.claremont.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/nha

Gnose et manichéisme

Entre les oasis d’Egypte et la route de la soie

Hommage à Jean-Daniel Dubois

A. Van den Kerchove, L. G. Soares Santoprete (eds.), 2017

Description

A l’occasion du départ à la retraite de Jean-Daniel Dubois de la direction d’études « Gnose et Manichéisme » à l’Ecole pratique des hautes études en 2015, plusieurs de ses collègues et amis ont tenu à lui rendre hommage. La diversité des thèmes, des écrits et des communautés culturelles et linguistiques étudiés dans les quarante-quatre contributions ici publiées, témoigne de la richesse du parcours intellectuel de Jean-Daniel Dubois, lequel s’étend des oasis d’Egypte jusqu’à la Route de la Soie. Ce volume s’adresse aux spécialistes de la Méditerranée, du Proche-Orient et de l’Extrême-Orient anciens. Il intéressera les historiens des religions, particulièrement ceux des mouvements chrétiens – dont les courants gnostiques -, du manichéisme, des cultes polythéistes et de l’islam, les philologues ainsi que les historiens de la philosophie de l’Antiquité tardive.

(Texte de la maison d’édition)

Table de matières

Liminaire
Anna Van den Kerchove et Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete

L’itinéraire intellectuel de Jean-Daniel Dubois
Anna Van den Kerchove et Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete
Bibliographie de Jean-Daniel Dubois
Anna Van den Kerchove et Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete
Tabula gratulatoria

PARTIE I. Écrits gnostiques
Not Really Non-Existent? A Suggestion for Interpreting and Restoring Zostrianos (Nag Hammadi Codex VIII, 1) 117, 11-15 – Stephen Emmel
L’avant-dernier feuillet de l’Évangile de Judas – une reconstitution – Gregor Wurst
La philosophie des systèmes gnostiques des premiers principes – Josep Montserrat-Torrents
El Sobre los principios de Orígenes y el Tratado tripartito (NHC I, 5) reconsiderados – Francisco García Bazán
The Anonymous Parmenides Commentary, Marius Victorinus, and the Sethian Platonizing Apocalypses: State of the Question – John D. Turner
Padre femenino. El Dios-Madre de los gnósticos – Mariano Troiano
The melothesia of the Apocryphon of John and the Umm al-kitāb – Einar Thomassen
Le théâtre du monde: illusion ou rédemption? – Claudine Besset-Lamoine

PARTIE II. L’Église manichéenne et la réception des écrits manichéens
Secrets of heaven: Manichaean cosmology in its late antique context – Jason David BeDuhn
Le jumeau et le paraclet céleste de Mani: quelques éléments de lecture et de réflexion – Simon C. Mimouni
Symbols of liberation: The Salvation-seeking Souls, the Primary Prophets, and the Light Mind in Manichaean Didactic Painting – Zsuzsanna Gulácsi
Exégèse manichéenne et anti-manichéenne de 2 Corinthiens 4, 4 chez Titus de Bostra (Contre les manichéens IV 108) – Madeleine Scopello
Vérité, Erreur et Mensonge dans le Psautier et les Kephalaia du Fayorem – Paul-Hubert Poirier
Le retour du refoulé. Le concept de la vision de Dieu pour Augustin à la suite des nouvelles recherches sur le manichéisme – Giovanni Filoramo
Sur les traces syriaques des manichéens : les réfutations de Moïse bar Kepha (IXes.) et de Jacques bar Šakko (XIIIs.) – Flavia Ruani
Mani déguisé en monophysite – Alain Le Boulluec
La colonne de lumière, une notion manichéenne dans l’ismaélisme ṭayyibite – Daniel De Smet
Les cinq esprits de l’homme divin (Aspects de l’imamologie duodécimaine XIII) – Mohammad-Ali Amir-Moezzi
‘In the name of Jesus’. Observations on the term ‘Jesus the Messiah’ in christian and manichaean texts from Central Asia – Samuel N. C. Lieu
Le chant divin : rôle et pouvoir de la musique rituelle. Des rites musicaux de l’Orient ancien aux hymnes des manichéens de Chine – Lucie Rault

