fbpx
Wikipedia

Meister Eckhart

Eckhart von Hochheim OP (c. 1260c. 1328),[1] commonly known as Meister Eckhart,[a] Master Eckhart[2] or Eckehart,[2] claimed original name Johannes Eckhart,[2] was a German Catholic theologian, philosopher and mystic, born near Gotha in the Landgraviate of Thuringia (now central Germany) in the Holy Roman Empire.[b]

The Reverend

Eckhart von Hochheim

Sculpture of Meister Eckhart (left) and John I, Duke of Brabant (right) at Town Hall Tower, Cologne by Elisabeth Perger
Bornc. 1260
Diedc. 1328 (aged c. 68)
probably Avignon, Kingdom of Arles, Holy Roman Empire
EraMedieval philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Main interests
Religion, Spirituality, Theology

Eckhart came into prominence during the Avignon Papacy at a time of increased tensions between monastic orders, diocesan clergy, the Franciscan Order, and Eckhart's Dominican Order. In later life, he was accused of heresy and brought up before the local Franciscan-led Inquisition, and tried as a heretic by Pope John XXII with the bull In Agro Dominico of March 27, 1329.[3].[c] He seems to have died before his verdict was received.[4][d]

He was well known for his work with pious lay groups such as the Friends of God and was succeeded by his more circumspect disciples Johannes Tauler and Henry Suso who was later beatified.[citation needed] Since the 19th century, he has received renewed attention. He has acquired a status as a great mystic within contemporary popular spirituality, as well as considerable interest from scholars situating him within the medieval scholastic and philosophical tradition.[6]

Biography edit

Eckhart was probably born around 1260 in the village of Tambach, near Gotha, in the Landgraviate of Thuringia,[7] perhaps between 1250 and 1260.[8] It was previously asserted that he was born to a noble family of landowners, but this originated in a misinterpretation of the archives of the period.[9] In reality, little is known about his family and early life. There is no basis for giving him the Christian name of Johannes, which sometimes appears in biographical sketches:[10] his Christian name was Eckhart; his surname was von Hochheim.[11]

Church career edit

 
Predigerkirche

Probably around 1278 Eckhart joined the Dominican convent at Erfurt, when he was about eighteen. It is assumed he studied at Cologne before 1280.[12] He may have also studied at the University of Paris, either before or after his time in Cologne.[13]

The first solid evidence we have for his life is when on 18 April 1294, as a baccalaureus (lecturer) on the Sentences of Peter Lombard, a post to which he had presumably been appointed in 1293, he preached the Easter Sermon (the Sermo Paschalis) at the Dominican convent of St. Jacques in Paris. In late 1294, Eckhart was made Prior at Erfurt and Dominican Provincial of Thuringia. His earliest vernacular work, Reden der Unterweisung (The Talks of Instructions/Counsels on Discernment), a series of talks delivered to Dominican novices, dates from this time (c. 1295–1298).[14] In 1302, he was sent to Paris to take up the external Dominican chair of theology. He remained there until 1303. The short Parisian Questions date from this time.[15]

In late 1303, Eckhart returned to Erfurt and was given the position of Provincial superior for Saxony, a province which reached at that time from the Netherlands to Livonia. Thereby, he had responsibility for forty-seven convents in the region. Complaints made against the Provincial superior of Teutonia and him at the Dominican general chapter held in Paris in 1306, concerning irregularities among the ternaries, must have been trivial, because the general, Aymeric of Piacenza, appointed him in the following year as his vicar-general for Bohemia with full power to set the demoralised monasteries there in order. Eckhart was Provincial for Saxony until 1311, during which time he founded three convents for women there.[16]

On 14 May 1311 Eckhart was appointed by the general chapter held at Naples as teacher at Paris. To be invited back to Paris for a second stint as magister was a rare privilege, previously granted only to Thomas Aquinas.[17] Eckhart stayed in Paris for two academic years, until the summer of 1313, living in the same house as William of Paris.

Then follows a long period of which it is known only that he spent part of the time at Strasbourg.[18] It is unclear what specific office he held there: he seems chiefly to have been concerned with spiritual direction and with preaching in convents of Dominicans.[19]

A passage in a chronicle of the year 1320, extant in manuscript (cf. Wilhelm Preger, i. 352–399), speaks of a prior Eckhart at Frankfurt who was suspected of heresy, and some historians have linked this to Meister Eckhart.

Accusation of heresy edit

 
The Meister Eckhart portal of the Erfurt Church
 
The Meister Eckhart portal of the Erfurt Church (Predigerkirche), quoting John 1:5

In late 1323 or early 1324, Eckhart left Strasbourg for the Dominican house at Cologne. It is not clear exactly what he did there, though part of his time may have been spent teaching at the prestigious Studium in the city. Eckhart also continued to preach, addressing his sermons during a time of disarray among the clergy and monastic orders, rapid growth of numerous pious lay groups, and the Inquisition's continuing concerns over heretical movements throughout Europe.

It appears that some of the Dominican authorities already had concerns about Eckhart's teaching. The Dominican General Chapter held in Venice in the spring of 1325 had spoken out against "friars in Teutonia who say things in their sermons that can easily lead simple and uneducated people into error".[20] This concern (or perhaps concerns held by the archbishop of Cologne, Henry of Virneburg) may have been why Nicholas of Strasburg, to whom the Pope had given the temporary charge of the Dominican convents in Germany in 1325, conducted an investigation into Eckhart's orthodoxy. Nicholas presented a list of suspect passages from the Book of Consolation to Eckhart, who responded sometime between August 1325 and January 1326 with the treatise Requisitus, now lost, which convinced his immediate superiors of his orthodoxy.[20] Despite this assurance, however, the archbishop in 1326 ordered an inquisitorial trial.[19][21] At this point Eckhart issued a Vindicatory Document, providing chapter and verse of what he had been taught.[22]

Throughout the difficult months of late 1326, Eckhart had the full support of the local Dominican authorities, as evident in Nicholas of Strasbourg's three official protests against the actions of the inquisitors in January 1327.[23] On 13 February 1327, before the archbishop's inquisitors pronounced their sentence on Eckhart, Eckhart preached a sermon in the Dominican church at Cologne, and then had his secretary read out a public protestation of his innocence. He stated in his protest that he had always detested everything wrong, and should anything of the kind be found in his writings, he now retracts. Eckhart himself translated the text into German, so that his audience, the vernacular public, could understand it. The verdict then seems to have gone against Eckhart. Eckhart denied competence and authority to the inquisitors and the archbishop, and appealed to the Pope against the verdict.[21] He then, in the spring of 1327, set off for Avignon.

In Avignon, Pope John XXII seems to have set up two tribunals to inquire into the case, one of theologians and the other of cardinals.[23] Evidence of this process is thin. However, it is known that the commissions reduced the 150 suspect articles down to 28; the document known as the Votum Avenionense gives, in scholastic fashion, the twenty-eight articles, Eckhart's defence of each, and the rebuttal of the commissioners.[23] On 30 April 1328, the pope wrote to Archbishop Henry of Virneburg that the case against Eckhart was moving ahead, but added that Eckhart had already died (modern scholarship suggests he may have died on 28 January 1328).[24] The papal commission eventually confirmed (albeit in modified form) the decision of the Cologne commission against Eckhart.[19]

Pope John XXII issued a bull (In agro dominico), 27 March 1329, in which a series of statements from Eckhart is characterized as heretical, another as suspected of heresy.[25] At the close, it is stated that Eckhart recanted before his death everything which he had falsely taught, by subjecting himself and his writing to the decision of the Apostolic see. It is possible that the Pope's unusual decision to issue the bull, despite the death of Eckhart (and the fact that Eckhart was not being personally condemned as a heretic), was due to the pope's fear of the growing problem of mystical heresy, and pressure from his ally Henry of Virneburg to bring the case to a definite conclusion.[26]

Rehabilitation edit

Eckhart's status in the contemporary Catholic Church has been uncertain. The Dominican Order pressed in the last decade of the 20th century for his full rehabilitation and confirmation of his theological orthodoxy. Pope John Paul II voiced favorable opinion on this initiative, even going as far as quoting from Eckhart's writings, but the outcome was confined to the corridors of the Vatican. In the spring of 2010, it was revealed that there had been a response from the Vatican in a letter dated 1992. Timothy Radcliffe, then Master of the Dominicans and recipient of the letter, summarized the contents as follows:

We tried to have the censure lifted on Eckhart[27] ... and were told that there was really no need since he had never been condemned by name, just some propositions which he was supposed to have held, and so we are perfectly free to say that he is a good and orthodox theologian.[28]

Professor Winfried Trusen of Würzburg, a correspondent of Radcliffe, wrote in a defence of Eckhart to Cardinal Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI), stating:

Only 28 propositions were censured, but they were taken out of their context and impossible to verify, since there were no manuscripts in Avignon.[28]

Influences edit

Eckhart was schooled in medieval scholasticism and was well-acquainted with Aristotelianism and Augustinianism. The Neo-Platonism of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite asserted a great influence on him, as reflected in his notions on the Gottheit beyond the God who can be named.

Teachings edit

Sermons edit

Although he was an accomplished academic theologian, Eckhart's best-remembered works are his highly unusual sermons in the vernacular. Eckhart as a preaching friar attempted to guide his flock, as well as monks and nuns under his jurisdiction, with practical sermons on spiritual/psychological transformation and New Testament metaphorical content related to the creative power inherent in disinterest (dispassion or detachment).[citation needed]

The central theme of Eckhart's German sermons is the presence of God in the individual soul, and the dignity of the soul of the just man. Although he elaborated on this theme, he rarely departed from it. In one sermon, Eckhart gives the following summary of his message:

When I preach, I usually speak of detachment and say that a man should be empty of self and all things; and secondly, that he should be reconstructed in the simple good that God is; and thirdly, that he should consider the great aristocracy which God has set up in the soul, such that by means of it man may wonderfully attain to God; and fourthly, of the purity of the divine nature.[29]

As Eckhart said in his trial defence, his sermons were meant to inspire in listeners the desire above all to do some good.[citation needed] In this, he frequently used unusual language or seemed to stray from the path of orthodoxy, which made him suspect to the Church during the tense years of the Avignon Papacy.[citation needed]

Theology proper edit

In Eckhart's vision, God is primarily fecund. Out of overabundance of love the fertile God gives birth to the Son, the Word in all of us. Clearly,[e] this is rooted in the Neoplatonic notion of "ebullience; boiling over" of the One that cannot hold back its abundance of Being. Eckhart had imagined the creation not as a "compulsory" overflowing (a metaphor based on a common hydrodynamic picture), but as the free act of will of the triune nature of Deity (refer Trinitarianism).

Another bold assertion is Eckhart's distinction between God and Godhead (Gottheit in German, meaning Godhood or Godhead, state of being God). These notions had been present in Pseudo-Dionysius's writings and John the Scot's De divisione naturae, but Eckhart, with characteristic vigor and audacity, reshaped the germinal metaphors into profound images of polarity between the Unmanifest and Manifest Absolute.

Eckhart taught that "it is not in God to destroy anything which has being, but he perfects all things"[30] leading some scholars to conclude that he may have held to some form of universal salvation.[31]

Contemplative method edit

John Orme Mills notes that Eckhart did not "leave us a guide to the spiritual life like St Bonaventure’s Itinerarium – the Journey of the Soul," but that his ideas on this have to be condensed from his "couple of very short books on suffering and detachment" and sermons.[32] According to Mills, Eckhart's comments on prayer are only about contemplative prayer and "detachment."[32]

According to Reiner Schürmann, four stages can be discerned in Eckhart's understanding mystical development: dissimilarity, similarity, identity, breakthrough.[2]

Influence and study edit

13th century edit

Eckhart was one of the most influential 13th-century Christian Neoplatonists in his day, and remained widely read in the later Middle Ages.[33] Some early twentieth-century writers believed that Eckhart's work was forgotten by his fellow Dominicans soon after his death. In 1960, however, a manuscript ("in agro dominico") was discovered containing six hundred excerpts from Eckhart, clearly deriving from an original made in the Cologne Dominican convent after the promulgation of the bull condemning Eckhart's writings, as notations from the bull are inserted into the manuscript.[34] The manuscript came into the possession of the Carthusians in Basel, demonstrating that some Dominicans and Carthusians had continued to read Eckhart's work.

It is also clear that Nicholas of Cusa, Archbishop of Cologne in the 1430s and 1440s, engaged in extensive study of Eckhart. He assembled, and carefully annotated, a surviving collection of Eckhart's Latin works.[35] As Eckhart was the only medieval theologian tried before the Inquisition as a heretic, the subsequent (1329) condemnation of excerpts from his works cast a shadow over his reputation for some, but followers of Eckhart in the lay group Friends of God existed in communities across the region and carried on his ideas under the leadership of such priests as John Tauler and Henry Suso.[36]

Johannes Tauler and Rulman Merswin edit

Eckhart is considered by some to have been the inspirational "layman" referred to in Johannes Tauler's and Rulman Merswin's later writings in Strasbourg where he is known to have spent time (although it is doubtful that he authored the simplistic Book of the Nine Rocks published by Merswin and attributed to The Friend of God from the Oberland). On the other hand, most scholars consider The Friend of God from the Oberland to be a pure fiction invented by Merswin to hide his authorship because of the intimidating tactics of the Inquisition at the time.[citation needed]

Theologia Germanica and the Reformation edit

It has been suspected that his practical communication of the mystical path is behind the influential 14th-century "anonymous" Theologia Germanica, which was disseminated after his disappearance. According to the medieval introduction of the document, its author was an unnamed member of the Teutonic Order of Knights living in Frankfurt.[citation needed]

The lack of imprimatur from the Church and anonymity of the author of the Theologia Germanica did not lessen its influence for the next two centuries – including Martin Luther at the peak of public and clerical resistance to Catholic indulgences – and was viewed by some historians of the early 20th century as pivotal in provoking Luther's actions and the subsequent Protestant Reformation.[citation needed]

The following quote from the Theologia Germanica depicts the conflict between worldly and ecclesiastical affairs:[citation needed]

The two eyes of the soul of man cannot both perform their work at once: but if the soul shall see with the right eye into eternity, then the left eye must close itself and refrain from working, and be as though it were dead. For if the left eye be fulfilling its office toward outward things, that is holding converse with time and the creatures; then must the right eye be hindered in its working; that is, in its contemplation. Therefore, whosoever will have the one must let the other go; for "no man can serve two masters".[37]

Obscurity edit

Eckhart was largely forgotten from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries, barring occasional interest from thinkers such as Angelus Silesius (1627–1677).[38] For centuries, his writings were known only from a number of sermons found in old editions of Johann Tauler's sermons, published by Kachelouen (Leipzig, 1498) and by Adam Petri (Basel, 1521 and 1522).

