When I think of the great Christian spiritual masters of the last 100
years, the names that come to mind belong to those folks who dared to
leave behind the comfortable and familiar and venture out into the
unknown spiritual wilderness. In so doing, they stumbled across new
insights and rediscovered forgotten truths that vitalize all of us.
Bede Griffiths, the British born and bred Benedictine monk who traveled
to India at the age of fifty and lived there for almost 35 years, is
one of these intrepid sojourners. Griffiths reanimated a sometimes
wilting Christianity by helping Christians to discover its deep
contemplative core, and he did this by recognizing the shared patterns
between Christian and Hindu contemplation. Living as a Christian
sannyasi (a seeker of God in the Hindu tradition) for almost half of
his life, Griffiths' experiences and writings help the rest of us to
see and appreciate our Christian tradition with fresh eyes while at the
same time celebrating the spiritual truths in other faith traditions.
Thomas Matus' well-chosen anthology offers a wonderful introduction to
those unfamiliar with Bede Griffiths and a convenient resource for
those who know and love him. The selections represent Griffiths'
autobiographical writings, his reflections on reason and intuition
("masculine" and "feminine"), his conviction that Hinduism and
Christianity can complement and enrich one another, and his ultimate
certainty that advaita, or nondualism, is the heart of all great
religious traditions. The selections are prefaced by an introductory
essay that highlights some of the central themes in Griffiths' work.
Reading Griffiths and reflecting on his insight that there is a central
unity, a nondualism, that ties all creation together, gives new meaning
to familiar Christian categories such as the Mystical Body or the Vine
and the Branch. by Kerry Walters
Soft Cover 128pg