Mysticism and Ethics: Bridging Transcendence and Action in Religious Experience

A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444). This special issue belongs to the section "Religions and Humanities/Philosophies".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 March 2026) | Viewed by 11103

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Faculty of Theology, Pontifical University of Comillas, 28015 Madrid, Spain
Interests: Meister Eckhart and Henry Suso (German mysticism); medieval women mystics; interreligious dialogue

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

According to phenomenological studies, religious experience involves the whole of the human being (Martín Velasco 2006). The believer recognises and responds to the Presence of the transcendent Mystery —God, the Reality Absolute— with the gift of self, expressed in different ways in the various religious traditions: as faith, trust or obedience (Judeo-Christian tradition); unconditional submission to the will of Allah (Islam); conformity with the Tao (Taoism), etc. Such a religious attitude also involves concrete action and an ethical response, framed within the coordinates of each religion. In Christianity, for example, “faith shows itself to be active through love” (Galatians 5:6), because “faith without works is dead” (James 2:17); and it is pointed out that “You will know them by their fruit” (Matthew 7:16). All religions encourage compassion, justice, charity and love of one's neighbour. Even ‘others’, the hungry, the sick, foreigners, etc., become the place of encounter with the Other, the Presence, the Absolute. Despite the differences in the systematisation of the moral life, in all religions the categorical imperative appears, in one way or another: not to treat the other as a means, not to instrumentalise them, but to recognise them as an end.

Within the religious experience, mysticism has been considered in different ways, both by theology and by philosophy, as well as by psychology and comparative studies (McGinn 2000). Although the place of mysticism in religion has been questioned, for many authors mysticism is part of religion; it is even considered to be the highest expression of religious experience or is described as the highest degree of faith experience (Martín Velasco 1999). There has also been debate about the definition of the mystical phenomenon, whether it is solely an emotional and subjective experience or whether it also has a cognitive dimension. Some have considered that mysticism has a universal core common to all religions (W. James), but others have emphasised that a distinction must be made between the mystical experience itself and its interpretations, situated in a particular cultural and religious framework (W. T. Stace). Steven Katz also reminds us that mystical experiences are, above all, religious experiences of a specific tradition and proposes a contextual religious approach to the study of mysticism.

Recognising the diversity of perspectives on mysticism, and without attempting to offer a closed definition, we understand by ‘mysticism’ the inner and direct experiences of the union of the depths of the subject with the Whole, the Universe, the Absolute, the divine, God, the Spirit (Martín Velasco 1999), which take place at a level of consciousness that transcends ordinary experience: in other words, the direct awareness of the Presence of God or of Transcendence (McGinn 2000).

In this Special Issue, we wish to explore the necessary relationship between mystical experience (as well as all spiritual experience) and ethics. Although mysticism and ethics may have been considered to be independent or even opposed, both the testimonies of numerous mystics and the studies on the subject show that mysticism and ethics are intrinsically connected (Katz 1992a,b; Yúfera 2015; Thibdeau 2025; Serrán-Pagán y Fuentes 2025). Furthermore, the mystical experience not only includes the ethical dimension, but also provokes and develops it, making moral action a criterion of discernment for the authentic mystical experience ( Martín Velasco 1999). In addition, mysticism can reconcile deep cultural and philosophical differences (Hunnex 1958) and promote interreligious dialogue and coexistence.

Thus, in this Special Issue, we propose to address the following:

  • Theoretical reflection on how religious experience and the awareness of the transcendent Presence (the mystical experience) involves ethics: virtues, moral action, commitment to justice, etc.
  • Studies of specific situations in which, throughout history, religious experience and mystical experience have elicited a specific ethical response (achieving peace, overcoming injustice, etc.).
  • Studies of specific authors, considered by their traditions as mystics or as spiritual authors: what they did, how they acted and what they wrote about moral action and spiritual and mystical experience.
  • Theological or philosophical justification of ethical behaviour (love, compassion, mercy, justice, etc.) by great believers and mystics of all times and religious traditions.
  • Reflections on contemporary situations and the relevance of spirituality and mysticism for coexistence, peace and interreligious dialogue.

We request that, prior to submitting a manuscript, potential authors submit a proposed title and an abstract of 200 to 300 words summarizing their intended contribution, sent to the Guest Editor (sbara@comillas.edu). Full manuscripts will undergo double-blind peer review.