PARTIE III. Acta Pilati et leur réception
À propos d’un passage mystérieux dans l’Évangile de Nicodème (XVI 3) – Bernard Outtier
Une polémique de rabbins évacuée dans les versions d’Acta Pilati 14.1.2 – Gérard Roquet
La gloria inexpresable. Las teofanías de los apócrifos del Antiguo Testamento y su significado en una variante copta de las Actas de Pilato – Magdalena Díaz Araujo
«Et les enseignes s’inclinèrent» : possibles allusions aux Actes de Pilate dans quelques homélies coptes – Anne-Catherine Baudoin
Diffusion et réception des Actes de Pilate dans la littérature byzantine – Rémi Gounelle
La manifestation de la royauté du Christ dans les Actes de Pilate ré-actualisée dans la liturgie byzantine sous l’impulsion du Pseudo-Germain de Constantinople – Christiane Furrer
The Troyes Redaction of the Evangelium Nicodemi and its Vernacular Legacy – Zbigniew Izydorczyk and Dario Bullitta
De quelques pièces du dossier syriaque sur Pilate : de la correspondance byzantine à la correspondance médiévale – Alain J. Desreumaux
À la recherche de la tradition perdue : à propos d’une édition critique de la version slave des Acta Pilati – Susana Torres Prieto

PARTIE IV. Lieux et figures
Le parent comique du monastère. À propos du De vita contemplativa de Philon d’Alexandrie – Tatjana Aleknienė
Épigraphie et expériences religieuses : le cas des ‘bains’ de Gadara (Palaestina IIa) – Nicole Belayche
Remarques à propos des fragments coptes 159-160, 302-304, conservés à l’IFAO du Caire: Une homélie copte sur la Vierge Marie attribuée à Cyrille de Jérusalem – Agnès Le Tiec
Bardaisan and the Bible – Alberto Camplani
La double figure de Joseph d’Arimathie : histoire de la réception d’un personnage biblique – Régis Burnet
Bartholomew’s martyrdoms : the Latin tradition – Els Rose
Kālēb, souverain et saint : un nouvel Alexandre? – Jacques-Noël Pérès
Loisy et les apocryphes pétriniens – Jean-Michel Roessli

PARTIE V. Pensées grecque et d’Orient
Visions et légitimation : voie hermétique de la connaissance et du salut dans Corpus Hermeticum I – Anna Van den Kerchove
OC 216 (dubium) des Places – Fragmentum Orphicum 353 Kern. Probleme und Interpretationen – Helmut Seng
Le mythe d’Ouranos, Kronos et Zeus comme argument antignostique chez Plotin – Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete
Le rituel théurgique de l’ensevelissement et le Phèdre de Platon. À propos de Proclus, Théologie Platonicienne, IV, 9 – Philippe Hoffmann
Le ḥadīth de la création des noms divins et son exégèse par Mullā Ṣadrā – Christian Jambet
L’image, lieu de la médiation dans les papyrus magiques grecs – Michela Zago
Sortilège nabatéen – Michel Tardieu

Index
Sources
Thèmes principaux, Noms anciens de dieux, personnes, lieux
Auteurs modernes

Lien

http://www.brepols.net/Pages/ShowProduct.aspx?prod_id=IS-9782503567631-1

Lux in Tenebris

The Visual and the Symbolic in Western Esotericism

Peter J. Forshaw (ed.), Leyde, Brill, 2016

Description

The eighteen original interdisciplinary essays in Lux in Tenebris explore the alchemical, magical, kabbalistic, rosicrucian and theosophical verbal and visual symbolism in the history of Western Esotericism, from the middle ages to the present day.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Preliminary Material

Introduction: The Visual and the Symbolic in Western Esotericism

Visual and Acoustic Symbols in Gikatilla, Neoplatonic and Pythagorean Thought

Transfiguration and the Fire within: Marsilio Ficino on the Metaphysics and Psychology of Light

The Memory Theatre of Giulio Camillo: Alchemy, Rhetoric, and Deification in the Renaissance

Agrippa’s Cosmic Ladder: Building a World with Words in the De Occulta Philosophia

Imagining the Image of God: Corporeal Envisioning in the Theosophy of Jacob Böhme