Rediscovery edit

Interest in Eckhart's works was revived in the early nineteenth century, especially by German Romantics and Idealist philosophers.[39][40][f] Franz Pfeiffer's publication in 1857 of Eckhart's German sermons and treatises added greatly to this interest.[42]

A second important figure in the later nineteenth century for the recovery of Eckhart's works was Henry Denifle, who was the first to recover Eckhart's Latin works, from 1886 onwards.[43]

During the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, much Catholic interest in Eckhart was concerned with the consistency of his thought in relation to Neoscholastic thought – in other words, to see whether Eckhart's thought could be seen to be essentially in conformity with orthodoxy as represented by his fellow Dominican Thomas Aquinas.[44]

Attribution of works edit

Since the mid-nineteenth century scholars have questioned which of the many pieces attributed to Eckhart should be considered genuine, and whether greater weight should be given to works written in the vernacular, or Latin. Although the vernacular works survive today in over 200 manuscripts, the Latin writings are found only in a handful of manuscripts. Denifle and others have proposed that the Latin treatises, which Eckhart prepared for publication very carefully, were essential to a full understanding of Eckhart.[45]

In 1923, Eckhart's Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense (also known as the Rechtsfertigung, or Vindicatory Document) was re-published. The Defense recorded Eckhart's responses against two of the Inquisitional proceedings brought against him at Cologne, and details of the circumstances of Eckhart's trial. The excerpts in the Defense from vernacular sermons and treatises described by Eckhart as his own, served to authenticate a number of the vernacular works.[46] Although questions remain about the authenticity of some vernacular works, there is no dispute about the genuine character of the Latin texts presented in the critical edition.[47]

Eckhart as a mystic edit

Since the 1960s scholars have debated whether Eckhart should be called a "mystic".[48] The philosopher Karl Albert had already argued that Eckhart had to be placed in the tradition of philosophical mysticism of Parmenides and Plato and the neo-Platonist thinkers Plotinus, Porphyry and Proclus.[49] Heribert Fischer argued in the 1960s that Eckhart was a mediaeval theologian.[49] Most recently, Clint Johnson agreed with D. T. Suzuki and argued on the basis of Eckhart's appeals to experience that he is a mystic in the tradition of Augustine and Dionysius.[50] [51] Passages like the following, Johnson contends, point to experience beyond intellectual speculation and philosophizing:

Those who have never been familiar with inward things do not know what God is. Like a man who has wine in his cellar but has never tasted it, he does not know that it is good. (Sermon 10, DW I 164.5–8)[52]

Whoever does not understand what I say, let him not burden his heart with it. For as long as a man is not like this truth, he will not understand what I say. For this is a truth beyond thought that comes immediately from the heart of God. (Sermon 52, DW II 506.1–3)[52]

Kurt Flasch, a member of the so-called Bochum-school of mediaeval philosophy,[49] strongly reacted against the influence of New Age mysticism and "all kinds of emotional subjective mysticism", arguing for the need to free Eckhart from "the Mystical Flood".[49] He sees Eckhart strictly as a philosopher. Flasch argues that the opposition between "mystic" and "scholastic" is not relevant because this mysticism (in Eckhart's context) is penetrated by the spirit of the university, in which it occurred.[citation needed]

According to Hackett, Eckhart is to be understood as an "original hermeneutical thinker in the Latin tradition".[49] To understand Eckhart, he has to be properly placed within the western philosophical tradition of which he was a part. [53]

Josiah Royce, an objective idealist, saw Eckhart as a representative example of 13th and 14th century Catholic mystics "on the verge of pronounced heresy" but without original philosophical opinions. Royce attributes Eckhart's reputation for originality to the fact that he translated scholastic philosophy from Latin into German, and that Eckhart wrote about his speculations in German instead of Latin.[54]: 262, 265–266  Eckhart generally followed Thomas Aquinas's doctrine of the Trinity, but Eckhart exaggerated the scholastic distinction between the divine essence and the divine persons. The very heart of Eckhart's speculative mysticism, according to Royce, is that if, through what is called in Christian terminology the procession of the Son, the divine omniscience gets a complete expression in eternal terms, still there is even at the centre of this omniscience the necessary mystery of the divine essence itself, which neither generates nor is generated, and which is yet the source and fountain of all the divine. The Trinity is, for Eckhart, the revealed God and the mysterious origin of the Trinity is the Godhead, the absolute God.[54]: 279–282 

Modern popularisation edit

Theology edit

Matthew Fox edit

Matthew Fox (born 1940) is an American theologian.[55] Formerly a priest and a member of the Dominican Order within the Roman Catholic Church, Fox was an early and influential exponent of a movement that came to be known as Creation Spirituality. The movement draws inspiration from the wisdom traditions of Christian scriptures and from the philosophies of such medieval Catholic visionaries as Hildegard of Bingen, Thomas Aquinas, Francis of Assisi, Julian of Norwich, Dante Alighieri, Meister Eckhart and Nicholas of Cusa, and others. Fox has written a number of articles on Eckhart[citation needed] and a book titled Breakthrough: Meister Eckhart's Creation Spirituality in New Translation.[56]

Modern philosophy edit

In "Conversation on a Country Path," Martin Heidegger develops his concept of Gelassenheit, or releasement, from Meister Eckhart.[57] Ian Moore argues "that Heidegger consulted Eckhart again and again throughout his career to develop or support his own thought.".[58]

The French philosopher Jacques Derrida distinguishes Eckhart's Negative Theology from his own concept of différance although John D. Caputo in his influential The Tears and Prayers of Jacques Derrida emphasises the importance of that tradition for this thought.[59]

Modern spirituality edit

Meister Eckhart has become one of the timeless heroes of modern spirituality, which, to historian of religion[60] Wouter Hanegraaff, thrives on an all-inclusive syncretism.[61] This syncretism started with the colonisation of Asia, and the search of similarities between Eastern and Western religions.[62] Western monotheism was projected onto Eastern religiosity by Western orientalists, trying to accommodate Eastern religiosity to a Western understanding, whereafter Asian intellectuals used these projections as a starting point to propose the superiority of those Eastern religions.[62] Early on, the figure of Meister Eckhart has played a role in these developments and exchanges.[62]

Renewed academic attention to Eckhart has attracted favorable attention to his work from contemporary non-Christian mystics. Eckhart's most famous single quote, "The Eye with which I see God is the same Eye with which God sees me", is commonly cited by thinkers within neopaganism and ultimatist Buddhism as a point of contact between these traditions and Christian mysticism.

Schopenhauer edit

The first European translation of Upanishads appeared in two parts in 1801 and 1802.[62] The 19th-century philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer was influenced by the early translations of the Upanishads, which he called "the consolation of my life".[63][g] Schopenhauer compared Eckhart's views to the teachings of Indian, Christian and Islamic mystics and ascetics:

If we turn from the forms, produced by external circumstances, and go to the root of things, we shall find that Sakyamuni and Meister Eckhart teach the same thing; only that the former dared to express his ideas plainly and positively, whereas Eckhart is obliged to clothe them in the garment of the Christian myth, and to adapt his expressions thereto.[64]

Schopenhauer also stated:

Buddha, Eckhart, and I all teach essentially the same.[65]

Theosophical Society edit

A major force in the mutual influence of Eastern and Western ideas and religiosity was the Theosophical Society,[66][67] which also incorporated Eckhart in its notion of Theosophy.[68] It searched for ancient wisdom in the East, spreading Eastern religious ideas in the West.[69] One of its salient features was the belief in "Masters of Wisdom",[70][h] "beings, human or once human, who have transcended the normal frontiers of knowledge, and who make their wisdom available to others".[70] The Theosophical Society also spread Western ideas in the East, aiding a modernisation of Eastern traditions, and contributing to a growing nationalism in the Asian colonies.[71]

Neo-Vedanta edit

The Theosophical Society had a major influence on Hindu reform movements.[67][i] A major proponent of this "neo-Hinduism", also called "neo-Vedanta",[73] was Vivekananda[74][75] (1863–1902) who popularised his modernised interpretation[76] of Advaita Vedanta in the 19th and early 20th century in both India and the West,[75] emphasising anubhava ("personal experience"[77]) over scriptural authority.[77] Vivekananda's teachings have been compared to Eckhart's teachings.[78][79]

In the 20th century, Eckhart's thoughts were also compared to Shankara's Advaita Vedanta by Rudolf Otto in his Mysticism East and West.[80] According to Richard King, the aim of this work was to redeem Eckhart's mysticism in Protestant circles,[81] attempting "to establish the superiority of the German mysticism of Eckhart over the Indian mysticism of Sankara".[65]

Buddhist modernism edit

The Theosophical Society also had a major influence on Buddhist modernism,[71] and the spread of this modernised Buddhism in the West.[71] Along with Henry Steel Olcott and Anagarika Dharmapala, Helena Blavatsky was instrumental in the Western transmission and revival of Theravada Buddhism.[82][83][84]

In 1891, Karl Eugen Neumann, who translated large parts of the Tripitaka, found parallels between Eckhart and Buddhism,[85] which he published in Zwei buddhistische Suttas und ein Traktat Meister Eckharts (Two Buddhist Suttas and a treatise of Meister Eckhart). D. T. Suzuki, who joined the Theosophical Society Adyar and was an active Theosophist,[86][87][88] discerned parallels between Eckhart's teachings and Zen Buddhism in his Mysticism: Christian and Buddhist,[89] drawing similarities between Eckhart's "pure nothingness" (ein bloss nicht) and sunyata.[90] Shizuteru Ueda, a third generation Kyoto School philosopher and scholar in medieval philosophy showed similarities between Eckhart's soteriology and Zen Buddhism in an article.[91]

Reiner Schürmann OP, a professor of philosophy, while agreeing with Daisetz T. Suzuki that there exist certain similarities between Zen Buddhism and Meister Eckhart's teaching, also disputed Suzuki's contention that the ideas expounded in Eckhart's sermons closely approach Buddhist thought, "so closely indeed, that one could stamp them almost definitely as coming out of Buddhist speculations".[89] Schurmann's several clarifications included:

  1. On the question of "Time" and Eckhart's view (claimed as parallel to Buddhism in reducing awakening to instantaneity) that the birth of the Word in the ground of the mind must accomplish itself in an instant, in "the eternal now", that in fact Eckhart in this respect is rooted directly in the catechisis of the Fathers of the Church rather than merely derived from Buddhism;[89]
  2. On the question of "Isness" and Suzuki's contention that the "Christian experiences are not after all different from those of the Buddhist; terminology is all that divides us", that in Eckhart "the Godhead's istigkeit [translated as "isness" by Suzuki] is a negation of all quiddities; it says that God, rather than non-being, is at the heart of all things" thereby demonstrating with Eckhart's theocentrism that "the istigkeit of the Godhead and the isness of a thing then refer to two opposite experiences in Meister Eckhart and Suzuki: in the former, to God, and in the latter, to 'our ordinary state of the mind'" and Buddhism's attempts to think "pure nothingness";[92]
  3. On the question of "Emptiness" and Eckhart's view (claimed as parallel to Buddhist emphasis "on the emptiness of all 'composite things'") that only a perfectly released person, devoid of all, comprehends, "seizes", God, that the Buddhist "emptiness" seems to concern man's relation to things while Eckhart's concern is with what is "at the end of the road opened by detachment [which is] the mind espouses the very movement of the divine dehiscence; it does what the Godhead does: it lets all things be; not only must God also abandon all of his own – names and attributes if he is to reach into the ground of the mind (this is already a step beyond the recognition of the emptiness of all composite things), but God's essential being – releasement – becomes the being of a released man."[93]

Roman Curial statement edit

With Joseph Ratzinger as Prefect, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in 1989 published a Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on some aspects of Christian meditation which opposed those who[94]

propose abandoning [...] the very idea of the One and Triune God, who is Love, in favor of an immersion "in the indeterminate abyss of the divinity."

with a footnote stating

Meister Eckhart speaks of an immersion "in the indeterminate abyss of the divinity" which is a "darkness in which the light of the Trinity never shines." Cf. Sermo "Ave Gratia Plena" in fine (J. Quint, Deutsche Predigten und Traktate, Hanser 1955, 261).

Psychology and psychoanalysis edit

Erich Fromm edit

The notable humanistic psychoanalyst and philosopher Erich Fromm was another scholar who brought renewed attention in the West to Eckhart's writings, drawing upon many of the latter's themes in his large corpus of work. Eckhart was a significant influence in developing United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjöld's conception of spiritual growth through selfless service to humanity, as detailed in his book of contemplations called Vägmärken ("Markings").[j]

Carl Jung edit

In Aion, Researches into the Phenomenology of Self[95] Carl Jung cites Eckhart approvingly in his discussion of Christ as a symbol of the archetypal self. Jung sees Eckhart as a Christian Gnostic:

Meister Eckhart's theology knows a "Godhead" of which no qualities, except unity and being, can be predicated; it "is becoming," it is not yet Lord of itself, and it represents an absolute coincidence of opposites: "But its simple nature is of forms formless; of becoming becomingless; of beings beingless; of things thingless," etc. Union of opposites is equivalent to unconsciousness, so far as human logic goes, for consciousness presupposes a differentiation into subject and object and a relation between them. (Page 193.)

As the Godhead is essentially unconscious, so too is the man who lives in God. In his sermon on "The Poor in Spirit" (Matt. 5 : 3), the Meister says: "The man who has this poverty has everything he was when he lived not in any wise, neither in himself, nor in truth, nor in God. He is so quit and empty of all knowing that no knowledge of God is alive in him; for while he stood in the eternal nature of god, there lived in him not another: what lived there was himself. And so we say this man is as empty of his own knowledge as he was when he was not anything; he lets God work with what he will, and he stands empty as when he came from God." Therefore he should love God in the following way: "Love him as he is; a not-God, a not-spirit, a not-person, a not-image; as a sheer, pure, clear One, which he is, sundered from all secondness; and in this One let us sink eternally, from nothing to nothing. So help us God. Amen." (Page 193.)

Jung summed up his view of Eckhart saying:

The world-embracing spirit of Meister Eckhart knew, without discursive knowledge, the primordial mystical experience of India as well as of the Gnostics, and was itself the finest flower on the tree of the "Free Spirit" that flourished at the beginning of the eleventh century. Well might the writings of this Master be buried for six hundred years, for "his time was not yet come." Only in the nineteenth century did he find a public at all capable of appreciating the grandeur of his mind. (Page 194.)

