The Cloud of Unknowing
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- This article is about the medieval book. For other uses see The Cloud of Unknowing (disambiguation)
The Cloud of Unknowing is a practical spiritual guidebook thought to have been written in the 14th century by an anonymous English monk who counsels a young student to seek God not through knowledge but through love.
"Our intense need to understand will always be a powerful stumbling block to our attempts to reach God in simple love [...] and must always be overcome. For if you do not overcome this need to understand, it will undermine your quest. It will replace the darkness which you have pierced to reach God with clear images of something which, however good, however beautiful, however Godlike, is not God."
The book, which draws on the mystical tradition of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, has reputedly inspired generations of mystical searchers from St. John of the Cross to Teilhard de Chardin. It has been described as Christianity with a Zen outlook, but has also been derided by some as anti-intellectual.
The practical prayer advice contained in The Cloud of Unknowing formed the basis for the practice of centering prayer, a form of Christian meditation developed by Trappist monks William Meninger and Thomas Keating in the 1970s.
"And so I urge you, go after experience rather than knowledge. On account of pride, knowledge may often deceive you, but this gentle, loving affection will not deceive you. Knowledge tends to breed conceit, but love builds. Knowledge is full of labor, but love, full of rest."
[edit] References
- The Cloud of Unknowing : and The Book of Privy Counseling (1973). translator, William Johnston. 1996 edition foreword, Huston Smith. Image Doubleday, paperback: ISBN 0-385-03097-5
- The Cloud of Unknowing (1981). Paulist Press translation. 2004 HarperCollins edition: ISBN 0-06-073775-1
- The Cloud of Unknowing (1957). translation by Ira Progoff. Dell/Doubleday. 1983 paperback: ISBN 0440319943, 1989 paperback: ISBN 0-385-28144-7
[edit] External links
- Introduction to Online text with analysis and bibliography
- Online text in Middle English, 2528 lines in 75 chapters on one html page
- John Watkins 1922 London edition with introduction by Evelyn Underhill
- Alternate Internet Archive link for London edition when primary server is periodically unavailable.