We look forward to receiving your scholarly contributions.

References

Katz, Steven. 1992a. Mysticism and Ethics in Western Mystical Traditions. Religious Studies 28: 407-423. Available online: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0034412500021752.

Katz, Steven. 1992b. Ethics and Mysticism in Eastern Mystical Traditions. Religious Studies 28: 253-267. Available online: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0034412500021582.

Hunnex, Milton D. 1958. Mysticism and Ethics: Radhakrishnan and Schweitzer. Philosophy East and West 8: 121-136. Available online: https://doi.org/10.2307/1397447.

Martín Velasco, Juan. 2006. Introducción al a fenomenología de la religión. Madrid: Trotta.

Martín Velasco, Juan. 1999. El fenómeno místico: Estudio comparado. Madrid: Trotta.

McGinn, Bernard. 2000. Appendix. In The Presence of God. A History of Christian Mysticism II. The Foundations of Mysticism. New York: Crossroad, 263-343 and 420-441.

Serrán-Pagán y Fuentes, Cristobal. 2025. Mysticism and Social Justice. Basel: MDPI. Available online: https://doi.org/10.3390/books978-3-7258-3222-4.

Thibdeau, John C. 2025. Enacting Mysticism in the World: Practical Sufism in the Tariqa Karkariyya and Alawiyya. Religions 16(2): 111. Available online: https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020111.

Yúfera, Julia. 2015. Mística y ética: desafíos para nuestro tiempo. De la experiencia mística a la acción moral. Isegoria (53), 679-695. Available online: https://doi.org/10.3989/isegoria.2015.053.12.

Prof. Dr. Silvia Bara Bancel
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • mysticism
  • ethics
  • action
  • love
  • virtues
  • god
  • religious experience
  • justice
  • transcendence
  • moral

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Published Papers (12 papers)