Dreams and Symbols in The Chemical Wedding

The Mind’s Eye: Images of Creation and Revelation in Mystical Theology and Theosophy

Where Geometry Meets Kabbalah: Paul Yvon’s Esoteric Engravings

De Sapientia Salomonis: Emanuel Swedenborg and the Kabbalah

The Arcanes of the World. Symbols and Mystical-Allegorical Exegesis in Emanuel Swedenborg’s De Cultu et Amore Dei

Signs in the Sky: The Tobol’sk Chronicle and Celestial Divination in Russia, 1695–1734

Myth and Magic: Victorian Enoch and Historical Contexts

The Juncture of Transcendence and Concretion: Symbolique in René Schwaller de Lubicz

The Symbology of Hermeticism in the Work of Julius Evola

The Iconography of Coniunctio Oppositorum: Visual and Verbal Dialogues in Ithell Colquhoun’s Oeuvre

Modern Angels, Avant-Gardes and the Esoteric Archive

The Death of the Author and the Birth of the Luciferian Reader: Ur-images, Postmodernity and Semiotic Self-Apotheosis

Esoteric Theories of Color

Index of Names

Index of Subjects

Link

https://brill.com/view/title/34012#:~:text=Lux%20in%20Tenebris%20is%20a,philosophy%2C%20Platonism%2C%20Rosicrucianism%2C%20and

The Spiritual Tradition in Eastern Christianity

Ascetic Psychology, Mystical Experience, and Physical Practices

Bradford D.T., Leuven: Peeters, 2016

Description

The Spiritual Tradition in Eastern Christianity is a comprehensive survey of the means, goals, and motivations of the ascetic life as represented in texts spanning the fourth and the nineteenth century. Contemporary examples are also included. The main themes are the dynamics of the soul, the disabling effects of the passions, mental and physical ascetism, the desirable condition of dispassion, and the experience of deification. A variety of topics are addressed, including hesychast prayer, religious weeping, the spiritual senses, dream interpretation, luminous visions, the holy ‘fool’, ascetic demonology, and pain in ascetic practice. Typical ascetic and mystical experiences are interpreted from the psychological and the neuroscientific perspective. Comparative analyses based on Sufism, Vedantic mysticism, and especially early Buddhist psychology highlight distinctive features of the Christian ascetic life. Major figures such as Evagrius Ponticus, Maximos the Confessor, Isaac the Syrian, and Symeon the New Theologian receive extensive individual consideration.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Preface

