In conversation with the Wisdom Community, Cynthia Bourgeault provides further reflections and responds to a number of questions arising from her Eastertide practice challenge.
An introduction to a little known contemporary mystical gem, The Mystery of Death by Hungarian-born Jesuit theologian Ladislaus Boros, which has been a mainstay of Cynthia’s own spiritual work for more than forty years. She teaches against the backdrop of our own point in history, “where death has weighed so heavily on people’s hearts these past few years and our own individual and collective terror of it has been so brutally exposed.”
In The Corner of Fourth and Nondual, a title inspired by Thomas Merton’s moment of revelation ‘at the Corner of Fourth and Walnut’ in his celebrated essay ‘A Member of […]
Hail, holy Queen, Mother of Mercy!
Our life, our sweetness, and our hope! To thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve, to thee do we send up our sighs, mourning and weeping in this valley, of tears.
“Since the Wisdom principle is imperishable in the human soul, it is built right into the blueprint of who we are as people.” (Living Presence, Chapter 1, Cynthia Bourgeault)
Wisdom Waypoints (formerly Northeast Wisdom) hosted its first Wisdom Practice Day on August 28, 2021. This video contains Cynthia’s opening remarks about the state of the Wisdom Community.
Cynthia Bourgeault writes a short guide to Jacob Boehme’s work. What’s the best way to approach his work? Experientially. To gain access to the complex and beautiful cosmology of Jacob Boehme there is one all-important secret: it is necessary to approach him with the same mind in which he received his mystical illumination.