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Research

17 pages, 235 KB  
Article
Spirituality in Action: The Church as Agent of Reconciliation, Lessons from South Africa
by Carmen Márquez Beunza
Religions 2026, 17(5), 576; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17050576 - 11 May 2026
Viewed by 287
Abstract
For many Christians, the Gospel has nothing to do with socio-political issues. It is a “spiritual” matter. However, this is an unbiblical understanding of Christian faith. It is too a misunderstanding of what authentic spirituality is and the implications it entails. There is [...] Read more.
For many Christians, the Gospel has nothing to do with socio-political issues. It is a “spiritual” matter. However, this is an unbiblical understanding of Christian faith. It is too a misunderstanding of what authentic spirituality is and the implications it entails. There is false piety which resulted in a faith and a spirituality divorced from the real world. This study focuses on the ethical implications of spirituality and explores its deep connection with the mission of the Church in the struggle for justice and peace and the quest for reconciliation. It argues that the South African experience can help us to a better understanding of true spirituality and the ethical implications of Christian faith. In the context of apartheid, many Christians understood that their faith compelled them to develop a “mystique of action,” involving themselves in the struggle against injustice and engaging in the search for reconciliation. The South African experience shows us that reconciliation is not a private affair between God and the individual; it has far-reaching social and political implications. Full article
23 pages, 325 KB  
Article
The “Spirituality of Vulnerability” in Louis Joseph Lebret
by Francisco Javier Fuertes
Religions 2026, 17(5), 562; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17050562 - 7 May 2026
Viewed by 386
Abstract
This article explores the key pillars of the spirituality in Fr. Lebret’s work, which is far less well known than his ethical writings. To achieve this aim, the author’s ethical, socio-economic, and spiritual works; some of his unpublished writings; and existing bibliographical references [...] Read more.
This article explores the key pillars of the spirituality in Fr. Lebret’s work, which is far less well known than his ethical writings. To achieve this aim, the author’s ethical, socio-economic, and spiritual works; some of his unpublished writings; and existing bibliographical references of his work were examined. This article develops a conceptual biography that shows the extent to which his entire intellectual work had its origins in the suffering and questions of the people with whom Fr. Lebret became involved along his journey. Fr. Lebret was never a theorist of theology but rather of the practice of faith. Both his ethical and spiritual concepts and syntheses can be fully understood only when illuminated in the light of the concrete reality of each moment that he sought to transform. Moreover, the originality of Lebret’s spiritual thought lies less in his specific conceptual keys (divine mercy as a gift of vulnerability, the human person created in the image of God, solidarity as a political act of mercy, and resilient hope in the face of the difficulties of building the Kingdom of God) and more in the relationships between these and his essential ethical concepts, which are both the source and the goal of the believer’s life. One contribution of this article is the elucidation of this relationship between ethics and spirituality, in which Fr. Lebret takes the contemplata aliiis tradere of his Dominican tradition a step further. Indeed, he regards it as a circular rather than a linear relationship, in which the ethical commitment to suffering reality is not the ultimate end of contemplation but a spiritual act that is a continuation of the Eucharist. In addition, the latter is not only the source but also the goal of God’s mercy, which is verified as authentic only in acts of self-surrender and self-giving for the sake of one’s brothers and sisters. Finally, he highlights something that has not been sufficiently emphasised in the literature to date, namely the power of his spirituality to illuminate the path in the face of our own contemporary vulnerabilities. Without undertaking a systematic study of the generative digital revolution, some authors have already noted that, while not denying its many positive consequences, it does not seem to foster contemplation; spiritual growth; or, consequently, critical awareness, purpose, and meaning in contemporary life. Fr. Lebret’s spirituality, which is demonstrated by the repeated references to his spiritual works, not only shares the transformative intention of his entire body of work but also is considered by the author himself to be the very heart of that civilisation of solidarity that will make such a change possible. It is a spirituality which, through its four pillars, is intrinsically gratuitous, relational, committed to suffering, and intrinsically hopeful. Moreover, it is a spirituality of hope because it does not forget that it is in human vulnerability that the infinite power of God’s mercy is manifested in a privileged manner. Full article
22 pages, 358 KB  
Article
“Love One Another” According to Meister Eckhart
by Silvia Bara Bancel and Markus Enders
Religions 2026, 17(5), 545; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17050545 - 30 Apr 2026
Viewed by 502
Abstract
Although Meister Eckhart is frequently regarded as a speculative mystic, his practical teachings, particularly concerning love, are often overlooked. This study explores the practical consequences of his statements on neighborly love in order to demonstrate his concrete contributions to ethics. Our research reveals [...] Read more.