Chapter 1 – The Powers of the Soul

1.1 The Incensive Power

1.2 The Desiring Power

1.3 The Intellect

1.4 Image and Archetype

1.5 Brightly Shining Mind

Chapter 2 – The Heart

2.1 Spiritual Anatomy

2.2 Hesychast Prayer

2.3 Four Phases of Prayer

2.4 Intracorporeal Space

2.5 Posture and Respiration

2.6 Attention

2.7 Two Patterns of Autonomic Arousal

2.8 Parallels in Other Traditions

2.9 The Influence of Sufism

Chapter 3 – The Luminous Presence

3.1 Properties of the Luminous Presence

3.2 The Hesychast Controversy

3.3 Divine and Demonic Visions

3.4 Four Kinds of Luminous Visions

3.5 Focal-Extracorporeal Light

3.6 Global-Extracorporeal Light

3.7 Corporeal Light

3.8 Intracorporeal Light

3.9 A Complex Visionary Experience

3.10 Chromatic Visionary Light

3.11 Visionary Light and Divine Omnipresence

Chapter 4 0 Sleep, Dreams, and Prayer

4.1 Prayer During Sleep

4.2 Sleep Deprivation

4.3 Dream Interpretation

4.4 Visions and Revelations While Asleep

4.5 Illustration of Prayer While Dreaming

4.6 Illustration of Mystical Experience While Asleep

4.7 Dreamless Sleep and Mystical Experience

Chapter 5 – The Spiritual Senses

5.1 Spiritual Perception

5.2 Sensory Perception

5.3 One and Many

5.4 Mystical Synesthesia

5.5 Spiritual Odor

5.6 Smell and Demonic Entrapment

Chapter 6 – The Passions

6.1 Eight Dispositions

6.2 The Five Hindrances

6.3 The Constructing Activities

6.4 The Demons

6.5 Anchorite and Cenobite

6.6 Psychotherapy of the Passions

6.7 Illustration of Evagrian Psychotherapy

6.8 Demons, Delirium, and Migraine

Chapter 7 – Stillness and Dispassion

7.1 The Delicacy of Stillness

7.2 Nipsis and Attention

7.3 Nipsis and Emotion

7.4 Nipsis and Memory

7.5 The Permanence of Dispassion

7.6 A Dispassionate ‘Fool’

Chapter 8 – Acedia

8.1 Depleted Fervor

8.2 Acedia and Physical Symptoms

Chapter 9 – Pride and Vainglory

9.1 Vainglory and Social Display

9.2 Clothing and Other Possessions

9.3 Vainglory and Cognition

9.4 A Psychosis of Pride and Vainglory

Chapter 10 – Fornication

10.1 Morbid Defluxions

10.2 Intoxication and Sexual Fantasy

10.3 Fornication and Sense-Desire

Chapter 11 – Gluttony

11.1 Diverse Expressions of Gluttony

11.2 Fasting

11.3 A Syndrome of Ascetic Fasting

11.4 The Precedence of Gluttony over Fornication

11.5 The Desire for Immortality

Chapter 12 – Physical Practices

12.1 Surface and Depth Interventions

12.2 Discomfort and Pain

12.3 The Prostration

12.4 Face, Eyes, and Gaze

Chapter 13 – Evagrius on Impassioned Mental Activity

13.1 Thoughts

13.2 Illustration of Objective Perception

Chapter 14 – Images of Bodily Corruption

14.1 The Buddhist Meditation on Foulness

14.2 The Ascetic Utility of Raw Emotion

Chapter 15 – Maximos on Impassioned Mental Activity

15.1 Conceptual Images

15.2 Illustration of Objective Perception

Chapter 16 – Religious Weeping

16.1 Tears

16.2 Weeping

16.3 Isaac the Syrian on Tears

16.4 Permanent Autonomic Change

Chapter 17 – The Body in Dreams and Fantasy

17.1 The Imaginal Body

17.2 A Principle of Mental Transformation

Chapter 18 – The Deified Body

18.1 The Flesh

18.2 Weightiness

18.3 Illusory Movement

18.4 Weightiness and Cosmology

Chapter 19 – The Remembrance of Death

19.1 Fear and Love

19.2 An Imaginal Practice

19.3 The Thought of Death

19.4 Change in the Practice

19.5 An Imitation of Christ

Chapter 20 – Three Forms of Mystical Experience

20.1 Near-Absorption

20.2 The Ecstatic Vision

20.3 The Imageless Grasp

20.4 Mystical Experience in Temporal Perspective

Chapter 21 – Maximos on Dispassion and Deification

21.1 Eros

21.2 Preliminary Dispassions

21.3 Advanced Dispassions

21.4 Inhibition of Perceptual Experience

21.5 Deification

References

Appendices

Appendix A: Sources and Terms

Appendix B: Ascetic Theologians

Appendix C: Biographical Chronology of Symeon the New Theologian

Appendix D: Visionary Mysticism in Symeon the New Theologian

Appendix E: Deification and Cognitive Inhibition in Maximos the Confessor

Index

Link

https://poj.peeters-leuven.be/content.php?url=issue&journal_code=SIS&issue=0&vol=26

Heidelberg University and The Internet Archive

Papyri Graecae Magicae

Description and organization

The Greek Magical Papyri (Latin Papyri Graecae Magicae, abbreviated PGM) is the name given by scholars to a body of papyri from Graeco-Roman Egypt, which each contain a number of magical spells, formulae, hymns and ritual. The materials in the papyri date from the 2nd century BC to the 5th century AD. The manuscripts came to light through the antiquities trade, from the 18th century onwards. One of the best known of these texts is the Mithras Liturgy.

The texts were published in a series, and individual texts are referenced using the abbreviation PGM plus the volume and item number. Each volume contains a number of spells and rituals. Further discoveries of similar texts from elsewhere have been allocated PGM numbers for convenience.