Meister Eckhart Prize edit

In popular culture edit

In Jacob's Ladder, Louis, the main character's friend, attributes the following quote to Eckhart:

You know what he [Eckhart] said? The only thing that burns in Hell is the part of you that won't let go of your life; your memories, your attachments. They burn 'em all away. But they're not punishing you, he said. They're freeing your soul. ...If you're frightened of dying and holding on, you'll see devils tearing your life away. But if you've made your peace then the devils are really angels, freeing you from the Earth.[96][citation needed]

In Z213: Exit, by Dimitris Lyacos the same quote, attributed to Eckhart, appears in a slightly different wording:

Your own are burning and your memories and you don't want to leave them. Everything will burn to the end, you suffer, but nobody is punishing you, they are just setting your soul free. Don't be afraid because while you fear death they will rend your soul like demons. Only calm down and you will see the angels who are setting you free and then you will be free.[97]

In the book The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson, Eckhart is mentioned in a story Marianne Engel recounts to the (unnamed) protagonist about her days in the Engelthal Monastery:

Meister Eckhart would not even admit that God was good. ...Eckhart's position was that anything that was good can become better, and whatever may become better may become best. God cannot be referred to as "good", "better", or best because He is above all things. If a man says that God is wise, the man is lying because anything that is wise can become wiser. Anything that a man might say about God is incorrect, even calling Him by the name of God. God is "superessential nothingness" and "transcendent Being" ... beyond all words and beyond all understanding. The best a man can do is remain silent, because anytime he prates on about God, he is committing the sin of lying. The true master knows that if he had a God he could understand, he would never hold Him to be God.[98]

Eckhart is also referenced in J. D. Salinger's Franny and Zooey. In a letter to Zooey, Buddy says,

I can't help thinking you'd make a damn site better-adjusted actor if Seymour and I hadn't thrown in the Upanishads and the Diamond Sutra and Eckhart and all our other old loves with the rest of your recommended reading when you were small.[99]

The third movement of John Adams's Harmonielehre symphony (1985) is titled "Meister Eckhart and Quackie", which imagines the mystic floating through space with the composer's daughter Emily (nicknamed Quackie) on his back whispering secrets of grace in his ear.[100]

Eckhart Tolle quotes Meister Eckhart in The Power of Now as saying "Time is what keeps the light from reaching us".[101]

Works edit

 
Manuscript Soest, Stadtarchiv und Wissenschaftliche Stadtbibliothek, Codex Nr. 33, folium 57 verso, a–b

The publication of the modern critical edition of Eckhart's German and Latin works began in 1936 and was completed in April 2022.[102]

Latin works edit

One difficulty with Eckhart's Latin writings is that they clearly represent only a small portion of what he planned to write. Eckhart describes his plans to write a vast Opus Tripartitum (Three-Part Work). Unfortunately, all that exists today of the first part, the Work of Propositions, is the Prologue illustrating the first proposition (with Eckhart intending the first part alone to consist of over one thousand propositions).[103] The second part, called the Work of Questions, no longer exists. The third part, the Work of Commentaries, is the major surviving Latin work by Eckhart, consisting of a Prologue, six commentaries, and fifty-six sermons.[104] It used to be thought that this work was begun while Eckhart was in Paris between 1311 and 1313; however, recent manuscript discoveries mean that much of what survives must be dated to before 1310.[105]

The surviving Latin works are, therefore:

  • The early Quaestiones Parisiensis (Parisian Questions).[106]
  • Prologus generalis in Opus tripartitium (General Prologue to the Three-Part Work).[107]
  • Prologus in Opus propositionum (Prologue to the Work of Propositions).[108]
  • Prologus in Opus expositionum (Prologue to the Work of Commentaries).[109]
  • Expositio Libri Genesis (Commentary on the Book of Genesis).[110]
  • Liber Parabolorum Genesis (Book of the Parables of Genesis).[111]
  • Expositio Libri Exodi (Commentary on the Book of Exodus).[112]
  • Expositio Libri Sapientiae (Commentary on the Book of Wisdom).[113]
  • Sermones et Lectiones super Ecclesiastici c.24:23–31 (Sermons and Lectures on the Twenty-fourth chapter of Ecclesiasticus).[114]
  • Fragments of the Commentary on the Song of Songs survive
  • Expositio sancti Evangelii secundum Iohannem (Commentary on John)[115]
  • Various sermons,[116] including some preserved in the collection Paradisus anime intelligentis (Paradise of the Intelligent Soul/Paradise of the Intellectual Soul).[117]
  • A brief treatise on the Lord's Prayer, largely an anthology culled from earlier authorities.
  • The Defense.[118]
  • Although not composed by Eckhart, also relevant are the Vatican archive materials relating to Eckhart's trial, the Votum theologicum (or Opinion) of the Avignon commission who investigated Eckhart, and the bull In agro dominico.

Vernacular works edit

Questions concerning the authenticity of the Middle High German texts attributed to Eckhart are much greater than for the Latin texts. The problems involve not only whether a particular sermon or treatise is to be judged authentic or pseudonymous, but also, given the large number of manuscripts and the fragmentary condition of many of them, whether it is even possible to establish the text for some of the pieces accepted as genuine.[119] Eckhart's sermons are versions written down by others from memory or from notes, meaning that the possibility for error was much greater than for the carefully written Latin treatises.

The critical edition of Eckhart's works traditionally accepted 86 sermons as genuine, based on the research done by its editor Josef Quint (1898–1976)[120] during the 20th century. Of these, Sermons 1–16b are proved authentic by direct citation in the Defense. Sermons 17–24 have such close textual affinities with Latin sermons recognised as genuine that they are accepted. Sermons 25–86 are harder to verify, and judgements have been made on the basis of style and content.[121] Georg Steer took over the editorship in 1983.[122] Between 2003 and 2016, the critical edition under Georg Steer added another 30 vernacular sermons (Nos. 87 to 117) in volumes 4.1 and 4.2.[123] Because six sermons exist in an A and B version (5a-b, 13-13a, 16a-b, 20a-b, 36a-b und 54a-b)[124] the final total of vernacular sermons is 123 (numbered consecutively from 1 to 117).

When Franz Pfeiffer published his edition of Eckhart's works in 1857, he included seventeen vernacular treatises he considered to be written by Eckhart. Modern scholarship is much more cautious, however, and the critical edition accepts only four of Eckhart's vernacular treatises as genuine:

  • The longest of these, the Reden der Unterweisung (Counsels on Discernment/Discourses on Instruction/Talks of Instruction),[125] is probably Eckhart's earliest surviving work, a set of spiritual instructions that he gave to young Dominicans in the 1290s. It was clearly a popular work, with fifty-one manuscripts known.[126]
  • A second vernacular treatise, the Liber Benedictus (Book "Benedictus" ), in fact consists of two related treatises firstly, Daz buoch der götlîchen trœstunge(The Book of the Divine Consolation),[127] and secondly, a sermon entitled Von dem edeln menschen (Of the Nobleman).[128]
  • The final vernacular treatise accepted as genuine by the critical edition is entitled Von Abgescheidenheit (On Detachment).[129] However, this treatise is generally today not thought to be written by Eckhart.[130]

Modern editions and translations edit

  • Meister Eckhart: Die deutschen und lateinischen Werke. Herausgegeben im Auftrage der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft. Stuttgart and Berlin: Verlag W. Kohlhammer, 11 Vols., 1936–2022. (This is the critical edition of Meister Eckhart's works. The Latin works comprise six volumes and were completed in 2022. The Middle High German works comprise five volumes and were completed in 2016).
  • Eckhart, the German Works: 64 Homilies for the Liturgical Year. I. De Tempore: Introduction, Translation and Notes,
  • Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press and London: SPCK, 1981. Re-published in paperback without notes and a foreword by John O’Donohue as Meister Eckhart, Selections from His Essential Writings, (New York, 2005).
  • Meister Eckhart: Teacher and Preacher, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Frank Tobin, New York and London: Paulist Press/SPCK, 1987.
  • C. de B. Evans, Meister Eckhart by Franz Pfeiffer, 2 vols., London: Watkins, 1924 and 1931.
  • Meister Eckhart: A Modern Translation, trans. Raymond B. Blakney, New York: Harper and Row, 1941, ISBN 0-06-130008-X (a translation of many of the works, including treatises, 28 sermons, and Defense).
  • Otto Karrer Meister Eckhart Speaks The Philosophical Library, Inc. New York, 1957.
  • James M. Clark and John V. Skinner, eds. and trans., Treatises and Sermons of Meister Eckhart, New York: Octagon Books, 1983. (Reprint of Harper and Row ed., 1958/London: Faber & Faber, 1958.)
  • Armand Maurer, ed., Master Eckhart: Parisian Questions and Prologues, Toronto, Canada: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1974.
  • Meister Eckhart, Sermons and Treatises, trans. by M. O'C. Walshe, 3 vols., (London: Watkins, 1979–1981; later printed at Longmead, Shaftesbury, Dorset: Element Books, 1979–1990). Now published as The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, trans. and ed. by Maurice O'C Walshe, rev. by Bernard McGinn (New York: The Crossroad Publishing Company, 2009).
  • Matthew Fox, Breakthrough: Meister Eckhart's Creation Spirituality in New Translation (Garden City, New York, 1980).
  • Meister Eckhart: Selected Writings, ed. and trans. by Oliver Davies, London: Penguin, 1994.
  • Meister Eckhart's Book of the Heart: Meditations for the Restless Soul, by Jon M. Sweeney and Mark S. Burrows, Charlottesville, VA: Hampton Roads, 2017.
  • Paradox at Play: Metaphor in Meister Eckhart's Sermons with Previously Unpublished Sermons, by Clint Johnson, Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2023. (translations of all previously unpublished sermons Pfeiffer nos. 87–109 in DW IV volumes 1 and 2, and Sermon 54a which is not in Walshe, Flasch's new manuscript for Sermon 52 and several other sermons)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pronounced [ˈmaɪ̯stɐ ˈɛkʰaʀt].
  2. ^ Meister is German for "Master", referring to the academic title Magister in theologia that he obtained in Paris.
  3. ^ His "Defence" is famous for his reasoned arguments to all challenged articles of his writing, and his refutation of heretical intent.
  4. ^ There is no record of the date and place of his death, but John XXII records that he was already dead when his propositions were condemned.[5]
  5. ^ Aside from a rather striking metaphor of "fertility"
  6. ^ Franz von Baader (1765–1841), for instance, studied Eckhart in the early 19th century.[41] Von Baader was a German Roman Catholic philosopher and theologian. He studied under Abraham Gottlob Werner at Freiberg, travelled through several of the mining districts in north Germany, and for four years, 1792–1796, resided in England. There he became acquainted with the ideas of David Hume, David Hartley and William Godwin, which were all distasteful to him. But he also came into contact with the mystical speculations of Meister Eckhart, Louis Claude de Saint-Martin (1743–1803), and above all those of Jakob Boehme, which were more to his liking. In 1796 he returned from England, and came into contact with Friedrich Schelling, and the works he published during this period were manifestly influenced by that philosopher.
  7. ^ And he called his poodle "Atman".[63]
  8. ^ See also Ascended Master Teachings
  9. ^ The Theosophical Society and the Arya Samaj were united from 1878 to 1882, as the Theosophical Society of the Arya Samaj.[72]
  10. ^ Dusen: "[t]he counterpoint to this enormously exposed and public life is Eckhart and Jan van Ruysbroek. They really give me balance and-a more necessary sense of humor." Henry P van Dusen. Dag Hammarskjöld. A Biographical Interpretation of Markings. Faber and Faber. London 1967 pp.49–50.

