The Idea of the Holy Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The Idea of the Holy The Idea of the Holy by Rudolf Otto
1,532 ratings, 4.03 average rating, 125 reviews
The Idea of the Holy Quotes Showing 1-8 of 8
“And 'the holy' will be, in Dr. Otto's language, a complex category of the 'numinous' and the 'moral', or, in one of his favourite metaphors, a fabric in which we have the non-rational numinous experience as the woof and the rational and ethical as the warp.”
Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy: An Inquiry Into the Non-rational Factor in the Idea of the Divine and Its Relation to the Rational
“Genuine divination, in short, has nothing whatever to do with natural law and the relation or lack of relation to it of something experienced. It is not concerned at all with the way in which a phenomenon— be it event, person, or thing— came into existence, but with what it means, that is, with its significance as a 'sign ’ of the holy.”
Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy
“A characteristic common to all types of mysticism is the Identification, in different degrees of completeness, of the _personal self with the transcendent Reality.”
Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy
“,.....mysticism leads to a valuation of the transcendent object of its reference as that which through plenitude of being stands supreme and absolute, so that the finite self contrasted with it becomes conscious even in its nullity that ‘I am naught, Thou art all’.”
Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy
“Genuine divination, in short, has nothing whatever to do with natural law or the relation or lack of relation to it of something experienced. It is not concerned at all with the way in which the phenomenon—be it event, person, or thing—came into existence, but with what it means, that is, with its significance as a 'sign' of the holy.”
Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy
“Genuine divination, in short, has nothing whatever to do with natural law or the relation or lack of relation to it of something experienced. It is not concerned at all with the way in which the phenomenon—be it event, person, or thing—came into existence, but with what it means, that is, with its significance as a 'sign' of the holly.”
Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy
“Genuine divination, in short, has nothing whatever to do with natural law or the relation or lack of relation to it of something experienced. It is not concerned at all with the way in which the phenomenon came into existence, but with what it ”
Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy
“Genuine divination, in short, has nothing whatever to do with natural law or the relation or lack of relation to it of something experienced. It is not concerned at all with the way in which the phenomenon—be it event, person, or thing—came into existence, but with what it ”
Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy