Mysticism transcends religious definitions
Islamic, Christian and Jewish faiths each have their own mystic
elements.
By Sumayya Ahmad
Published: Wednesday, April 21, 2004
From: http://www.dailytrojan.com/news/2004/04/21/News/Mysticism.Transcends.Religious.Definitions-666465.shtml
Mysticism, which is defined as an immediate consciousness of the
transcendent or ultimate reality or God, is a religious phenomenon
that has occurred across many faiths, including Islam, Christianity
and Judaism.
On Monday, the Office of Religious Life put on the program "Mysticism
across the Religious Spectrum," featuring three speakers for
the three Abrahamic faiths who illuminated the topic in an academic
light.
The event highlighted the practices of Sufism, or Islamic mysticism,
Christian mysticism in Catholic faiths, as well as Kabbalah, or Jewish
mysticism. The speakers discussed how these traditions are practiced,
their similarities and the experiences that mystics have encountered.
Megan Reid, assistant professor of religion, spoke about Sufism.
Sufism has been part of mainstream Islam for centuries, and began
as a formal tradition in the 13th and 14th centuries, she said. "Sufism
is a belief in the return to a God who we were at one point were
very close to, but are now separated from," she said.
"Sufism has been an interpretive tradition, as response to
a scripture. Muslim mystics tend to respond to the Quran (Muslim
holy book) predominantly."
Sufis would often take phrases from the Quran and interpret them
in a variety of ways, Reid said. For example, the line "Everywhere
you turn, there is the face of God" has been explained in many
ways by Sufi poets and mystics.
Sufis believe that spiritual enlightenment is always a product of
hard work, she said. Some of the ways in which they practice is contemplation
of particular words of phrases of the Quran, fasting and bodily exercises
such as spending all night in prayer.
"There is a belief of a possibility of extinguishing yourself,
and all there is is the consciousness of God," she said.
Reid also said that Sufism currently has a massive worldwide following,
both abroad and within the United States. In fact, Reid said that
the best-selling poet in America is Rumi, one of the most famous
Sufi poets who lived in the 13th century.
Kabbalah is another mystic tradition that has received a lot of
attention in mainstream America. Professor Eitan Fishbane of Hebrew
Union College spoke about Kabbalah.
"Mysticism in Judiasm is a particular way of looking at the
world," he said. "It sees the world as reverberations of
the divine presence."
Kabbalists believe there is more to what is real than what meets
the eye, Fishbane said. The Jewish scripture, the Torah, is at the
very core of Jewish mystical tradition.
"The Torah and the Hebrew Bible as a whole is a text that was
subjected to detailed and unending scrutiny to illuminate various
meanings," he said. "To Kabbalists, to encounter the text
was to encounter the state of God."
Kabbalists practice mysticism in various ways, including meditating
on specific letters, closing their eyes and seeing the letter dancing
and saying various prayers in order to enter into a divine consciousness,
Fishbane said.
Many Kabalistic traditions were influenced by Sufism, since many "like-minded" people
lived in the same Middle Eastern region during the time Kabbalah
was being established, Fishbane said.
USC religion professor Sheila Briggs, whose emphasis is history
and theology in the West, spoke about Christian mysticism. She said
that not all branches of Christianity talk about mystical traditions
and it is mostly found within older branches of Christianity, such
as Catholicism and Episcopalism.
"Mystics in the Christian traditions have two important experiences," she
said. "One is the visionary experiences, which can be related
to sight or hearing, which is often seen as an awakening and the
use of an inward sight.
"The other is the contemplative union with God, where the destiny
of the soul is to return to its source."
Briggs said that Christ tends to be central in the visionary experiences
of mystics and is often seen as the link between ordinary human beings
and God.
Unlike Islamic and Judaic mysticism, Briggs said that Christian
mysticism does not respond to a literary interpretation of scriptures.
Mystics were always under question for being heretics, she said.
"There was a potential conflict between what is the mystics
vision of God and what the Church teaches God to be," she said.
Briggs said mystics often joined monasteries and also underwent
disciplines of the body. Like Sufis, Christian mystics also fasted
and performed breathing exercises.
It is very noticeable that in Christian traditions, mystics were
women who were often of low standing in society, Briggs said.
"These were women who had very little access to the positions
of authority in the Church," she said. "Some say that someone
very unworthy can have this experiences and there is a great emphasis
on humiliation. They recognize how lowly they are, but they were
still recognized by God."
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