References edit

  1. ^ Mojsisch, Burkhard; Summerell, Orrin F. "Meister Eckhart". plato.stanford.edu. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d Meister Eckhart: German mystic by Father Reiner Schürmann, O.P. on Britannica
  3. ^ Meister Eckhart; Edmund Colledge; Bernard McGinn (1981). Meister Eckhart, the Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises, and Defense. Paulist Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-8091-2370-4.
  4. ^ Colledge, Edmund (1981). "Historical Data". Meister Eckhart: The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises, and Defense. Colledge, Edmund., McGinn, Bernard. New York: Paulist Press. p. 12. ISBN 0-8091-0322-2. OCLC 8410552.
  5. ^ John XXII (27 March 1329). "In Argo Dominico". Meister Eckhart: The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises, and Defense. Colledge, Edmund., McGinn, Bernard. New York: Paulist Press, 1981. p. 81. ISBN 0-8091-0322-2. OCLC 8410552.
  6. ^ Hackett 2012.
  7. ^ Bernard McGinn, The Mystical Thought of Meister Eckhart, (New York: Crossroad Publishing Company, 2001), p.2, points out that previous scholarship which had placed Eckhart's birth in Hochheim is incorrect: Hochheim is used in the sources to indicate Eckhart's family name, not his birthplace.
  8. ^ Walter Senner, 'Meister Eckhart’s Life, Training, Career, and Trial' in Jeremiah Hackett (ed.), A Companion to Meister Eckhart (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 7–84.
  9. ^ Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.5.
  10. ^ Cairns, Earl (1996), Christianity through the Centuries, Zondervan
  11. ^ Clark, James (1957), Meister Eckhart, New York: Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd., p. 11
  12. ^ This supposition is founded on Eckhart’s frequent citation, with respect, of Albert the Great, who had taught at Cologne until his death in 1280, and more particularly, his statement in his 1294 Easter Sermon that "Albert often used to say: 'This I know, as we know things, for we all know very little.'" (Bernard McGinn, The Mystical Thought of Meister Eckhart (New York: Crossroad Publishing Company, 2001), p.2.)
  13. ^ The evidence for Eckhart's studies in Cologne is similarly circumstantial as recounted in Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.7.
  14. ^ McGinn, Eckhart, p.4
  15. ^ The Parisian Questions were first discovered in 1927. They are translated with an introduction in Armand Maurer, ed., Master Eckhart: Parisian Questions and Prologues, (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1974).
  16. ^ On the possible dating of the works written in this period, see McGinn, Eckhart, pp.5–9.
  17. ^ McGinn, Eckhart, p.9
  18. ^ cf. Urkundenbuch der Stadt Strassburg, iii. 236.
  19. ^ a b c Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.10.
  20. ^ a b McGinn, Eckhart, (2001), p.14
  21. ^ a b cf. the document in Preger, i. 471; more accurately in ALKG, ii. 627 sqq.
  22. ^ In the early twentieth century, the suspicion of Eckhart was often attributed to tensions between Dominicans and Franciscans. This narrative, however, has been replaced by one which emphasizes the broader context of fears concerning the Heresy of the Free Spirit. See Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism, (2005), p.103.
  23. ^ a b c McGinn, Eckhart, (2001), p.17
  24. ^ The general assumption in modern scholarship on Eckhart has been that the date of Eckhart's death is lost. McGinn, Eckhart, (2001), p.17, however, trusts the argument of Walter Senner that a seventeenth-century Dominican source noted that Eckhart was remembered in German convents on 28 January – suggesting this day in 1328 was the date of his death. Some early twentieth-century writers suggested Eckhart may have not in fact died, but continued his ministry in anonymity, but there is no single medieval source that supports this suspicion.
  25. ^ The bull is given complete in ALKG, ii. 636–640).
  26. ^ McGinn, Eckhart, (2001), p.18.
  27. ^ Noble, Charissa. "Cage, Satie, and Eckhart: A Hermeneutical Look at John Cage's Appropriation of Eckhart through In A Landscape". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  28. ^ a b . Academici.com. Archived from the original on 12 September 2010. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  29. ^ Marcus Braybrooke, Beacons of Light: 100 People who Have Shaped The History of Humankind, pp. 316–317 (O Books, 2009). ISBN 978-1-84694-185-6
  30. ^ Talks of Instruction, 22.
  31. ^ Ramelli, A Larger Hope, 202–206.
  32. ^ a b John Orme Mills, Meister Eckhart and Prayer, Eckhart Society
  33. ^ As McGinn, Eckhart, p.1, points out, about three hundred manuscripts containing Eckhart's German sermons, both authentic and pseudonymous, survive.
  34. ^ Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.19.
  35. ^ Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.20.
  36. ^ Christianity through the Centuries, Earle E. Cairns, Zondervan, 1996
  37. ^ Theologia Germanica, public domain
  38. ^ McGinn, Eckhart, p.1
  39. ^ McGinn, Eckhart, p.1.
  40. ^ Hackett 2012, p. xxvii.
  41. ^ Ffytche 2011, p. 33.
  42. ^ This was in the second volume of his Deutsche Mystiker (Stuttgart). Pfeiffer's edition included 111 sermons and 18 treatises, as well as a number of sayings and fragments – but many of these are now recognised to be later works falsely attributed to Eckhart. (Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.62)
  43. ^ Mention could also be made of Franz Jostes, Meister Eckhart und seine Junger, ungedruckte Texte zur Geschichte der deutschen Mystik (Collectanea Friburgensia, iv., Freiburg, 1895).
  44. ^ McGinn, Eckhart, p.20.
  45. ^ Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.62.
  46. ^ Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.63.
  47. ^ Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.64.
  48. ^ Hackett 2012, p. xxii.
  49. ^ a b c d e Hackett 2012, p. xxiii.
  50. ^ Suzuki 1957.
  51. ^ Johnson 2023, p. 3.
  52. ^ a b Johnson 2023, p. 85.
  53. ^ Hackett 2012, p. xxiv.
  54. ^ a b Royce, Josiah (1898). "Meister Eckhart". Studies of good and evil : a series of essays upon problems of philosophy and life. New York: D. Appleton. pp. 261–297. OCLC 271174795.
  55. ^ "Peterborough". Peterborough Examiner.
  56. ^ Eckhart, Meister (1980). Breakthrough, Meister Eckhart's creation spirituality, in new translation. Translated by Matthew Fox. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-17045-9. OCLC 6555678.
  57. ^ Heidegger, M. Discourse on Thinking. Trans. John M. Anderson and E. Hans Freund. Harpers and Row, 1966
  58. ^ Moore, I.A. Eckhart, Heidegger, and the Imperative of Releasement. SUNY Press, 2019, p.xi
  59. ^ Derrida, J: "How to Avoid Speaking: Denials" pages 3–70, in "Languages of the Unsayable: The Play of Negativity in Literature and Literary Theory" Stanley Budick and Wolfgang Iser, eds. 1989
  60. ^ Staff (2013). "dhr. prof. dr. W.J. (Wouter) Hanegraaff". University of Amsterdam. from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
  61. ^ Hanegraaff 1996.
  62. ^ a b c d King 2002.
  63. ^ a b Renard 2010, p. 178.
  64. ^ Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation, Vol. II, Ch. XLVIII
  65. ^ a b King 2002, p. 125.
  66. ^ Renard 2010, p. 185-188.
  67. ^ a b Sinari 2000.
  68. ^ Partridge 2006, p. 3, note 2.
  69. ^ Lavoie 2012.
  70. ^ a b Gilchrist 1996, p. 32.
  71. ^ a b c McMahan 2008.
  72. ^ Johnson 1994, p. 107.
  73. ^ King 2002, p. 93.
  74. ^ Renard 2010, p. 189-193.
  75. ^ a b Michaelson 2009, p. 79-81.
  76. ^ Rambachan 1994.
  77. ^ a b Rambachan 1994, p. 1.
  78. ^ Ganapathy 2003, p. 247.
  79. ^ Akhilananda Swami 2012.
  80. ^ King 2002, p. 125-128.
  81. ^ King 2002, p. 126.
  82. ^ McMahan 2008, p. 98.
  83. ^ Gombrich 1996, p. 185-188.
  84. ^ Fields 1992, p. 83-118.
  85. ^ Moran 2012, p. 672.
  86. ^ Algeo 2005.
  87. ^ Algeo 2007.
  88. ^ Tweed 2005.
  89. ^ a b c Schurmann 2001, p. 217.
  90. ^ King 2002, p. 156.
  91. ^ Shizuteru Ueda (1989), Eckhart um zen am problem
  92. ^ Schurmann 2001, p. 218.
  93. ^ Schurmann 2001, p. 219.
  94. ^ Ratzinger, Joseph. "Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on some aspects of Christian Meditation – Orationis formas". www.vatican.va. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  95. ^ The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Volume 9, Part II, Princeton University Press (1959)
  96. ^ Rubin 1990, p.82
  97. ^ Lyacos 2010, p.88
  98. ^ Andrew Davidson, The Gargoyle, pp.140–41
  99. ^ Salinger, J.D (1955). Franny and Zooey. Boston: Little Brown and Company. pp. 59–60. ISBN 0-316-76949-5.
  100. ^ Simon Rattle & City of Birmingham SO (1994) CD booklet
  101. ^ Tolle, Eckhart (1997). The Power of Now.
  102. ^ Meister Eckhart: Die deutschen und lateinischen Werke. Herausgegeben im Auftrage der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft. Stuttgart and Berlin: Kohlhammer Verlag, 11 Vols., 1936–2022. The Latin works comprise 6 volumes (widely referred to as LW1–6), while the German works comprise 5 volumes (widely referred to as DW1–5).
  103. ^ Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.64. This Prologue exists in two manuscripts discovered by Denifle – one discovered in Erfurt in 1880, and the other in Kues in 1886.
  104. ^ Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p.65.
  105. ^ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism, (2005), p.98.
  106. ^ LW 1:27–83. The English translation is Armand Maurer, ed., Master Eckhart: Parisian Questions and Prologues, Toronto, Canada: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1974.
  107. ^ LW 1:148–165. An English translation is in Armand Maurer, ed., Master Eckhart: Parisian Questions and Prologues, Toronto, Canada: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1974, pp.77–104.
  108. ^ LW 1:166–182.
  109. ^ LW 1:183–184.
  110. ^ LW 1:185–444. The Prologue and the commentary on Genesis 3 are translated into English in Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, pp.82–121.
  111. ^ LW 1:447–702.
  112. ^ LW 2:1–227. This is translated into English in its entirety in Meister Eckhart: Teacher and Preacher, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Frank Tobin, New York and London: Paulist Press/SPCK, 1987, pp.41–146.
  113. ^ LW 2:301–643.
  114. ^ LW 2:29–300. The commentary on Ecclesiasticus 24.29 is translated into English in Meister Eckhart: Teacher and Preacher, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Frank Tobin, New York and London: Paulist Press/SPCK, 1987, pp.174–181.
  115. ^ LW 3. The commentary on John 1:1–14 is translated into English in Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, pp.122–173. The commentary on John 14.8 is translated into English in Meister Eckhart: Teacher and Preacher, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Frank Tobin, New York and London: Paulist Press/SPCK, 1987, pp.182–205.
  116. ^ Markus, Professor (22 April 2011). "LW4. An extensive list of English translations of the sermons". Markusvinzent.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  117. ^ Around half of the 64 sermons in the Paradisus were by Eckhart, with the majority contributed by Dominicans. On the origin and purpose of the Paradisus (with dates around 1330–40 generally suggested), see Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism, (2005), p.321–2 (which reverses some of the arguments of McGinn (2001).
  118. ^ Selections are translated into English in Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, pp.71–76.
  119. ^ Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981, p. 66.
  120. ^ "Josef Quint". Eckhart.de. 24 July 2017. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  121. ^ Markus, Professor (22 April 2011). "An extensive list of English translations of the sermons". Markusvinzent.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  122. ^ "Georg Steer". Eckhart.de. 24 July 2017. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  123. ^ "Die deutschen Werke". Eckhart.de. 24 July 2017. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  124. ^ "Predigten". Eckhart.de. 22 August 2017. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  125. ^ LW 5:137–376.
  126. ^ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism, (2005), p.95.
  127. ^ DW 5:1–105.
  128. ^ DW 5:109–119.
  129. ^ DW 5:400–434. All four vernacular treatises are translated into English in Meister Eckhart, The Essential Sermons, Commentaries, Treatises and Defense, trans. and ed. by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge, New York: Paulist Press, 1981.
  130. ^ Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism, (2005), p.632.

Sources edit

  • Akhilananda Swami (2012), Hindu Psychology: Its Meaning for the West, Routledge
  • Algeo, Adele S. (July 2005), "Beatrice Lane Suzuki and Theosophy in Japan", Theosophical History, XI
  • Algeo, Adele S. (January–February 2007), "Beatrice Lane Suzuki: An American Theosophist in Japan", Quest, 95 (1): 13–17
  • Boyd-MacMillan, Eolene M (2006), Transformation: James Loder, Mystical Spirituality, and James Hillman, Peter Lang
  • Herman Büttner, ed., Schriften und Predigten, vol. 1. Jena: Eugen Diederichs, 1903.
  • Herman Büttner, ed., Schriften und Predigten, vol. 2. Jena: Eugen Diederichs, 1909.
  • Augustine Daniels, O.S.B., ed., "Eine lateinische Rechtfertigungsschrift des Meister Eckharts", Beiträge zur Geschichte der Philosophie des Mittelalters, 23, 5 (Münster, 1923): 1 – 4, 12 – 13, 34 – 35, 65 – 66.
  • Fields, Rick (1992), How the Swans Came to the Lake. A Narrative History of Buddhism in America, Boston & London: Shambhala
  • Ffytche, Matt (2011), The Foundation of the Unconscious: Schelling, Freud and the Birth of the Modern Psyche, Cambridge University Press
  • Ganapathy (2003), The Way of the Siddhas. In: K. R. Sundararajan, Bithika Mukerji (2003), Hindu Spirituality, Motilal Banarsidass Publ.
  • Gilchrist, Cherry (1996), Theosophy. The Wisdom of the Ages, HarperSanFrancisco
  • Gombrich, Richard F. (1996), Theravāda Buddhism. A Social History from Ancient Benares to Modern Colombo, London and New York: Routledge
  • Hackett, Jeremiah (2012), A Companion to Meister Eckhart, Brill
  • Hanegraaff, Wouter J. (1996), New Age Religion and Western Culture: Esotericism in the Mirror of Secular Thought, Boston, Massachusetts, US: Brill Academic Publishers, ISBN 978-90-04-10696-3
  • Johnson, K. Paul (1994), The masters revealed: Madam Blavatsky and the myth of the Great White Lodge, SUNY Press, ISBN 0-7914-2063-9
  • Johnson, Clint (2023), Paradox at Play: Metaphor in Meister Eckhart's Sermons with Previously Unpublished Sermons, Catholic University of America Press, ISBN 978-0-81-323529-5
  • Franz Jostes, ed., Meister Eckhart und seine Jünger: Ungedruckte Texte zur Geschichte der deutschen Mystik. Berlin: De Gruyter, 1972 (Series: Deutsche Neudrucke Texte des Mittelalters).
  • Thomas Kaepelli, "Kurze Mitteilungen über mittelalterliche Dominikanerschriftsteller", Archivum Fratrum Praedicatorum 10, (1940), pp. 293 – 94.
  • Thomas Kaepelli, Scriptores ordinis Praedicatorum medii aevi. Vol. I (A-F). Rome, 1970.
  • King, Richard (2002), Orientalism and Religion: Post-Colonial Theory, India and "The Mystic East", Routledge
  • Gustav Landauer, ed. and trans. Meister Eckharts mystische Schriften. Berlin: Karl Schnabel, 1903.
  • M.H. Laurent, "Autour du procés de Maître Eckhart. Les documents des Archives Vaticanes", Divus Thomas (Piacenza) 39 (1936), pp. 331 – 48, 430 – 47.
  • Lavoie, Jeffrey D. (2012), The Theosophical Society: The History of a Spiritualist Movement, Universal-Publishers
  • McMahan, David L. (2008), The Making of Buddhist Modernism, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-518327-6
  • Michaelson, Jay (2009), Everything Is God: The Radical Path of Nondual Judaism, Shambhala
  • Moran, Dermot (2012), Meister Eckhart in 20th Century Philosophy. In: Jeremiah Hacket (2012), A Companion to Meister Eckhart, Brill
  • Partridge, Christipher Hugh (2006), Understanding the Dark Side: Western Demonology, Satanic Panics and Alien Abduction, University of Chester
  • Franz Pelster, S.J., ed., Articuli contra Fratrem Aychardum Alamannum, Vat. lat. 3899, f. 123r – 130v, in "Ein Gutachten aus dem Eckehart-Prozess in Avignon", Aus der Geistewelt des Mittelalters, Festgabe Martin Grabmann, Beiträge Supplement 3, Munster, 1935, pp. 1099–1124.
  • Franz Pfeiffer, ed. Deutsche Mystiker des vierzehnten Jahrhunderts, vol. II: Meister Eckhart. 2nd ed. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck, 1906.
  • Josef Quint, ed. and trans. Meister Eckehart: Deutsche Predigten und Traktate, Munich: Carl Hanser, 1955.
  • Josef Quint, ed., Textbuch zur Mystik des deutschen Mittelalters: Meister Eckhart, Johannes Tauler, Heinrich Seuse, Halle/Saale: M. Niemeyer, 1952.
  • Rambachan, Anatanand (1994), The Limits of Scripture: Vivekananda's Reinterpretation of the Vedas, University of Hawaii Press
  • Renard, Philip (2010), Non-Dualisme. De directe bevrijdingsweg, Cothen: Uitgeverij Juwelenschip
  • Rubin, Bruce Joel, Jacob's Ladder. Mark Mixson, general editor, The Applause Screenplay Series, Applause Theatre Book Publishers, 1990. ISBN 1-55783-086-X.
  • Schurmann, Reiner (2001), Wandering Joy: Meister Eckhart's Mystical Philosophy, Lindisfarne Books
  • Sinari, Ramakant (2000), Advaita and Contemporary Indian Philosophy. In: Chattopadhyana (gen.ed.), "History of Science, Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization. Volume II Part 2: Advaita Vedanta", Delhi: Centre for Studies in Civilizations
  • Suzuki, Daisetz Teitaro (1957), Mysticism: Christian and Buddhist, Allen & Unwin
  • Gabriel Théry, "Édition critique des piéces relatives au procés d'Eckhart continues dans le manuscrit 33b de la Bibliothèque de Soest", Archives d'histoire littéraire et doctrinal du moyen âge, 1 (1926), pp. 129 – 268.
  • Tweed, Thomas A. (2005), (PDF), Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 32 (2): 249–281, archived from the original (PDF) on 22 May 2012, retrieved 19 April 2013
  • James Midgely Clark, Meister Eckhart: An Introduction to the Study of His Works with an Anthology of His Sermons, Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson, 1957.
  • Shizuteru Ueda, Die Gottesgeburt in der Seele und der Durchbruch zur Gottheit. Die mystische Anthropologie Meister Eckharts und ihre Konfrontation mit der Mystik des Zen-Buddhismus, Gütersloh: Mohn, 1965.
  • Reiner Schürmann, Meister Eckhart: Mystic and Philosopher, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1978.
  • Matthew Fox, ed., Breakthrough: Meister Eckhart's Creation Spirituality in New Translation, Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1980.
  • Bernard McGinn The Mystical Thought of Meister Eckhart: The Man from whom God Hid Nothing, (New York: Herder & Herder, 2001)

Further reading edit

  • Jeanne Ancelet-Hustache, Master Eckhart and the Rhineland Mystics, New York and London: Harper and Row/ Longmans, 1957.
  • Leonardo Vittorio Arena, The Shadows of the Masters, ebook, 2013.
  • James M. Clark, The Great German Mystics, New York: Russell and Russell, 1970 (reprint of Basil Blackwell edition, Oxford: 1949.)
  • James M. Clark, trans., Henry Suso: Little Book of Eternal Wisdom and Little Book of Truth, London: Faber, 1953.
  • Cesare Catà, Il Cardinale e l'Eretico. Nicola Cusano e il problema della eredità "eterodossa" di Meister Eckhart nel suo pensiero, in "Viator. Medieval and Renaissance Studies", UCLA University, Volume 41, No.2 (2010), pp. 269–291.
  • Oliver Davies, God Within: The Mystical Tradition of Northern Europe, London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 1988.
  • Oliver Davies, Meister Eckhart: Mystical Theologian, London: SPCK, 1991.
  • Eckardus Theutonicus, homo doctus et sanctus, Fribourg: University of Fribourg, 1993.
  • Robert K. Forman, Meister Eckhart: Mystic as Theologian, Rockport, Massachusetts/Shaftesbury, Dorset: Element Books, 1991.
  • Gundolf Gieraths, O.P., '"Life in Abundance: Meister Eckhart and the German Dominican Mystics of the 14th Century", Spirituality Today Supplement, Autumn, 1986.
  • Joel F. Harrington, Dangerous Mystic: Meister Eckhart’s Path to the God Within, New York: Penguin Press, 2018.
  • Aldous Huxley, The Perennial Philosophy: An Interpretation of the Great Mystics, East and West, New York: HarperCollins, 1945.
  • Amy Hollywood, The Soul as Virgin Wife: Mechthild of Magdeburg, Marguerite Porete, and Meister Eckhart, Notre Dame and London: University of Notre Dame Press, 1996.
  • Rufus Jones, The Flowering of Mysticism in the Fourteenth Century, New York: Hafner Publishing Co., 1971 (facsimile of 1939 ed.).
  • Bernard McGinn, "Eckhart's Condemnation Reconsidered" in The Thomist, vol. 44, 1980.
  • Bernard McGinn, ed., Meister Eckhart and the Beguine Mystics Hadewijch of Brabant, Mechthild of Magdeburg, and Marguerite Porete, New York: Continuum, 1994.
  • Ben Morgan. On Becoming God: Late Medieval Mysticism and the Modern Western Self. New York: Fordham UP, 2013.
  • Arthur Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation, Vol. II, ISBN 0-486-21762-0
  • Cyprian Smith, The Way of Paradox: Spiritual Life as Taught by Meister Eckhart, New York: Paulist Press, 1988.
  • Frank Tobin, Meister Eckhart: Thought and Language, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1986.
  • Denys Turner, The Darkness of God: Negativity in Christian Mysticism, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
  • Winfried Trusen, Der Prozess gegen Meister Eckhart, Fribourg: University of Fribourg, 1988.
  • Andrew Weeks, German Mysticism from Hildegard of Bingen to Ludwig Wittgenstein: A Literary and Intellectual History, Albany: State University of New York Press, 1993.
  • Richard Woods, O.P., Eckhart's Way, Wilmington, Delaware: Glazier, 1986 (Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press, 1991).
  • Richard Woods, O.P., Meister Eckhart: The Gospel of Peace and Justice, Tape Cassette Program, Chicago: Center for Religion & Society, 1993.
  • Richard Woods, O.P., Meister Eckhart: Master of Mystics (London, Continuum, 2010).

External links edit

  • The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume V. Published 1909. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Nihil Obstat, 1 May 1909. Remy Lafort, Censor. Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
  • Meister Eckhart's Sermons translated into English by Claud Field, at Christian Classics Ethereal Library.
  • Meister Eckhart und seine Zeit German Website, most texts in German translation, some in Latin
  • Meister Eckhart Bibliography since 1995
  • Mojsisch, B.; Summerell, O.F. "Meister Eckhart". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Meister Eckhart: German mystic by Father Reiner Schürmann, O.P. on Britannica
  • Brown, Arthur, ""
  • . Research by catholic scholars
  • The Meister Eckhart Site, including full text of the papal bull against Meister Eckhart.
  • Works by or about Meister Eckhart at Internet Archive
  • Works by Meister Eckhart at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Literature by and about Meister Eckhart in the German National Library catalogue
  • Works by and about Meister Eckhart in the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek (German Digital Library)
  • "Meister Eckhart". Repertorium "Historical Sources of the German Middle Ages" (Geschichtsquellen des deutschen Mittelalters).

meister, eckhart, eckhart, hochheim, 1260, 1328, commonly, known, master, eckhart, eckehart, claimed, original, name, johannes, eckhart, german, catholic, theologian, philosopher, mystic, born, near, gotha, landgraviate, thuringia, central, germany, holy, roma. Eckhart von Hochheim OP c 1260 c 1328 1 commonly known as Meister Eckhart a Master Eckhart 2 or Eckehart 2 claimed original name Johannes Eckhart 2 was a German Catholic theologian philosopher and mystic born near Gotha in the Landgraviate of Thuringia now central Germany in the Holy Roman Empire b The ReverendEckhart von HochheimOPSculpture of Meister Eckhart left and John I Duke of Brabant right at Town Hall Tower Cologne by Elisabeth PergerBornc 1260Tambach Landgraviate of Thuringia Holy Roman EmpireDiedc 1328 aged c 68 probably Avignon Kingdom of Arles Holy Roman EmpireEraMedieval philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolNeoplatonism Theological intellectualismMain interestsReligion Spirituality TheologyEckhart came into prominence during the Avignon Papacy at a time of increased tensions between monastic orders diocesan clergy the Franciscan Order and Eckhart s Dominican Order In later life he was accused of heresy and brought up before the local Franciscan led Inquisition and tried as a heretic by Pope John XXII with the bull In Agro Dominico of March 27 1329 3 c He seems to have died before his verdict was received 4 d He was well known for his work with pious lay groups such as the Friends of God and was succeeded by his more circumspect disciples Johannes Tauler and Henry Suso who was later beatified citation needed Since the 19th century he has received renewed attention He has acquired a status as a great mystic within contemporary popular spirituality as well as considerable interest from scholars situating him within the medieval scholastic and philosophical tradition 6 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Church career 1 2 Accusation of heresy 1 3 Rehabilitation 2 Influences 3 Teachings 3 1 Sermons 3 2 Theology proper 3 3 Contemplative method 4 Influence and study 4 1 13th century 4 2 Johannes Tauler and Rulman Merswin 4 3 Theologia Germanica and the Reformation 4 4 Obscurity 4 5 Rediscovery 4 6 Attribution of works 4 7 Eckhart as a mystic 5 Modern popularisation 5 1 Theology 5 1 1 Matthew Fox 5 2 Modern philosophy 5 3 Modern spirituality 5 3 1 Schopenhauer 5 3 2 Theosophical Society 5 3 3 Neo Vedanta 5 3 4 Buddhist modernism 5 3 5 Roman Curial statement 5 4 Psychology and psychoanalysis 5 4 1 Erich Fromm 5 4 2 Carl Jung 5 5 Meister Eckhart Prize 5 6 In popular culture 6 Works 6 1 Latin works 6 2 Vernacular works 6 3 Modern editions and translations 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksBiography editEckhart was probably born around 1260 in the village of Tambach near Gotha in the Landgraviate of Thuringia 7 perhaps between 1250 and 1260 8 It was previously asserted that he was born to a noble family of landowners but this originated in a misinterpretation of the archives of the period 9 In reality little is known about his family and early life There is no basis for giving him the Christian name of Johannes which sometimes appears in biographical sketches 10 his Christian name was Eckhart his surname was von Hochheim 11 Church career edit nbsp PredigerkircheProbably around 1278 Eckhart joined the Dominican convent at Erfurt when he was about eighteen It is assumed he studied at Cologne before 1280 12 He may have also studied at the University of Paris either before or after his time in Cologne 13 The first solid evidence we have for his life is when on 18 April 1294 as a baccalaureus lecturer on the Sentences of Peter Lombard a post to which he had presumably been appointed in 1293 he preached the Easter Sermon the Sermo Paschalis at the Dominican convent of St Jacques in Paris In late 1294 Eckhart was made Prior at Erfurt and Dominican Provincial of Thuringia His earliest vernacular work Reden der Unterweisung The Talks of Instructions Counsels on Discernment a series of talks delivered to Dominican novices dates from this time c 1295 1298 14 In 1302 he was sent to Paris to take up the external Dominican chair of theology He remained there until 1303 The short Parisian Questions date from this time 15 In late 1303 Eckhart returned to Erfurt and was given the position of Provincial superior for Saxony a province which reached at that time from the Netherlands to Livonia Thereby he had responsibility for forty seven convents in the region Complaints made against the Provincial superior of Teutonia and him at the Dominican general chapter held in Paris in 1306 concerning irregularities among the ternaries must have been trivial because the general Aymeric of Piacenza appointed him in the following year as his vicar general for Bohemia with full power to set the demoralised monasteries there in order Eckhart was Provincial for Saxony until 1311 during which time he founded three convents for women there 16 On 14 May 1311 Eckhart was appointed by the general chapter held at Naples as teacher at Paris To be invited back to Paris for a second stint as magister was a rare privilege previously granted only to Thomas Aquinas 17 Eckhart stayed in Paris for two academic years until the summer of 1313 living in the same house as William of Paris Then follows a long period of which it is known only that he spent part of the time at Strasbourg 18 It is unclear what specific office he held there he seems chiefly to have been concerned with spiritual direction and with preaching in convents of Dominicans 19 A passage in a chronicle of the year 1320 extant in manuscript cf Wilhelm Preger i 352 399 speaks of a prior Eckhart at Frankfurt who was suspected of heresy and some historians have linked this to Meister Eckhart Accusation of heresy edit nbsp The Meister Eckhart portal of the Erfurt Church nbsp The Meister Eckhart portal of the Erfurt Church Predigerkirche quoting John 1 5In late 1323 or early 1324 Eckhart left Strasbourg for the Dominican house at Cologne It is not clear exactly what he did there though part of his time may have been spent teaching at the prestigious Studium in the city Eckhart also continued to preach addressing his sermons during a time of disarray among the clergy and monastic orders rapid growth of numerous pious lay groups and the Inquisition s continuing concerns over heretical movements throughout Europe It appears that some of the Dominican authorities already had concerns about Eckhart s teaching The Dominican General Chapter held in Venice in the spring of 1325 had spoken out against friars in Teutonia who say things in their sermons that can easily lead simple and uneducated people into error 20 This concern or perhaps concerns held by the archbishop of Cologne Henry of Virneburg may have been why Nicholas of Strasburg to whom the Pope had given the temporary charge of the Dominican convents in Germany in 1325 conducted an investigation into Eckhart s orthodoxy Nicholas presented a list of suspect passages from the Book of Consolation to Eckhart who responded sometime between August 1325 and January 1326 with the treatise Requisitus now lost which convinced his immediate superiors of his orthodoxy 20 Despite this assurance however the archbishop in 1326 ordered an inquisitorial trial 19 21 At this point Eckhart issued a Vindicatory Document providing chapter and verse of what he had been taught 22 Throughout the difficult months of late 1326 Eckhart had the full support of the local Dominican authorities as evident in Nicholas of Strasbourg s three official protests against the actions of the inquisitors in January 1327 23 On 13 February 1327 before the archbishop s inquisitors pronounced their sentence on Eckhart Eckhart preached a sermon in the Dominican church at Cologne and then had his secretary read out a public protestation of his innocence He stated in his protest that he had always detested everything wrong and should anything of the kind be found in his writings he now retracts Eckhart himself translated the text into German so that his audience the vernacular public could understand it The verdict then seems to have gone against Eckhart Eckhart denied competence and authority to the inquisitors and the archbishop and appealed to the Pope against the verdict 21 He then in the spring of 1327 set off for Avignon In Avignon Pope John XXII seems to have set up two tribunals to inquire into the case one of theologians and the other of cardinals 23 Evidence of this process is thin However it is known that the commissions reduced the 150 suspect articles down to 28 the document known as the Votum Avenionense gives in scholastic fashion the twenty eight articles Eckhart s defence of each and the rebuttal of the commissioners 23 On 30 April 1328 the pope wrote to Archbishop Henry of Virneburg that the case against Eckhart was moving ahead but added that Eckhart had already died modern scholarship suggests he may have died on 28 January 1328 24 The papal commission eventually confirmed albeit in modified form the decision of the Cologne commission against Eckhart 19 Pope John XXII issued a bull In agro dominico 27 March 1329 in which a series of statements from Eckhart is characterized as heretical another as suspected of heresy 25 At the close it is stated that Eckhart recanted before his death everything which he had falsely taught by subjecting himself and his writing to the decision of the Apostolic see It is possible that the Pope s unusual decision to issue the bull despite the death of Eckhart and the fact that Eckhart was not being personally condemned as a heretic was due to the pope s fear of the growing problem of mystical heresy and pressure from his ally Henry of Virneburg to bring the case to a definite conclusion 26 Rehabilitation edit This Rehabilitation relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this Rehabilitation by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Meister Eckhart news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Eckhart s status in the contemporary Catholic Church has been uncertain The Dominican Order pressed in the last decade of the 20th century for his full rehabilitation and confirmation of his theological orthodoxy Pope John Paul II voiced favorable opinion on this initiative even going as far as quoting from Eckhart s writings but the outcome was confined to the corridors of the Vatican In the spring of 2010 it was revealed that there had been a response from the Vatican in a letter dated 1992 Timothy Radcliffe then Master of the Dominicans and recipient of the letter summarized the contents as follows We tried to have the censure lifted on Eckhart 27 and were told that there was really no need since he had never been condemned by name just some propositions which he was supposed to have held and so we are perfectly free to say that he is a good and orthodox theologian 28 Professor Winfried Trusen of Wurzburg a correspondent of Radcliffe wrote in a defence of Eckhart to Cardinal Ratzinger later Pope Benedict XVI stating Only 28 propositions were censured but they were taken out of their context and impossible to verify since there were no manuscripts in Avignon 28 Influences editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2017 Eckhart was schooled in medieval scholasticism and was well acquainted with Aristotelianism and Augustinianism The Neo Platonism of Pseudo Dionysius the Areopagite asserted a great influence on him as reflected in his notions on the Gottheit beyond the God who can be named Teachings editSermons edit Although he was an accomplished academic theologian Eckhart s best remembered works are his highly unusual sermons in the vernacular Eckhart as a preaching friar attempted to guide his flock as well as monks and nuns under his jurisdiction with practical sermons on spiritual psychological transformation and New Testament metaphorical content related to the creative power inherent in disinterest dispassion or detachment citation needed The central theme of Eckhart s German sermons is the presence of God in the individual soul and the dignity of the soul of the just man Although he elaborated on this theme he rarely departed from it In one sermon Eckhart gives the following summary of his message When I preach I usually speak of detachment and say that a man should be empty of self and all things and secondly that he should be reconstructed in the simple good that God is and thirdly that he should consider the great aristocracy which God has set up in the soul such that by means of it man may wonderfully attain to God and fourthly of the purity of the divine nature 29 As Eckhart said in his trial defence his sermons were meant to inspire in listeners the desire above all to do some good citation needed In this he frequently used unusual language or seemed to stray from the path of orthodoxy which made him suspect to the Church during the tense years of the Avignon Papacy citation needed Theology proper edit See also Theology proper Deus absconditus and Deus otiosus This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Eckhart s vision God is primarily fecund Out of overabundance of love the fertile God gives birth to the Son the Word in all of us Clearly e this is rooted in the Neoplatonic notion of ebullience boiling over of the One that cannot hold back its abundance of Being Eckhart had imagined the creation not as a compulsory overflowing a metaphor based on a common hydrodynamic picture but as the free act of will of the triune nature of Deity refer Trinitarianism Another bold assertion is Eckhart s distinction between God and Godhead Gottheit in German meaning Godhood or Godhead state of being God These notions had been present in Pseudo Dionysius s writings and John the Scot s De divisione naturae but Eckhart with characteristic vigor and audacity reshaped the germinal metaphors into profound images of polarity between the Unmanifest and Manifest Absolute Eckhart taught that it is not in God to destroy anything which has being but he perfects all things 30 leading some scholars to conclude that he may have held to some form of universal salvation 31 Contemplative method edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message John Orme Mills notes that Eckhart did not leave us a guide to the spiritual life like St Bonaventure s Itinerarium the Journey of the Soul but that his ideas on this have to be condensed from his couple of very short books on suffering and detachment and sermons 32 According to Mills Eckhart s comments on prayer are only about contemplative prayer and detachment 32 According to Reiner Schurmann four stages can be discerned in Eckhart s understanding mystical development dissimilarity similarity identity breakthrough 2 Influence and study edit13th century edit Eckhart was one of the most influential 13th century Christian Neoplatonists in his day and remained widely read in the later Middle Ages 33 Some early twentieth century writers believed that Eckhart s work was forgotten by his fellow Dominicans soon after his death In 1960 however a manuscript in agro dominico was discovered containing six hundred excerpts from Eckhart clearly deriving from an original made in the Cologne Dominican convent after the promulgation of the bull condemning Eckhart s writings as notations from the bull are inserted into the manuscript 34 The manuscript came into the possession of the Carthusians in Basel demonstrating that some Dominicans and Carthusians had continued to read Eckhart s work It is also clear that Nicholas of Cusa Archbishop of Cologne in the 1430s and 1440s engaged in extensive study of Eckhart He assembled and carefully annotated a surviving collection of Eckhart s Latin works 35 As Eckhart was the only medieval theologian tried before the Inquisition as a heretic the subsequent 1329 condemnation of excerpts from his works cast a shadow over his reputation for some but followers of Eckhart in the lay group Friends of God existed in communities across the region and carried on his ideas under the leadership of such priests as John Tauler and Henry Suso 36 Johannes Tauler and Rulman Merswin edit Eckhart is considered by some to have been the inspirational layman referred to in Johannes Tauler s and Rulman Merswin s later writings in Strasbourg where he is known to have spent time although it is doubtful that he authored the simplistic Book of the Nine Rocks published by Merswin and attributed to The Friend of God from the Oberland On the other hand most scholars consider The Friend of God from the Oberland to be a pure fiction invented by Merswin to hide his authorship because of the intimidating tactics of the Inquisition at the time citation needed Theologia Germanica and the Reformation edit It has been suspected that his practical communication of the mystical path is behind the influential 14th century anonymous Theologia Germanica which was disseminated after his disappearance According to the medieval introduction of the document its author was an unnamed member of the Teutonic Order of Knights living in Frankfurt citation needed The lack of imprimatur from the Church and anonymity of the author of the Theologia Germanica did not lessen its influence for the next two centuries including Martin Luther at the peak of public and clerical resistance to Catholic indulgences and was viewed by some historians of the early 20th century as pivotal in provoking Luther s actions and the subsequent Protestant Reformation citation needed The following quote from the Theologia Germanica depicts the conflict between worldly and ecclesiastical affairs citation needed The two eyes of the soul of man cannot both perform their work at once but if the soul shall see with the right eye into eternity then the left eye must close itself and refrain from working and be as though it were dead For if the left eye be fulfilling its office toward outward things that is holding converse with time and the creatures then must the right eye be hindered in its working that is in its contemplation Therefore whosoever will have the one must let the other go for no man can serve two masters 37 Obscurity edit Eckhart was largely forgotten from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries barring occasional interest from thinkers such as Angelus Silesius 1627 1677 38 For centuries his writings were known only from a number of sermons found in old editions of Johann Tauler s sermons published by Kachelouen Leipzig 1498 and by Adam Petri Basel 1521 and 1522 Rediscovery edit Interest in Eckhart s works was revived in the early nineteenth century especially by German Romantics and Idealist philosophers 39 40 f Franz Pfeiffer s publication in 1857 of Eckhart s German sermons and treatises added greatly to this interest 42 A second important figure in the later nineteenth century for the recovery of Eckhart s works was Henry Denifle who was the first to recover Eckhart s Latin works from 1886 onwards 43 During the late nineteenth and early twentieth century much Catholic interest in Eckhart was concerned with the consistency of his thought in relation to Neoscholastic thought in other words to see whether Eckhart s thought could be seen to be essentially in conformity with orthodoxy as represented by his fellow Dominican Thomas Aquinas 44 Attribution of works edit Since the mid nineteenth century scholars have questioned which of the many pieces attributed to Eckhart should be considered genuine and whether greater weight should be given to works written in the vernacular or Latin Although the vernacular works survive today in over 200 manuscripts the Latin writings are found only in a handful of manuscripts Denifle and others have proposed that the Latin treatises which Eckhart prepared for publication very carefully were essential to a full understanding of Eckhart 45 In 1923 Eckhart s Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense also known as the Rechtsfertigung or Vindicatory Document was re published The Defense recorded Eckhart s responses against two of the Inquisitional proceedings brought against him at Cologne and details of the circumstances of Eckhart s trial The excerpts in the Defense from vernacular sermons and treatises described by Eckhart as his own served to authenticate a number of the vernacular works 46 Although questions remain about the authenticity of some vernacular works there is no dispute about the genuine character of the Latin texts presented in the critical edition 47 Eckhart as a mystic edit Since the 1960s scholars have debated whether Eckhart should be called a mystic 48 The philosopher Karl Albert had already argued that Eckhart had to be placed in the tradition of philosophical mysticism of Parmenides and Plato and the neo Platonist thinkers Plotinus Porphyry and Proclus 49 Heribert Fischer argued in the 1960s that Eckhart was a mediaeval theologian 49 Most recently Clint Johnson agreed with D T Suzuki and argued on the basis of Eckhart s appeals to experience that he is a mystic in the tradition of Augustine and Dionysius 50 51 Passages like the following Johnson contends point to experience beyond intellectual speculation and philosophizing Those who have never been familiar with inward things do not know what God is Like a man who has wine in his cellar but has never tasted it he does not know that it is good Sermon 10 DW I 164 5 8 52 Whoever does not understand what I say let him not burden his heart with it For as long as a man is not like this truth he will not understand what I say For this is a truth beyond thought that comes immediately from the heart of God Sermon 52 DW II 506 1 3 52 Kurt Flasch a member of the so called Bochum school of mediaeval philosophy 49 strongly reacted against the influence of New Age mysticism and all kinds of emotional subjective mysticism arguing for the need to free Eckhart from the Mystical Flood 49 He sees Eckhart strictly as a philosopher Flasch argues that the opposition between mystic and scholastic is not relevant because this mysticism in Eckhart s context is penetrated by the spirit of the university in which it occurred citation needed According to Hackett Eckhart is to be understood as an original hermeneutical thinker in the Latin tradition 49 To understand Eckhart he has to be properly placed within the western philosophical tradition of which he was a part 53 Josiah Royce an objective idealist saw Eckhart as a representative example of 13th and 14th century Catholic mystics on the verge of pronounced heresy but without original philosophical opinions Royce attributes Eckhart s reputation for originality to the fact that he translated scholastic philosophy from Latin into German and that Eckhart wrote about his speculations in German instead of Latin 54 262 265 266 Eckhart generally followed Thomas Aquinas s doctrine of the Trinity but Eckhart exaggerated the scholastic distinction between the divine essence and the divine persons The very heart of Eckhart s speculative mysticism according to Royce is that if through what is called in Christian terminology the procession of the Son the divine omniscience gets a complete expression in eternal terms still there is even at the centre of this omniscience the necessary mystery of the divine essence itself which neither generates nor is generated and which is yet the source and fountain of all the divine The Trinity is for Eckhart the revealed God and the mysterious origin of the Trinity is the Godhead the absolute God 54 279 282 Modern popularisation editTheology edit Matthew Fox edit Matthew Fox born 1940 is an American theologian 55 Formerly a priest and a member of the Dominican Order within the Roman Catholic Church Fox was an early and influential exponent of a movement that came to be known as Creation Spirituality The movement draws inspiration from the wisdom traditions of Christian scriptures and from the philosophies of such medieval Catholic visionaries as Hildegard of Bingen Thomas Aquinas Francis of Assisi Julian of Norwich Dante Alighieri Meister Eckhart and Nicholas of Cusa and others Fox has written a number of articles on Eckhart citation needed and a book titled Breakthrough Meister Eckhart s Creation Spirituality in New Translation 56 Modern philosophy edit In Conversation on a Country Path Martin Heidegger develops his concept of Gelassenheit or releasement from Meister Eckhart 57 Ian Moore argues that Heidegger consulted Eckhart again and again throughout his career to develop or support his own thought 58 The French philosopher Jacques Derrida distinguishes Eckhart s Negative Theology from his own concept of differance although John D Caputo in his influential The Tears and Prayers of Jacques Derrida emphasises the importance of that tradition for this thought 59 Modern spirituality edit See also Nondualism Meister Eckhart has become one of the timeless heroes of modern spirituality which to historian of religion 60 Wouter Hanegraaff thrives on an all inclusive syncretism 61 This syncretism started with the colonisation of Asia and the search of similarities between Eastern and Western religions 62 Western monotheism was projected onto Eastern religiosity by Western orientalists trying to accommodate Eastern religiosity to a Western understanding whereafter Asian intellectuals used these projections as a starting point to propose the superiority of those Eastern religions 62 Early on the figure of Meister Eckhart has played a role in these developments and exchanges 62 Renewed academic attention to Eckhart has attracted favorable attention to his work from contemporary non Christian mystics Eckhart s most famous single quote The Eye with which I see God is the same Eye with which God sees me is commonly cited by thinkers within neopaganism and ultimatist Buddhism as a point of contact between these traditions and Christian mysticism Schopenhauer edit The first European translation of Upanishads appeared in two parts in 1801 and 1802 62 The 19th century philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer was influenced by the early translations of the Upanishads which he called the consolation of my life 63 g Schopenhauer compared Eckhart s views to the teachings of Indian Christian and Islamic mystics and ascetics If we turn from the forms produced by external circumstances and go to the root of things we shall find that Sakyamuni and Meister Eckhart teach the same thing only that the former dared to express his ideas plainly and positively whereas Eckhart is obliged to clothe them in the garment of the Christian myth and to adapt his expressions thereto 64 Schopenhauer also stated Buddha Eckhart and I all teach essentially the same 65 Theosophical Society edit A major force in the mutual influence of Eastern and Western ideas and religiosity was the Theosophical Society 66 67 which also incorporated Eckhart in its notion of Theosophy 68 It searched for ancient wisdom in the East spreading Eastern religious ideas in the West 69 One of its salient features was the belief in Masters of Wisdom 70 h beings human or once human who have transcended the normal frontiers of knowledge and who make their wisdom available to others 70 The Theosophical Society also spread Western ideas in the East aiding a modernisation of Eastern traditions and contributing to a growing nationalism in the Asian colonies 71 Neo Vedanta edit Main article Neo Vedanta The Theosophical Society had a major influence on Hindu reform movements 67 i A major proponent of this neo Hinduism also called neo Vedanta 73 was Vivekananda 74 75 1863 1902 who popularised his modernised interpretation 76 of Advaita Vedanta in the 19th and early 20th century in both India and the West 75 emphasising anubhava personal experience 77 over scriptural authority 77 Vivekananda s teachings have been compared to Eckhart s teachings 78 79 In the 20th century Eckhart s thoughts were also compared to Shankara s Advaita Vedanta by Rudolf Otto in his Mysticism East and West 80 According to Richard King the aim of this work was to redeem Eckhart s mysticism in Protestant circles 81 attempting to establish the superiority of the German mysticism of Eckhart over the Indian mysticism of Sankara 65 Buddhist modernism edit Main article Buddhist modernism The Theosophical Society also had a major influence on Buddhist modernism 71 and the spread of this modernised Buddhism in the West 71 Along with Henry Steel Olcott and Anagarika Dharmapala Helena Blavatsky was instrumental in the Western transmission and revival of Theravada Buddhism 82 83 84 In 1891 Karl Eugen Neumann who translated large parts of the Tripitaka found parallels between Eckhart and Buddhism 85 which he published in Zwei buddhistische Suttas und ein Traktat Meister Eckharts Two Buddhist Suttas and a treatise of Meister Eckhart D T Suzuki who joined the Theosophical Society Adyar and was an active Theosophist 86 87 88 discerned parallels between Eckhart s teachings and Zen Buddhism in his Mysticism Christian and Buddhist 89 drawing similarities between Eckhart s pure nothingness ein bloss nicht and sunyata 90 Shizuteru Ueda a third generation Kyoto School philosopher and scholar in medieval philosophy showed similarities between Eckhart s soteriology and Zen Buddhism in an article 91 Reiner Schurmann OP a professor of philosophy while agreeing with Daisetz T Suzuki that there exist certain similarities between Zen Buddhism and Meister Eckhart s teaching also disputed Suzuki s contention that the ideas expounded in Eckhart s sermons closely approach Buddhist thought so closely indeed that one could stamp them almost definitely as coming out of Buddhist speculations 89 Schurmann s several clarifications included On the question of Time and Eckhart s view claimed as parallel to Buddhism in reducing awakening to instantaneity that the birth of the Word in the ground of the mind must accomplish itself in an instant in the eternal now that in fact Eckhart in this respect is rooted directly in the catechisis of the Fathers of the Church rather than merely derived from Buddhism 89 On the question of Isness and Suzuki s contention that the Christian experiences are not after all different from those of the Buddhist terminology is all that divides us that in Eckhart the Godhead s istigkeit translated as isness by Suzuki is a negation of all quiddities it says that God rather than non being is at the heart of all things thereby demonstrating with Eckhart s theocentrism that the istigkeit of the Godhead and the isness of a thing then refer to two opposite experiences in Meister Eckhart and Suzuki in the former to God and in the latter to our ordinary state of the mind and Buddhism s attempts to think pure nothingness 92 On the question of Emptiness and Eckhart s view claimed as parallel to Buddhist emphasis on the emptiness of all composite things that only a perfectly released person devoid of all comprehends seizes God that the Buddhist emptiness seems to concern man s relation to things while Eckhart s concern is with what is at the end of the road opened by detachment which is the mind espouses the very movement of the divine dehiscence it does what the Godhead does it lets all things be not only must God also abandon all of his own names and attributes if he is to reach into the ground of the mind this is already a step beyond the recognition of the emptiness of all composite things but God s essential being releasement becomes the being of a released man 93 Roman Curial statement edit With Joseph Ratzinger as Prefect the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in 1989 published a Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on some aspects of Christian meditation which opposed those who 94 propose abandoning the very idea of the One and Triune God who is Love in favor of an immersion in the indeterminate abyss of the divinity with a footnote stating Meister Eckhart speaks of an immersion in the indeterminate abyss of the divinity which is a darkness in which the light of the Trinity never shines Cf Sermo Ave Gratia Plena in fine J Quint Deutsche Predigten und Traktate Hanser 1955 261 Psychology and psychoanalysis edit Erich Fromm edit The notable humanistic psychoanalyst and philosopher Erich Fromm was another scholar who brought renewed attention in the West to Eckhart s writings drawing upon many of the latter s themes in his large corpus of work Eckhart was a significant influence in developing United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold s conception of spiritual growth through selfless service to humanity as detailed in his book of contemplations called Vagmarken Markings j Carl Jung edit In Aion Researches into the Phenomenology of Self 95 Carl Jung cites Eckhart approvingly in his discussion of Christ as a symbol of the archetypal self Jung sees Eckhart as a Christian Gnostic Meister Eckhart s theology knows a Godhead of which no qualities except unity and being can be predicated it is becoming it is not yet Lord of itself and it represents an absolute coincidence of opposites But its simple nature is of forms formless of becoming becomingless of beings beingless of things thingless etc Union of opposites is equivalent to unconsciousness so far as human logic goes for consciousness presupposes a