Although Meister Eckhart is frequently regarded as a speculative mystic, his practical teachings, particularly concerning love, are often overlooked. This study explores the practical consequences of his statements on neighborly love in order to demonstrate his concrete contributions to ethics. Our research reveals that Eckhart views true love as a Trinitarian act of grace where humans participate in God’s love. Through pure, selfless love, human beings become inhabited by the Holy Spirit, loving their neighbors universally and equally as themselves. These findings are drawn from a textual analysis of Eckhart’s Latin commentaries on the Gospel of John and his German sermons, focusing on his Trinitarian theology and doctrine of virtues. Ultimately, love is identified as the central divine virtue that unifies the soul with God. When individuals love without seeking their own interest, their actions are simultaneously human and divine works. Thus, Eckhart’s profound theology offers a highly practical framework where perfect love radically transforms ethical action. Full article
23 pages, 405 KB  
Article
Malāmat and the Ethics of Invisibility: Mysticism, Poetic Witnessing, and Moral Critique in Late Modernity
by Mahmut Esat Harmancı and Meriç Harmancı
Religions 2026, 17(4), 481; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040481 - 14 Apr 2026
Viewed by 552
Abstract
This article reconceptualizes malāmat not as a marginal Sufi discipline but as a distinct ethical paradigm that redefines the relationship between selfhood, action, and moral legitimacy. Situating the discussion within late-modern conditions shaped by technological mediation, algorithmic evaluation, and regimes of visibility, it [...] Read more.
This article reconceptualizes malāmat not as a marginal Sufi discipline but as a distinct ethical paradigm that redefines the relationship between selfhood, action, and moral legitimacy. Situating the discussion within late-modern conditions shaped by technological mediation, algorithmic evaluation, and regimes of visibility, it argues that ethical value has increasingly been externalized through performance, recognition, and quantifiable outputs. Against this background, malāmat is examined as an alternative ethical model grounded in inward vigilance, relational practice, and the deliberate concealment of virtue. Drawing on early Malāmatī texts—particularly al-Sulamī—and their later elaboration in Ibn Arabī, the study demonstrates that ethical subjectivity is constituted through continuous self-critique and responsibility before the Divine rather than through public validation. The argument is further developed through a comparative engagement with Aristotle, Kant, Kierkegaard, and MacIntyre. It shows that, unlike these frameworks, malāmat sustains ethical life as an ongoing tension rather than a state of equilibrium or a universalizable norm. The article also highlights the role of classical Turkish and Persian poetry—especially Fuzûlî, Nâbî, and Şeyh Gâlib—in articulating malāmat as a lived ethical sensibility. Ultimately, the study proposes malāmat as a critical counter-model to contemporary regimes of visibility, offering an ethics grounded in inwardness, concealment, and irreducible personal responsibility. Full article
15 pages, 323 KB  
Article
Between Speech and Silence: Islamic Fairy Tales as a Mystical Bridge in the Siyasatnama and Sufi Traditions
by Fehmi Ünsalan and Sema Ülper Oktar
Religions 2026, 17(4), 451; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040451 - 4 Apr 2026
Viewed by 518
Abstract
This article posits that Islamic fairy tales function as a mystical bridge of speech, a discursive passage that, within the siyasatnama tradition, summons the subject toward ethico-political responsibility, while in Sufi narrative, it carries the seeker beyond the limits of language toward a [...] Read more.
This article posits that Islamic fairy tales function as a mystical bridge of speech, a discursive passage that, within the siyasatnama tradition, summons the subject toward ethico-political responsibility, while in Sufi narrative, it carries the seeker beyond the limits of language toward a transformative silence. Reading Indo-Persian and Ottoman siyasatnama texts alongside the Sufi classics of Attar and Rumi, the article traces this movement across both traditions. In the siyasatnama context, the fairy tale translates divine commandments into a set of virtues, such as justice, mercy, and compassion, that regulate the conduct of both ruler and subject, framing governance as an ethical response to a sacred truth. Conversely, in Sufi narrative, the fairy tale operates within a similar ethical–pedagogical grammar but directs the subject toward a fundamentally different ontological end: The dissolution of the self. Here, speech becomes a threshold to be crossed and narrative a cage to be surrendered, allowing the seeker to enter the silence in which divine love is realized. Ultimately, the article proposes that mystical transcendence does not signify a withdrawal from the ethical sphere; instead, it constitutes its most profound enactment, manifested either through the responsible exercise of power or its radical renunciation in love. Full article
19 pages, 301 KB  
Article
Detachment and Affectivity as Structures of Openness: Meister Eckhart’s Contribution to Situated Ethics Read in the Light of the Young Heidegger
by María Luisa Brantt
Religions 2026, 17(3), 336; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17030336 - 6 Mar 2026
Viewed by 614
Abstract
Contemporary ethical reflection is undergoing a crisis of its traditional normative foundations, which have proven difficult to reconcile with the affective, vulnerable and situated nature of moral experience. In this context, this article examines Meister Eckhart’s thought in light of Martin Heidegger’s early [...] Read more.
