A completely revised edition of the key spiritual texts from the most significant mystical writers in the Christian tradition, from Origen to Thomas Merton, with revised introductions and bibliographies.
Louis Dupre is a Catholic phenomenologist and religious philosopher. He was the T. Lawrason Riggs Professor in Yale University's religious studies department from 1973 to 1998, after which he became Professor Emeritus.[1] His work generally attempts to tie the modern age more closely to medieval and classical thought, finding precursors to Enlightenment and Reformation events that were naively viewed as revolutions. His well known works include "Passage to Modernity" and "The Enlightenment and the Intellectual Foundations of Modern Culture."
I read this book for my Foundations of Christian Spirituality class and it was great! I found it quite wordy and heavy which makes sense due to the subject matter, but I don't know if I would have gotten as much out of it without our weekly class discussions that made things so much more clear! It discusses one saint/mystic in each chapter and gives a bit of background and context, then provides excerpts of their writing to read too. All in all, very helpful. I can see myself referring back to this text in the future.
This book only exists because there is a market for people who teach classes on Christian mysticism. Reading 10 pages from 21 different authors can give you some insight, but only from a historical point of view, in my opinion. Any class would be better off taking one or two works and focusing on them in depth, rather than this skim across the top. I don't blame the editors, of course; they're just filling a need. And the authors themselves are brilliant, of course.
An excellent text on Christian mysticism. It contains excerpts of primary source writings and brief biographies of the great spiritual writers in the Christian tradition. Required reading for my students.