differentiation into subject and object and a relation between them Page 193 As the Godhead is essentially unconscious so too is the man who lives in God In his sermon on The Poor in Spirit Matt 5 3 the Meister says The man who has this poverty has everything he was when he lived not in any wise neither in himself nor in truth nor in God He is so quit and empty of all knowing that no knowledge of God is alive in him for while he stood in the eternal nature of god there lived in him not another what lived there was himself And so we say this man is as empty of his own knowledge as he was when he was not anything he lets God work with what he will and he stands empty as when he came from God Therefore he should love God in the following way Love him as he is a not God a not spirit a not person a not image as a sheer pure clear One which he is sundered from all secondness and in this One let us sink eternally from nothing to nothing So help us God Amen Page 193 Jung summed up his view of Eckhart saying The world embracing spirit of Meister Eckhart knew without discursive knowledge the primordial mystical experience of India as well as of the Gnostics and was itself the finest flower on the tree of the Free Spirit that flourished at the beginning of the eleventh century Well might the writings of this Master be buried for six hundred years for his time was not yet come Only in the nineteenth century did he find a public at all capable of appreciating the grandeur of his mind Page 194 Meister Eckhart Prize edit Main article Meister Eckhart Prize In popular culture edit In Jacob s Ladder Louis the main character s friend attributes the following quote to Eckhart You know what he Eckhart said The only thing that burns in Hell is the part of you that won t let go of your life your memories your attachments They burn em all away But they re not punishing you he said They re freeing your soul If you re frightened of dying and holding on you ll see devils tearing your life away But if you ve made your peace then the devils are really angels freeing you from the Earth 96 citation needed In Z213 Exit by Dimitris Lyacos the same quote attributed to Eckhart appears in a slightly different wording Your own are burning and your memories and you don t want to leave them Everything will burn to the end you suffer but nobody is punishing you they are just setting your soul free Don t be afraid because while you fear death they will rend your soul like demons Only calm down and you will see the angels who are setting you free and then you will be free 97 In the book The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson Eckhart is mentioned in a story Marianne Engel recounts to the unnamed protagonist about her days in the Engelthal Monastery Meister Eckhart would not even admit that God was good Eckhart s position was that anything that was good can become better and whatever may become better may become best God cannot be referred to as good better or best because He is above all things If a man says that God is wise the man is lying because anything that is wise can become wiser Anything that a man might say about God is incorrect even calling Him by the name of God God is superessential nothingness and transcendent Being beyond all words and beyond all understanding The best a man can do is remain silent because anytime he prates on about God he is committing the sin of lying The true master knows that if he had a God he could understand he would never hold Him to be God 98 Eckhart is also referenced in J D Salinger s Franny and Zooey In a letter to Zooey Buddy says I can t help thinking you d make a damn site better adjusted actor if Seymour and I hadn t thrown in the Upanishads and the Diamond Sutra and Eckhart and all our other old loves with the rest of your recommended reading when you were small 99 The third movement of John Adams s Harmonielehre symphony 1985 is titled Meister Eckhart and Quackie which imagines the mystic floating through space with the composer s daughter Emily nicknamed Quackie on his back whispering secrets of grace in his ear 100 Eckhart Tolle quotes Meister Eckhart in The Power of Now as saying Time is what keeps the light from reaching us 101 Works edit nbsp Manuscript Soest Stadtarchiv und Wissenschaftliche Stadtbibliothek Codex Nr 33 folium 57 verso a bThe publication of the modern critical edition of Eckhart s German and Latin works began in 1936 and was completed in April 2022 102 Latin works edit One difficulty with Eckhart s Latin writings is that they clearly represent only a small portion of what he planned to write Eckhart describes his plans to write a vast Opus Tripartitum Three Part Work Unfortunately all that exists today of the first part the Work of Propositions is the Prologue illustrating the first proposition with Eckhart intending the first part alone to consist of over one thousand propositions 103 The second part called the Work of Questions no longer exists The third part the Work of Commentaries is the major surviving Latin work by Eckhart consisting of a Prologue six commentaries and fifty six sermons 104 It used to be thought that this work was begun while Eckhart was in Paris between 1311 and 1313 however recent manuscript discoveries mean that much of what survives must be dated to before 1310 105 The surviving Latin works are therefore The early Quaestiones Parisiensis Parisian Questions 106 Prologus generalis in Opus tripartitium General Prologue to the Three Part Work 107 Prologus in Opus propositionum Prologue to the Work of Propositions 108 Prologus in Opus expositionum Prologue to the Work of Commentaries 109 Expositio Libri Genesis Commentary on the Book of Genesis 110 Liber Parabolorum Genesis Book of the Parables of Genesis 111 Expositio Libri Exodi Commentary on the Book of Exodus 112 Expositio Libri Sapientiae Commentary on the Book of Wisdom 113 Sermones et Lectiones super Ecclesiastici c 24 23 31 Sermons and Lectures on the Twenty fourth chapter of Ecclesiasticus 114 Fragments of the Commentary on the Song of Songs survive Expositio sancti Evangelii secundum Iohannem Commentary on John 115 Various sermons 116 including some preserved in the collection Paradisus anime intelligentis Paradise of the Intelligent Soul Paradise of the Intellectual Soul 117 A brief treatise on the Lord s Prayer largely an anthology culled from earlier authorities The Defense 118 Although not composed by Eckhart also relevant are the Vatican archive materials relating to Eckhart s trial the Votum theologicum or Opinion of the Avignon commission who investigated Eckhart and the bull In agro dominico Vernacular works edit Questions concerning the authenticity of the Middle High German texts attributed to Eckhart are much greater than for the Latin texts The problems involve not only whether a particular sermon or treatise is to be judged authentic or pseudonymous but also given the large number of manuscripts and the fragmentary condition of many of them whether it is even possible to establish the text for some of the pieces accepted as genuine 119 Eckhart s sermons are versions written down by others from memory or from notes meaning that the possibility for error was much greater than for the carefully written Latin treatises The critical edition of Eckhart s works traditionally accepted 86 sermons as genuine based on the research done by its editor Josef Quint 1898 1976 120 during the 20th century Of these Sermons 1 16b are proved authentic by direct citation in the Defense Sermons 17 24 have such close textual affinities with Latin sermons recognised as genuine that they are accepted Sermons 25 86 are harder to verify and judgements have been made on the basis of style and content 121 Georg Steer took over the editorship in 1983 122 Between 2003 and 2016 the critical edition under Georg Steer added another 30 vernacular sermons Nos 87 to 117 in volumes 4 1 and 4 2 123 Because six sermons exist in an A and B version 5a b 13 13a 16a b 20a b 36a b und 54a b 124 the final total of vernacular sermons is 123 numbered consecutively from 1 to 117 When Franz Pfeiffer published his edition of Eckhart s works in 1857 he included seventeen vernacular treatises he considered to be written by Eckhart Modern scholarship is much more cautious however and the critical edition accepts only four of Eckhart s vernacular treatises as genuine The longest of these the Reden der Unterweisung Counsels on Discernment Discourses on Instruction Talks of Instruction 125 is probably Eckhart s earliest surviving work a set of spiritual instructions that he gave to young Dominicans in the 1290s It was clearly a popular work with fifty one manuscripts known 126 A second vernacular treatise the Liber Benedictus Book Benedictus in fact consists of two related treatises firstly Daz buoch der gotlichen trœstunge The Book of the Divine Consolation 127 and secondly a sermon entitled Von dem edeln menschen Of the Nobleman 128 The final vernacular treatise accepted as genuine by the critical edition is entitled Von Abgescheidenheit On Detachment 129 However this treatise is generally today not thought to be written by Eckhart 130 Modern editions and translations edit Meister Eckhart Die deutschen und lateinischen Werke Herausgegeben im Auftrage der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft Stuttgart and Berlin Verlag W Kohlhammer 11 Vols 1936 2022 This is the critical edition of Meister Eckhart s works The Latin works comprise six volumes and were completed in 2022 The Middle High German works comprise five volumes and were completed in 2016 Eckhart the German Works 64 Homilies for the Liturgical Year I De Tempore Introduction Translation and Notes Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press and London SPCK 1981 Re published in paperback without notes and a foreword by John O Donohue as Meister Eckhart Selections from His Essential Writings New York 2005 Meister Eckhart Teacher and Preacher trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Frank Tobin New York and London Paulist Press SPCK 1987 C de B Evans Meister Eckhart by Franz Pfeiffer 2 vols London Watkins 1924 and 1931 Meister Eckhart A Modern Translation trans Raymond B Blakney New York Harper and Row 1941 ISBN 0 06 130008 X a translation of many of the works including treatises 28 sermons and Defense Otto Karrer Meister Eckhart Speaks The Philosophical Library Inc New York 1957 James M Clark and John V Skinner eds and trans Treatises and Sermons of Meister Eckhart New York Octagon Books 1983 Reprint of Harper and Row ed 1958 London Faber amp Faber 1958 Armand Maurer ed Master Eckhart Parisian Questions and Prologues Toronto Canada Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies 1974 Meister Eckhart Sermons and Treatises trans by M O C Walshe 3 vols London Watkins 1979 1981 later printed at Longmead Shaftesbury Dorset Element Books 1979 1990 Now published as The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart trans and ed by Maurice O C Walshe rev by Bernard McGinn New York The Crossroad Publishing Company 2009 Matthew Fox Breakthrough Meister Eckhart s Creation Spirituality in New Translation Garden City New York 1980 Meister Eckhart Selected Writings ed and trans by Oliver Davies London Penguin 1994 Meister Eckhart s Book of the Heart Meditations for the Restless Soul by Jon M Sweeney and Mark S Burrows Charlottesville VA Hampton Roads 2017 Paradox at Play Metaphor in Meister Eckhart s Sermons with Previously Unpublished Sermons by Clint Johnson Washington DC Catholic University of America Press 2023 translations of all previously unpublished sermons Pfeiffer nos 87 109 in DW IV volumes 1 and 2 and Sermon 54a which is not in Walshe Flasch s new manuscript for Sermon 52 and several other sermons See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Philosophy portalBook of the 24 Philosophers Brethren of the Free Spirit Essence energies distinction Gonsalvus of Spain Sister Catherine TreatiseNotes edit Pronounced ˈmaɪ stɐ ˈɛkʰaʀt Meister is German for Master referring to the academic title Magister in theologia that he obtained in Paris His Defence is famous for his reasoned arguments to all challenged articles of his writing and his refutation of heretical intent There is no record of the date and place of his death but John XXII records that he was already dead when his propositions were condemned 5 Aside from a rather striking metaphor of fertility Franz von Baader 1765 1841 for instance studied Eckhart in the early 19th century 41 Von Baader was a German Roman Catholic philosopher and theologian He studied under Abraham Gottlob Werner at Freiberg travelled through several of the mining districts in north Germany and for four years 1792 1796 resided in England There he became acquainted with the ideas of David Hume David Hartley and William Godwin which were all distasteful to him But he also came into contact with the mystical speculations of Meister Eckhart Louis Claude de Saint Martin 1743 1803 and above all those of Jakob Boehme which were more to his liking In 1796 he returned from England and came into contact with Friedrich Schelling and the works he published during this period were manifestly influenced by that philosopher And he called his poodle Atman 63 See also Ascended Master Teachings The Theosophical Society and the Arya Samaj were united from 1878 to 1882 as the Theosophical Society of the Arya Samaj 72 Dusen t he counterpoint to this enormously exposed and public life is Eckhart and Jan van Ruysbroek They really give me balance and a more necessary sense of humor Henry P van Dusen Dag Hammarskjold A Biographical Interpretation of Markings Faber and Faber London 1967 pp 49 50 References edit Mojsisch Burkhard Summerell Orrin F Meister Eckhart plato stanford edu Retrieved 11 September 2020 a b c d Meister Eckhart German mystic by Father Reiner Schurmann O P on Britannica Meister Eckhart Edmund Colledge Bernard McGinn 1981 Meister Eckhart the Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense Paulist Press p 77 ISBN 978 0 8091 2370 4 Colledge Edmund 1981 Historical Data Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense Colledge Edmund McGinn Bernard New York Paulist Press p 12 ISBN 0 8091 0322 2 OCLC 8410552 John XXII 27 March 1329 In Argo Dominico Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense Colledge Edmund McGinn Bernard New York Paulist Press 1981 p 81 ISBN 0 8091 0322 2 OCLC 8410552 Hackett 2012 Bernard McGinn The Mystical Thought of Meister Eckhart New York Crossroad Publishing Company 2001 p 2 points out that previous scholarship which had placed Eckhart s birth in Hochheim is incorrect Hochheim is used in the sources to indicate Eckhart s family name not his birthplace Walter Senner Meister Eckhart s Life Training Career and Trial in Jeremiah Hackett ed A Companion to Meister Eckhart Leiden Brill 2012 7 84 Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 5 Cairns Earl 1996 Christianity through the Centuries Zondervan Clark James 1957 Meister Eckhart New York Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd p 11 This supposition is founded on Eckhart s frequent citation with respect of Albert the Great who had taught at Cologne until his death in 1280 and more particularly his statement in his 1294 Easter Sermon that Albert often used to say This I know as we know things for we all know very little Bernard McGinn The Mystical Thought of Meister Eckhart New York Crossroad Publishing Company 2001 p 2 The evidence for Eckhart s studies in Cologne is similarly circumstantial as recounted in Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 7 McGinn Eckhart p 4 The Parisian Questions were first discovered in 1927 They are translated with an introduction in Armand Maurer ed Master Eckhart Parisian Questions and Prologues Toronto Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies 1974 On the possible dating of the works written in this period see McGinn Eckhart pp 5 9 McGinn Eckhart p 9 cf Urkundenbuch der Stadt Strassburg iii 236 a b c Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 10 a b McGinn Eckhart 2001 p 14 a b cf the document in Preger i 471 more accurately in ALKG ii 627 sqq In the early twentieth century the suspicion of Eckhart was often attributed to tensions between Dominicans and Franciscans This narrative however has been replaced by one which emphasizes the broader context of fears concerning the Heresy of the Free Spirit See Bernard McGinn The Harvest of Mysticism 2005 p 103 a b c McGinn Eckhart 2001 p 17 The general assumption in modern scholarship on Eckhart has been that the date of Eckhart s death is lost McGinn Eckhart 2001 p 17 however trusts the argument of Walter Senner that a seventeenth century Dominican source noted that Eckhart was remembered in German convents on 28 January suggesting this day in 1328 was the date of his death Some early twentieth century writers suggested Eckhart may have not in fact died but continued his ministry in anonymity but there is no single medieval source that supports this suspicion The bull is given complete in ALKG ii 636 640 McGinn Eckhart 2001 p 18 Noble Charissa Cage Satie and Eckhart A Hermeneutical Look at John Cage s Appropriation of Eckhart through In A Landscape a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Meister Eckhart rehabilitated