PGM XII and XIII were the first to be published, appearing in 1843 in Greek and in a Latin translation in 1885.

(Text by the organizers)

A digital version of the PGM (specifically, Preisendanz vol. II) at the University of Heidelberg:

http://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/heidhs3763IIA-51bd2

Link

https://archive.org/stream/Papyri_Graecae_Magicae/Papyri_Graecae_Magicae_djvu.txt

The scriptural universe of ancient christianity

Guy G. Stroumsa, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2016

Description

The passage of texts from scroll to codex created a revolution in the religious life of late antiquity. It played a decisive role in the Roman Empire’s conversion to Christianity and eventually enabled the worldwide spread of Christian faith. The Scriptural Universe of Ancient Christianity describes how canonical scripture was established and how scriptural interpretation replaced blood sacrifice as the central element of religious ritual. Perhaps more than any other cause, Guy G. Stroumsa argues, the codex converted the Roman Empire from paganism to Christianity. The codex permitted a mode of religious transmission across vast geographical areas, as sacred texts and commentaries circulated in book translations within and beyond Roman borders. Although sacred books had existed in ancient societies, they were now invested with a new aura and a new role at the core of religious ceremony. Once the holy book became central to all aspects of religious experience, the floodgates were opened for Greek and Latin texts to be reimagined and repurposed as proto-Christian. Most early Christian theologians did not intend to erase Greek and Roman cultural traditions; they were content to selectively adopt the texts and traditions they deemed valuable and compatible with the new faith, such as Platonism. The new cultura christiana emerging in late antiquity would eventually become the backbone of European identity.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Introduction: A Double Paradigm Shift

1. A Scriptural Galaxy

2. A Divine Palimpsest

3. Religious Revolution and Cultural Change

4. Scripture and Culture

5. The New Self and Reading Practices

6. Communities of Knowledge

7. Eastern Wisdoms

8. A World Full of Letters

9. Scriptural and Personal Authority

Conclusion: Alexandria, Jerusalem, Baghdad

Notes

Acknowledgments

Link

https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674545137

The Gnostic New Age

How a Countercultural Spirituality Revolutionized

Religion from Antiquity to Today

April D. DeConick, New York: Columbia University Press, 2016

Description

Gnosticism is a countercultural spirituality that forever changed the practice of Christianity. Before it emerged in the second century, passage to the afterlife required obedience to God and king. Gnosticism proposed that human beings were manifestations of the divine, unsettling the hierarchical foundations of the ancient world. Subversive and revolutionary, Gnostics taught that prayer and mediation could bring human beings into an ecstatic spiritual union with a transcendent deity. This mystical strain affected not just Christianity but many other religions, and it characterizes our understanding of the purpose and meaning of religion today. In The Gnostic New Age, April D. DeConick recovers this vibrant underground history to prove that Gnosticism was not suppressed or defeated by the Catholic Church long ago, nor was the movement a fabrication to justify the violent repression of alternative forms of Christianity. Gnosticism alleviated human suffering, soothing feelings of existential brokenness and alienation through the promise of renewal as God. DeConick begins in ancient Egypt and follows with the rise of Gnosticism in the Middle Ages, the advent of theosophy and other occult movements in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and contemporary New Age spiritual philosophies. As these theories find expression in science-fiction and fantasy films, DeConick sees evidence of Gnosticism’s next incarnation. Her work emphasizes the universal, countercultural appeal of a movement that embodies much more than a simple challenge to religious authority.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Matrix of Ancient Spirituality
2. The Gnostic True Man
3. Superpowers and Monsters
4. Paul and Gnostic Dogma
5. John and the Dark Cosmos
6. Gnostic Altered States
7. Hell Walks and Star Treks
8. Spiritual Avatars
9. The Pi of Politics
10. Pleasantville Religions
11. Gnosticism Out on a Limb
Bibliography
English Translation of Gnostic Sources
Filmography
Index

Link

http://cup.columbia.edu/book/the-gnostic-new-age/9780231170765

Divines techniques

Arts et langage homérique à la fin de l’Antiquité

Anca Vasiliu, Paris: Classiques-Garnier, 2016

Description

La description homérique renaît à la fin de l’Antiquité. Les astuces du genre rhétorique s’associent aux techniques des ouvrages décrits notamment par Héliodore, Grégoire de Nysse ou Nonnos de Panopolis, pour créer une image du vivant. Rivalisant avec la nature, le langage prend les vertus d’un démiurge inaugural.
Homeric description was reborn at the end of Antiquity. The tricks of the rhetorical genre are associated with the techniques of works described notably by Héliodore, Grégoire de Nysse, and Nonnos de Panopolis in order to create an image of the living. Competing with nature, language takes on the virtues of an inaugural demiurge.