Contemporary ethical reflection is undergoing a crisis of its traditional normative foundations, which have proven difficult to reconcile with the affective, vulnerable and situated nature of moral experience. In this context, this article examines Meister Eckhart’s thought in light of Martin Heidegger’s early phenomenology–hermeneutics in order to reconsider the place of affectivity in ethics. It is argued that Eckhart’s notion of abegescheidenheit (detachment) and Heidegger’s analysis of factual life and Befindlichkeit allow us to understand affectivity not as a psychological state, but as an ontological disposition of openness. Based on a hermeneutic–phenomenological analysis of key texts by both authors, it is shown that, without identifying or homologating them, their approaches question the figure of the self-sufficient moral human being and shift ethical reflection towards lived experience. The article concludes that this perspective offers conceptual foundations for a situated, relational ethics attentive to vulnerability, based on affective openness and the responsibility that emerges from concrete existence. Full article
15 pages, 214 KB  
Article
The Human Being in Exposure to Mystery: Phenomenological Foundations of a Mystical Anthropology
by Angélica Morales Arizmendi
Religions 2026, 17(2), 173; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17020173 - 31 Jan 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 652
Abstract
This article develops a phenomenological foundation of mystical anthropology through a dialogue between contemporary Spanish philosophy and the sixteenth-century Castilian mystical tradition. Taking Juan Martín Velasco, Miguel García-Baró, and Teresa of Ávila as its main interlocutors, it explores the anthropological structure of the [...] Read more.
This article develops a phenomenological foundation of mystical anthropology through a dialogue between contemporary Spanish philosophy and the sixteenth-century Castilian mystical tradition. Taking Juan Martín Velasco, Miguel García-Baró, and Teresa of Ávila as its main interlocutors, it explores the anthropological structure of the encounter with Mystery as an essential possibility of human existence. The study identifies the human being as a subject in exposure to Mystery—an existence that receives itself through a transcendent call to truth and goodness. The analysis shows that the mystical attitude converges with the philosophical one in their shared openness to the real and their ethical orientation toward truth and the Good. Both reveal that the human being is constituted by relation, receptivity, and responsibility. This synthesis redefines mystical experience not as an exceptional event, but as the most lucid manifestation of the human condition, offering a renewed anthropology capable of addressing contemporary nihilism and spiritual disorientation, understood as the loss of ultimate meaning and the weakening of desire that characterize many contemporary forms of human experience. Full article
17 pages, 268 KB  
Article
Mysticism and Ethics in the Theology of Religions and Interreligious Dialogue: Re-Reading Paul Tillich and Jacques-Albert Cuttat
by Santiago García Mourelo
Religions 2026, 17(1), 50; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17010050 - 2 Jan 2026
Viewed by 906
Abstract
In today’s plural and global context, the Theology of Religions and Interreligious Dialogue play a decisive role in fostering mutual understanding and a genuine culture of encounter. This article examines the theological and spiritual foundations of this task through a re-reading of Paul [...] Read more.
In today’s plural and global context, the Theology of Religions and Interreligious Dialogue play a decisive role in fostering mutual understanding and a genuine culture of encounter. This article examines the theological and spiritual foundations of this task through a re-reading of Paul Tillich and Jacques-Albert Cuttat. Starting from Tillich’s unfinished reflection on the significance of the history of religions, this study reconstructs his ontological and pneumatological framework, with particular attention to the notion of a mystical a priori as the structural condition of all religious experience. On this basis, it analyses Cuttat’s model of “assumptive convergence” between the two “religious hemispheres”—East and West—as an experiential and spiritual unfolding of Tillich’s intuition. This article argues that Cuttat’s proposal anticipates, in practical and mystical terms, the theology of religions outlined by Tillich, showing how Christian mystical experience can assume, discern, and transfigure other religious traditions without syncretism or relativism. In this perspective, mysticism emerges as a fundamental theological principle for articulating truth, plurality, and ethical responsibility in interreligious dialogue. Full article
28 pages, 391 KB  
Article
Attitude of Hope in the Poetry of St. John of the Cross in Context of Ethics of Ambiguity and Spiritual Abuse
by Antonina Wozna Urbanczak
Religions 2026, 17(1), 39; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17010039 - 30 Dec 2025
Viewed by 805
Abstract
The mystical poetry of St. John of the Cross (born in 1542 in Spain and died in 1591), a collaborator of St. Teresa of Jesus in the reform of the Carmelite Order, reveals how the experience of God is indissolubly linked with compassion, [...] Read more.
The mystical poetry of St. John of the Cross (born in 1542 in Spain and died in 1591), a collaborator of St. Teresa of Jesus in the reform of the Carmelite Order, reveals how the experience of God is indissolubly linked with compassion, and the practice of charity and hope. His life consistently reflects the virtues and attitudes celebrated in his poetry. This paper reinterprets three of his poems—Ascent of Mount Carmel, Of Falconry, and Spiritual Canticle—with a focus on the virtue and attitude of hope. It explores how hope is promoted and expressed through the lens of an ethics shaped by uncertainty and ambiguity, establishing a creative dialogue between classical and disruptive contemporary visions of Sanjuanist ethics. The text proposes an intersection of theology and ethics within a context of vulnerability, complexity, change, volatility, uncertainty, and ambiguity. It also addresses cases of spiritual abuse that distort the mystical and monastic meanings of the “dark night” metaphor. The experience of John of the Cross during his imprisonment is examined in relation to criteria for spiritual growth, with the aim of preventing spiritual misguidance. The paper aims to open the conversation in relation to the problem of abuse and its relation of how the cross may be understood and―in consequence―to help prevent the spiritual abuse that can take place through spiritual guidance. Full article