by the Pope Academici com Archived from the original on 12 September 2010 Retrieved 21 February 2014 Marcus Braybrooke Beacons of Light 100 People who Have Shaped The History of Humankind pp 316 317 O Books 2009 ISBN 978 1 84694 185 6 Talks of Instruction 22 Ramelli A Larger Hope 202 206 a b John Orme Mills Meister Eckhart and Prayer Eckhart Society As McGinn Eckhart p 1 points out about three hundred manuscripts containing Eckhart s German sermons both authentic and pseudonymous survive Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 19 Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 20 Christianity through the Centuries Earle E Cairns Zondervan 1996 Theologia Germanica public domain McGinn Eckhart p 1 McGinn Eckhart p 1 Hackett 2012 p xxvii Ffytche 2011 p 33 This was in the second volume of his Deutsche Mystiker Stuttgart Pfeiffer s edition included 111 sermons and 18 treatises as well as a number of sayings and fragments but many of these are now recognised to be later works falsely attributed to Eckhart Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 62 Mention could also be made of Franz Jostes Meister Eckhart und seine Junger ungedruckte Texte zur Geschichte der deutschen Mystik Collectanea Friburgensia iv Freiburg 1895 McGinn Eckhart p 20 Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 62 Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 63 Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 64 Hackett 2012 p xxii a b c d e Hackett 2012 p xxiii Suzuki 1957 Johnson 2023 p 3 a b Johnson 2023 p 85 Hackett 2012 p xxiv a b Royce Josiah 1898 Meister Eckhart Studies of good and evil a series of essays upon problems of philosophy and life New York D Appleton pp 261 297 OCLC 271174795 Peterborough Peterborough Examiner Eckhart Meister 1980 Breakthrough Meister Eckhart s creation spirituality in new translation Translated by Matthew Fox Garden City N Y Doubleday ISBN 0 385 17045 9 OCLC 6555678 Heidegger M Discourse on Thinking Trans John M Anderson and E Hans Freund Harpers and Row 1966 Moore I A Eckhart Heidegger and the Imperative of Releasement SUNY Press 2019 p xi Derrida J How to Avoid Speaking Denials pages 3 70 in Languages of the Unsayable The Play of Negativity in Literature and Literary Theory Stanley Budick and Wolfgang Iser eds 1989 Staff 2013 dhr prof dr W J Wouter Hanegraaff University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 22 December 2017 Retrieved 22 December 2017 Hanegraaff 1996 a b c d King 2002 a b Renard 2010 p 178 Schopenhauer The World as Will and Representation Vol II Ch XLVIII a b King 2002 p 125 Renard 2010 p 185 188 a b Sinari 2000 Partridge 2006 p 3 note 2 Lavoie 2012 a b Gilchrist 1996 p 32 a b c McMahan 2008 Johnson 1994 p 107 King 2002 p 93 Renard 2010 p 189 193 a b Michaelson 2009 p 79 81 Rambachan 1994 a b Rambachan 1994 p 1 Ganapathy 2003 p 247 Akhilananda Swami 2012 King 2002 p 125 128 King 2002 p 126 McMahan 2008 p 98 Gombrich 1996 p 185 188 Fields 1992 p 83 118 Moran 2012 p 672 Algeo 2005 Algeo 2007 Tweed 2005 a b c Schurmann 2001 p 217 King 2002 p 156 Shizuteru Ueda 1989 Eckhart um zen am problem Schurmann 2001 p 218 Schurmann 2001 p 219 Ratzinger Joseph Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on some aspects of Christian Meditation Orationis formas www vatican va Retrieved 6 April 2023 The Collected Works of C G Jung Volume 9 Part II Princeton University Press 1959 Rubin 1990 p 82 Lyacos 2010 p 88 Andrew Davidson The Gargoyle pp 140 41 Salinger J D 1955 Franny and Zooey Boston Little Brown and Company pp 59 60 ISBN 0 316 76949 5 Simon Rattle amp City of Birmingham SO 1994 CD booklet Tolle Eckhart 1997 The Power of Now Meister Eckhart Die deutschen und lateinischen Werke Herausgegeben im Auftrage der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft Stuttgart and Berlin Kohlhammer Verlag 11 Vols 1936 2022 The Latin works comprise 6 volumes widely referred to as LW1 6 while the German works comprise 5 volumes widely referred to as DW1 5 Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 64 This Prologue exists in two manuscripts discovered by Denifle one discovered in Erfurt in 1880 and the other in Kues in 1886 Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 65 Bernard McGinn The Harvest of Mysticism 2005 p 98 LW 1 27 83 The English translation is Armand Maurer ed Master Eckhart Parisian Questions and Prologues Toronto Canada Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies 1974 LW 1 148 165 An English translation is in Armand Maurer ed Master Eckhart Parisian Questions and Prologues Toronto Canada Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies 1974 pp 77 104 LW 1 166 182 LW 1 183 184 LW 1 185 444 The Prologue and the commentary on Genesis 3 are translated into English in Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 pp 82 121 LW 1 447 702 LW 2 1 227 This is translated into English in its entirety in Meister Eckhart Teacher and Preacher trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Frank Tobin New York and London Paulist Press SPCK 1987 pp 41 146 LW 2 301 643 LW 2 29 300 The commentary on Ecclesiasticus 24 29 is translated into English in Meister Eckhart Teacher and Preacher trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Frank Tobin New York and London Paulist Press SPCK 1987 pp 174 181 LW 3 The commentary on John 1 1 14 is translated into English in Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 pp 122 173 The commentary on John 14 8 is translated into English in Meister Eckhart Teacher and Preacher trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Frank Tobin New York and London Paulist Press SPCK 1987 pp 182 205 Markus Professor 22 April 2011 LW4 An extensive list of English translations of the sermons Markusvinzent blogspot co uk Retrieved 21 February 2014 Around half of the 64 sermons in the Paradisus were by Eckhart with the majority contributed by Dominicans On the origin and purpose of the Paradisus with dates around 1330 40 generally suggested see Bernard McGinn The Harvest of Mysticism 2005 p 321 2 which reverses some of the arguments of McGinn 2001 Selections are translated into English in Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 pp 71 76 Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 p 66 Josef Quint Eckhart de 24 July 2017 Retrieved 24 July 2017 Markus Professor 22 April 2011 An extensive list of English translations of the sermons Markusvinzent blogspot co uk Retrieved 21 February 2014 Georg Steer Eckhart de 24 July 2017 Retrieved 24 July 2017 Die deutschen Werke Eckhart de 24 July 2017 Retrieved 24 July 2017 Predigten Eckhart de 22 August 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2018 LW 5 137 376 Bernard McGinn The Harvest of Mysticism 2005 p 95 DW 5 1 105 DW 5 109 119 DW 5 400 434 All four vernacular treatises are translated into English in Meister Eckhart The Essential Sermons Commentaries Treatises and Defense trans and ed by Bernard McGinn and Edmund Colledge New York Paulist Press 1981 Bernard McGinn The Harvest of Mysticism 2005 p 632 Sources editAkhilananda Swami 2012 Hindu Psychology Its Meaning for the West Routledge Algeo Adele S July 2005 Beatrice Lane Suzuki and Theosophy in Japan Theosophical History XI Algeo Adele S January February 2007 Beatrice Lane Suzuki An American Theosophist in Japan Quest 95 1 13 17 Boyd MacMillan Eolene M 2006 Transformation James Loder Mystical Spirituality and James Hillman Peter Lang Herman Buttner ed Schriften und Predigten vol 1 Jena Eugen Diederichs 1903 Herman Buttner ed Schriften und Predigten vol 2 Jena Eugen Diederichs 1909 Augustine Daniels O S B ed Eine lateinische Rechtfertigungsschrift des Meister Eckharts Beitrage zur Geschichte der Philosophie des Mittelalters 23 5 Munster 1923 1 4 12 13 34 35 65 66 Fields Rick 1992 How the Swans Came to the Lake A Narrative History of Buddhism in America Boston amp London Shambhala Ffytche Matt 2011 The Foundation of the Unconscious Schelling Freud and the Birth of the Modern Psyche Cambridge University Press Ganapathy 2003 The Way of the Siddhas In K R Sundararajan Bithika Mukerji 2003 Hindu Spirituality Motilal Banarsidass Publ Gilchrist Cherry 1996 Theosophy The Wisdom of the Ages HarperSanFrancisco Gombrich Richard F 1996 Theravada Buddhism A Social History from Ancient Benares to Modern Colombo London and New York Routledge Hackett Jeremiah 2012 A Companion to Meister Eckhart Brill Hanegraaff Wouter J 1996 New Age Religion and Western Culture Esotericism in the Mirror of Secular Thought Boston Massachusetts US Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 10696 3 Johnson K Paul 1994 The masters revealed Madam Blavatsky and the myth of the Great White Lodge SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 2063 9 Johnson Clint 2023 Paradox at Play Metaphor in Meister Eckhart s Sermons with Previously Unpublished Sermons Catholic University of America Press ISBN 978 0 81 323529 5 Franz Jostes ed Meister Eckhart und seine Junger Ungedruckte Texte zur Geschichte der deutschen Mystik Berlin De Gruyter 1972 Series Deutsche Neudrucke Texte des Mittelalters Thomas Kaepelli Kurze Mitteilungen uber mittelalterliche Dominikanerschriftsteller Archivum Fratrum Praedicatorum 10 1940 pp 293 94 Thomas Kaepelli Scriptores ordinis Praedicatorum medii aevi Vol I A F Rome 1970 King Richard 2002 Orientalism and Religion Post Colonial Theory India and The Mystic East Routledge Gustav Landauer ed and trans Meister Eckharts mystische Schriften Berlin Karl Schnabel 1903 M H Laurent Autour du proces de Maitre Eckhart Les documents des Archives Vaticanes Divus Thomas Piacenza 39 1936 pp 331 48 430 47 Lavoie Jeffrey D 2012 The Theosophical Society The History of a Spiritualist Movement Universal Publishers McMahan David L 2008 The Making of Buddhist Modernism Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518327 6 Michaelson Jay 2009 Everything Is God The Radical Path of Nondual Judaism Shambhala Moran Dermot 2012 Meister Eckhart in 20th Century Philosophy In Jeremiah Hacket 2012 A Companion to Meister Eckhart Brill Partridge Christipher Hugh 2006 Understanding the Dark Side Western Demonology Satanic Panics and Alien Abduction University of Chester Franz Pelster S J ed Articuli contra Fratrem Aychardum Alamannum Vat lat 3899 f 123r 130v in Ein Gutachten aus dem Eckehart Prozess in Avignon Aus der Geistewelt des Mittelalters Festgabe Martin Grabmann Beitrage Supplement 3 Munster 1935 pp 1099 1124 Franz Pfeiffer ed Deutsche Mystiker des vierzehnten Jahrhunderts vol II Meister Eckhart 2nd ed Gottingen Vandenhoeck 1906 Josef Quint ed and trans Meister Eckehart Deutsche Predigten und Traktate Munich Carl Hanser 1955 Josef Quint ed Textbuch zur Mystik des deutschen Mittelalters Meister Eckhart Johannes Tauler Heinrich Seuse Halle Saale M Niemeyer 1952 Rambachan Anatanand 1994 The Limits of Scripture Vivekananda s Reinterpretation of the Vedas University of Hawaii Press Renard Philip 2010 Non Dualisme De directe bevrijdingsweg Cothen Uitgeverij Juwelenschip Rubin Bruce Joel Jacob s Ladder Mark Mixson general editor The Applause Screenplay Series Applause Theatre Book Publishers 1990 ISBN 1 55783 086 X Schurmann Reiner 2001 Wandering Joy Meister Eckhart s Mystical Philosophy Lindisfarne Books Sinari Ramakant 2000 Advaita and Contemporary Indian Philosophy In Chattopadhyana gen ed History of Science Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization Volume II Part 2 Advaita Vedanta Delhi Centre for Studies in Civilizations Suzuki Daisetz Teitaro 1957 Mysticism Christian and Buddhist Allen amp Unwin Gabriel Thery Edition critique des pieces relatives au proces d Eckhart continues dans le manuscrit 33b de la Bibliotheque de Soest Archives d histoire litteraire et doctrinal du moyen age 1 1926 pp 129 268 Tweed Thomas A 2005 American Occultism and Japanese Buddhism Albert J Edmunds D T Suzuki and Translocative History PDF Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 32 2 249 281 archived from the original PDF on 22 May 2012 retrieved 19 April 2013 James Midgely Clark Meister Eckhart An Introduction to the Study of His Works with an Anthology of His Sermons Edinburgh Thomas Nelson 1957 Shizuteru Ueda Die Gottesgeburt in der Seele und der Durchbruch zur Gottheit Die mystische Anthropologie Meister Eckharts und ihre Konfrontation mit der Mystik des Zen Buddhismus Gutersloh Mohn 1965 Reiner Schurmann Meister Eckhart Mystic and Philosopher Bloomington Indiana University Press 1978 Matthew Fox ed Breakthrough Meister Eckhart s Creation Spirituality in New Translation Garden City New York Doubleday 1980 Bernard McGinn The Mystical Thought of Meister Eckhart The Man from whom God Hid Nothing New York Herder amp Herder 2001 Further reading editJeanne Ancelet Hustache Master Eckhart and the Rhineland Mystics New York and London Harper and Row Longmans 1957 Leonardo Vittorio Arena The Shadows of the Masters ebook 2013 James M Clark The Great German Mystics New York Russell and Russell 1970 reprint of Basil Blackwell edition Oxford 1949 James M Clark trans Henry Suso Little Book of Eternal Wisdom and Little Book of Truth London Faber 1953 Cesare Cata Il Cardinale e l Eretico Nicola Cusano e il problema della eredita eterodossa di Meister Eckhart nel suo pensiero in Viator Medieval and Renaissance Studies UCLA University Volume 41 No 2 2010 pp 269 291 Oliver Davies God Within The Mystical Tradition of Northern Europe London Darton Longman and Todd 1988 Oliver Davies Meister Eckhart Mystical Theologian London SPCK 1991 Eckardus Theutonicus homo doctus et sanctus Fribourg University of Fribourg 1993 Robert K Forman Meister Eckhart Mystic as Theologian Rockport Massachusetts Shaftesbury Dorset Element Books 1991 Gundolf Gieraths O P Life in Abundance Meister Eckhart and the German Dominican Mystics of the 14th Century Spirituality Today Supplement Autumn 1986 Joel F Harrington Dangerous Mystic Meister Eckhart s Path to the God Within New York Penguin Press 2018 Aldous Huxley The Perennial Philosophy An Interpretation of the Great Mystics East and West New York HarperCollins 1945 Amy Hollywood The Soul as Virgin Wife Mechthild of Magdeburg Marguerite Porete and Meister Eckhart Notre Dame and London University of Notre Dame Press 1996 Rufus Jones The Flowering of Mysticism in the Fourteenth Century New York Hafner Publishing Co 1971 facsimile of 1939 ed Bernard McGinn Eckhart s Condemnation Reconsidered in The Thomist vol 44 1980 Bernard McGinn ed Meister Eckhart and the Beguine Mystics Hadewijch of Brabant Mechthild of Magdeburg and Marguerite Porete New York Continuum 1994 Ben Morgan On Becoming God Late Medieval Mysticism and the Modern Western Self New York Fordham UP 2013 Arthur Schopenhauer The World as Will and Representation Vol II ISBN 0 486 21762 0 Cyprian Smith The Way of Paradox Spiritual Life as Taught by Meister Eckhart New York Paulist Press 1988 Frank Tobin Meister Eckhart Thought and Language Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 1986 Denys Turner The Darkness of God Negativity in Christian Mysticism Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1995 Winfried Trusen Der Prozess gegen Meister Eckhart Fribourg University of Fribourg 1988 Andrew Weeks German Mysticism from Hildegard of Bingen to Ludwig Wittgenstein A Literary and Intellectual History Albany State University of New York Press 1993 Richard Woods O P Eckhart s Way Wilmington Delaware Glazier 1986 Collegeville Minnesota Liturgical Press 1991 Richard Woods O P Meister Eckhart The Gospel of Peace and Justice Tape Cassette Program Chicago Center for Religion amp Society 1993 Richard Woods O P Meister Eckhart Master of Mystics London Continuum 2010 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Meister Eckhart nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Meister Eckhart nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Meister Eckhart The Catholic Encyclopedia Volume V Published 1909 New York Robert Appleton Company Nihil Obstat 1 May 1909 Remy Lafort Censor Imprimatur John M Farley Archbishop of New York Meister Eckhart s Sermons translated into English by Claud Field at Christian Classics Ethereal Library Meister Eckhart und seine Zeit German Website most texts in German translation some in Latin Meister Eckhart Bibliography 1800 1997 Meister Eckhart Bibliography since 1995 Mojsisch B Summerell O F Meister Eckhart In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Meister Eckhart 1260 1328 article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Meister Eckhart German mystic by Father Reiner Schurmann O P on Britannica Brown Arthur The Man From Whom God Hid Nothing The Eckhart Society Research by catholic scholars The Meister Eckhart Site including full text of the papal bull against Meister Eckhart Works by or about Meister Eckhart at Internet Archive Works by Meister Eckhart at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Literature by and about Meister Eckhart in the German National Library catalogue Works by and about Meister Eckhart in the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek German Digital Library Meister Eckhart Repertorium Historical Sources of the German Middle Ages Geschichtsquellen des deutschen Mittelalters Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meister Eckhart amp oldid 1194379610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.