(Texte de la maison d’édition)

Table de matières

Epitomos: Parole d’or. Décrire en style homérique.

I. LOGOS-DEMIURGOS:

Raconter et décrire;

Les techniques divines du logos-dêmiurgos;

Décrire pour rester éveillé;

Le dispositif du témoignage;

Mimêsis et ekphrasis.

II. ON-ZOION:

La description-bouclier;

Appropriation du singulier.
Cahier I. Homère, Iliade (chant XVIII): les marqueurs de la description princeps.

III. EPOS:

La pantarbe et son reflet. L’histoire des deux anneaux;

Un palais dans un tableau diptyque ou l’art de faire d’un lieu un portrait.
Cahier II. Héliodore et Nonnos de Panopolis: le portrait et l’image de l’être par ekphraseis interposées.

IV. RHETORIKE:

A quoi sert de bien parler de poires et de pêches;

Transformer la parole en oeuvre;

Description d’Homère par statue interposée ou le regard de l’aveugle toujours vivant.
Cahier III. Grégoire de Nysse et Christodoros de Coptos: le beau et le vivant. Le logos en maître du regard.

V. SOPHIA:

Décrire, enfanter la révélation;

« La Sagesse a bâtit sa maison » (Proverbes 9);

La couleur: recouvrement et rayonnement;

L’inscription du rythme ou le battement de la lumière;

La matière première et universelle;

Sagesse, sacralité, Esprit.
Cahier IV. Paul le Silentiaire, Ephrasis de Sainte-Sophie de Constantinople: matière et lumière, le corps agissant du logos.
Synopsis: L’oeil qui touche.

Bibliographie.

Index des auteurs anciens et modernes et des oeuvres anciennes.

Lien

https://classiques-garnier.com/editions/index.php?option=com_virtuemart&page=shop.product_details&flypage=flypage_garnier.tpl&product_id=2462

Transforming Spirituality

Zas Friz de Col R., Ada: Baker Publishing, 2016

Description

In the 25 years of its existence, Studies in Spirituality has been an attentive observer of the significant changes that have taken place in the field of spirituality. During this period, research in spirituality shifted not only towards the centre of theological reflection, it has also responded to a culture that sought to go beyond the boundaries of theology, on the one hand, and to the experience of globalisation on the other. In this volume, Rossano Zas Friz De Col S.l., Professor of Spirituality at the Institute of Spirituality of the Pontifical Gregorian University (Rome), presents a list of thirty-one articles previously published in Studies in Spirituality, which, from his perspective, merit reprinting. The reader will find a collection revolving around spiritual transformation as their center. The reprinted articles are preceded by a reflection on twenty-five years of Studies in Spirituality, in which professor Zas Friz decribes how Studies in Spirituality brings spiritual transformation into focus today, and how to understand that transformation in the present globalized world.

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Preface

Introduction: Spiritual/inner transformation in a secularized society – An overview from Studies in Spirituality (1991-2014) – Rossano Zas Friz de Col

1 Inner Transformation

1.1 Inner Transformation from a Theological Point of View

Spirituality as transformation demands a structural dynamic approach – Kees Waaijman

Transformation – A key word in spirituality – Kees Waaijman

A theology of transformative healing in the monastic teaching of William of St. Thierry – MaryEllen O’Brien

The Dark Night in John of the Cross – The transformational process – Hein Blommestijn

Discovering the self and the world throug the eyes of God – A selective reading of The Spiritual Canticle – Hein Blommestijn

