Cynthia Bourgeault

Cynthia Bourgeault

CYNTHIA BOURGEAULT is a modern-day mystic, Episcopal priest, and theologian. She divides her time between solitude at her seaside hermitage in Maine and traveling globally to promote the rediscovery of the Christian contemplative path. She is a core faculty member at the Center for Action and Contemplation and founding director of an international network of Wisdom Schools. Cynthia's articles and essays have appeared in many journals and publications, and she is the author of numerous books, including The Wisdom Jesus, The Meaning of Mary Magdalene, The Holy Trinity and the Law of Three, and The Heart of Centering Prayer.

Cynthia Bourgeault

CYNTHIA BOURGEAULT is a modern-day mystic, Episcopal priest, and theologian. She divides her time between solitude at her seaside hermitage in Maine and traveling globally to promote the rediscovery of the Christian contemplative path. She is a core faculty member at the Center for Action and Contemplation and founding director of an international network of Wisdom Schools. Cynthia's articles and essays have appeared in many journals and publications, and she is the author of numerous books, including The Wisdom Jesus, The Meaning of Mary Magdalene, The Holy Trinity and the Law of Three, and The Heart of Centering Prayer.

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GUIDES

Christianity’s Best-Kept Secret: On Cynthia Bourgeault and The Cloud of Unknowing

“God can be held fast by love, but by thought never.”

The questions that arise upon encounter with this and other such confounding lines from the Christian mystical classic The Cloud of Unknowing(What is meant by “God,” anyway? What is love? What can be “known” beyond thought?) are what keep many potential readers from approaching the great fourteenth-century work. But the Cloud was in fact not intended for spiritual professionals or academics. It is a series of intimate instructions in the life of prayer written by an elder (or eldress maybe—the author remains unknown) to a younger disciple. That it contains many seemingly confusing statements may simply have to do with the fact that, to paraphrase Shunryu Suzuki, “what isn’t paradoxical isn’t true.”

More than forty years ago, the people who devised the practice now called Centering Prayer—among them the Trappists Thomas Keating and William Meninger—used The Cloud of Unknowing as their primary source. Centering Prayer has gone on to be a major phenomenon, widely practiced by Christians across the traditions. Cynthia Bourgeault’s new book, The Heart of Centering Prayer, offers a complete course in the practice, and then takes us back to its textual roots by offering a detailed commentary of The Cloud of Unknowing as it relates to Centering Prayer and to the perception of nonduality of which the anonymous author speaks. The feeling is almost like Cynthia putting her arm around your shoulder and leading you through the text, illuminating it as she goes, showing that it’s not really that scary, and, yes, that it is indeed intended for you. What the Christian mystics sought is truly for everyone.

Once you’ve gotten intimate with the Cloud through Cynthia’s commentary, you’ll likely want to read the entire text, and she recommends two particular translations among the several available: The first, by Ira Progoff, The Cloud of Unknowing: A New Translation of the Classic 14th-Century Guide to the Spiritual Experience (Delta Books, 1957), takes a psychological approach to the classic and emphasizes its place as a pioneering work in the phenomenology of consciousness, which puts in in sync with Cynthia’s own view. The second is actually published by Shambhala: The Cloud of Unknowing: A New Translation, by the Middle English scholar Carmen Acevedo Butcher. Cynthia recommends Carmen’s for its “spark” and readability. “When I first came upon this edition,” she says, “I found the translations so lively and contemporary that I assumed that [Carmen] was taking huge liberties with the text—but no, her translations are actually closer to the original than many of the others so far mentioned. For newcomers to Christian mystical literature, I recommend this book hands down for its sheer immediacy—almost as if ‘Anonymous’ (as Carmen cheekily addresses him) is sitting right there in the room with you—and for its fabulous way of conveying the energy of the medieval original.”

Whether you decide to go further into the Cloud yourself or not, Cynthia Bourgeault’s books, especially The Heart of Centering Prayer, are a wonderful introduction to the wisdom it contains, and they present compelling evidence that nondual awareness is in fact the foundation of the Christian experience.

The Cloud of Unknowing

$19.95 - Paperback

By: Carmen Acevedo Butcher

The Heart of Centering Prayer

$17.95 - Paperback

By: Cynthia Bourgeault

Also see the Carmen Acevedo Butcher talking about her translation of the Cloud of Unknowing.

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The Unitive Way and the Future of Christianity: A Discussion with Cynthia Bourgeault

Last time Cynthia was in our office, she and her editor, Dave O'Neal, had an interesting conversation about centering prayer, the future of Christianity, her book The Meaning of Mary Magdalene, and much more. Please enjoy these videos from her visit.

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[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rk_IRkkCz2A?rel=0&w=500&h=284]

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