12 pages, 447 KB  
Article
Richard of Saint Victor and His Idea of Wisdom and Love
by Ignacio Verdú Berganza
Religions 2025, 16(11), 1434; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16111434 - 10 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1072
Abstract
This study examines Richard of Saint Victor’s conception of wisdom and love, understood as the ultimate ends of human life and deeply connected with the notion of care. For Richard, authentic care requires discerning the true object of concern: the human being as [...] Read more.
This study examines Richard of Saint Victor’s conception of wisdom and love, understood as the ultimate ends of human life and deeply connected with the notion of care. For Richard, authentic care requires discerning the true object of concern: the human being as a rational creature created for happiness through knowledge and love of God. His anthropology highlights the dignity of man, composed of body, reason, and affection, and called to participate in divine happiness. Richard develops a spiritual pedagogy in which the ordering and moderation of affections—fear, sorrow, hope, love, joy, hatred, and modesty—are indispensable for the path toward contemplation. Through an allegorical reading of Jacob, his wives, and their children, Richard presents a symbolic itinerary where the progression of affectivity and reason leads ultimately to contemplation, embodied in Benjamin. This contemplative fulfillment transcends both fear and greed, liberating the human being from self-centeredness and opening him to love and divine wisdom. The work demonstrates Richard’s synthesis of Platonic, Augustinian, and Victorine traditions, proposing a transformative vision of the human person: happiness is inseparable from love, and wisdom is achieved not through rational argument but through the lived experience of love that surpasses reason. Full article
14 pages, 239 KB  
Article
Seeing the Beauty of the Lord: Mystics on Nature as Theophany
by Bernard Mcginn
Religions 2025, 16(10), 1271; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16101271 - 4 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1525
Abstract
Mystics are often thought to have little interest in the natural world, given their concern with the inner self. Many mystics, however, have had a profound sense of the beauty of creation. Their interest is not in nature as such, but in the [...] Read more.
Mystics are often thought to have little interest in the natural world, given their concern with the inner self. Many mystics, however, have had a profound sense of the beauty of creation. Their interest is not in nature as such, but in the world as a manifestation (theophania), a veil in which and through which God reveals and conceals Godself. This essay will sketch the line of “theophanic mysticism” in three figures. In several texts (e.g., Confessions 9.10; City of God 22.24), Augustine meditates on natural beauty as revealing God. In his “Canticum Solis” (Hymn of Brother Sun), Francis of Assisi presents a distinctive view of the natural and human worlds as praising God in a “familial chorus.” John of the Cross, who at times seems to reject the world, insists that when the soul is emptied of all false attachments, it will finally be able to see and love the beauty of creation. The essay concludes with a look at Pope Francis’s “Laudato Si’” as a contemporary revival of theophanic mysticism and an important ethical option in the midst of the current ecological crisis. Full article
18 pages, 300 KB  
Article
The Elephant in the Room: Nicholas of Cusa and the Mystical Basis for Pluralism
by Theo Poward
Religions 2025, 16(10), 1251; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16101251 - 29 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1605
Abstract
In the past few decades, a growing body of literature focused on the ‘return of religion’ has added important nuance to the discussion of pluralism, religion, and violence. This paper explores these postsecular critiques through the ancient parable of the Blind People and [...] Read more.
In the past few decades, a growing body of literature focused on the ‘return of religion’ has added important nuance to the discussion of pluralism, religion, and violence. This paper explores these postsecular critiques through the ancient parable of the Blind People and the Elephant. It argues that secularism maintains an ontology that assumes violence which forecloses the possibility of pluralism. Recent reappraisals of mysticism are at pains to highlight its ethical and political implications. This paper puts these bodies of literature in conversation to offer a mystical basis for pluralist ethics. To this end, a particular western Christian mystic, Nicholas of Cusa, in his work The Vision of God (1453) is shown to provide a theoretical and ethical basis for pluralism. The decision to focus on his mystical work The Vision of God is because the metatheoretical question of pluralism is addressed here in how unity with the divine means unity between the members of a community, which is worked out in an ethical practice of dialogue. By engaging Cusa’s mysticism in the context of postsecular critical theory, an alternate basis for pluralism is offered that sharply contrasts with that offered by secularism. Full article
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