Surrender – The Ignatian principle for growth in Christlikeness – John Udris

The imperative of mystical transformation – Donald Blais

Integration and interiorization – Duraiswani Simon Amalorpavadass

Patterns of conversion in Christianity – Anya Mali

Conversion as turning, conversion as deepening – James E. Royster

An embodiment paradigm for the study of Christian spirituality – Embodied imagery in the immediacy and indeterminacy of experience – Elizabeth Leung

1.2 Inner Transformation from the Interreligous Perspective

Becoming what we know – Dynamics of integral transformation in the spirituality of Sri Aurobindo – Felicity Edwards

Buddhist and Christian ultimate transformation – The ‘Perfection of Wisdom’ and Paul’s ‘Righteoused by Faith’ – Jesse Tanner

1.3 Inner Transformation and Psychology

Individuation and mystical union – Jung and Eckhart – Mark James

Converting mortal losses into vital gains – ‘Could be worse’… – Richard A. Hutch

The available pastor – Anke Bisschops

1.4 Empirical Research and Inner Transformation

Religion and personal/spiritual development – Some preliminary findings – Frits Mertens

Motives in motion – Frits Mertens

Chaos lives next to God – Religious visions and the integration of personality – Antoon Geels

Contemplative hospitality – Empirical explorations of spiritual experiences among abbey visitors – Thomas Quartier

Mystical orientation and psychological type – An empirical study among guests staying at a Benedictine abbey – Leslie J. Francis, Andrew Village, Mandy Robbins & Keith Ineson

Exploring the ‘mystical experiences’ of a new spirituality – A case study of Reiki – Jojan Jonker

2 Spirituality and Religion in a Secularised Society

2.1 An Intercultural Approach – The Netherlands, the Philippines and Australia

Spiritual, yes; religious, no – A Dutch student’s reactions to an abbey weekend – Wiel Smeets

The lack of spirituality in secularization – An experiential paradigm from a Philippine setting – Macario Ofilada Mina

Rising waters of the Spirit – The view from secular society – David Tacey

2.2 Spirituality and Philosophy

Spirituality and postmodern philosophy – Emptiness as an opportunity for esteem – Frans Maas

2.3 Spirituality and Discernment

Discernment for our times – A practice with postmodern implications – Elizabeth Liebert

2.4 Spirituality and Buddhism

Zen spirituality in a secular age – Charles Taylor and Zen Buddhism in the West – André van der Braak

Zen spirituality in a secular age II – Dōgen on fullness: Zazen as ritual embodiment of Buddhahood – André van der Braak

2.5 The Quest for Soul in a Secularised Society

Social spirituality and the quest for soul – Frans Maas & Kees Waaijman

Appendix – List of original publications

Link

http://bakerpublishinggroup.com/books/transforming-spirituality/265572

Religious Platonism

The Influence of Religion on Plato and the Influence of Plato on Religion

James K. Fableman, London: Routledge, 2016

Description

In Plato’s Laws is the earliest surviving fully developed cosmological argument. His influence on the philosophy of religion is wide ranging and this book examines both that and the influence of religion on Plato. Central to Plato’s thought is the theory of forms, which holds that there exists a realm of forms, perfect ideals of which things in this world are but imperfect copies. In this book, originally published in 1959, Feibleman finds two diverse strands in Plato’s philosophy: an idealism centered upon the Forms denying full ontological status to the realm of becoming, and a moderate realism granting actuality equal reality with Forms. For each strand Plato developed a conception of religion: a supernatural one derived from Orphism, and a naturalistic religion revering the traditional Olympian deities

(Text from the publisher)

Table of contents

Introduction: Parrhesia

Part 1: Plato’s Religious Philosophy

  1. Plato’s Method
  2. Plato’s Two Philosophies
  3. The Greek Religious Inheritance
  4. The Influence of Orphism
  5. Plato’s Two Religions

Part 2: The Religious Influence of Plato

  1. Aristotle’s Religion
  2. Philo’s Philosophy of Religion
  3. Plotinus’ Philosophy of Religion
  4. Rivals and Substitutes for Platonism
  5. Early Neoplatonism
  6. Later Neoplatonism: The Middle Ages

Link

https://www.routledge.com/Religious-Platonism-The-Influence-of-Religion-on-Plato-and-the-Influence/Feibleman/p/book/9781138985049