Thomas Keating

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For the famous art forger of the same name, see Tom Keating. For the American football player of the same name, see Tom Keating (American football).

Fr. Thomas Keating, O.C.S.O. (b. 1923) is a Cistercian monk and priest. He was born in New York City, and attended Deerfield Academy, Yale University, and Fordham University, graduating in December 1943. He is a founder of the Centering Prayer movement and of Contemplative Outreach, Ltd.

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[edit] Life

Keating entered the Cistercian Order in Valley Falls, Rhode Island in January, 1944. He was appointed Superior of St. Benedict’s Monastery, Snowmass, Colorado in 1958, and was elected abbot of St. Joseph's Abbey, Spencer, Massachusetts in 1961. He returned to Snowmass after retiring as abbot of Spencer in 1981, where he established a program of ten-day intensive retreats in the practice of Centering Prayer, a contemporary form of the Christian contemplative tradition.

He is one of the architects of the Centering Prayer movement begun in St. Joseph's Abbey in 1975. In 1984, along with Gustave Reininger and Edward Bednar, he co-founded Contemplative Outreach, Ltd., now an international, ecumenical organization teaching Centering Prayer and Lectio Divina, a form of meditation drawn from the Christian contemplative tradition. Contemplative Outreach provides a support system for those on the contemplative path through a wide variety of resources, workshops, and retreats. Keating helped found the Snowmass Interreligious Conference in 1982 and is a past president of the Temple of Understanding and of the Monastic Interreligious Dialogue among other interreligious activities.

Fr. Keating lives at St. Benedict's Monastery in Snowmass, Colorado.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Books

[edit] Audio/Video

[edit] Translations

  • El Centro Del Mundo (1993) ISBN 950-512-235-7
  • Invitacion a Amar, trans. Mercedes Cesar & Maria E. Steffens (1998) ISBN 0-8264-1093-6
  • Misterio de Cristo ed. Maria E. Steffens (1999) ISBN 0-8264-1173-8
  • Mente Abierta, Corazon Abierto trans. Ilse Reissner (2001) ISBN 0-8264-1341-2
  • Poziv na ljubav (2002) - Mostar (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Otvorena svijest otvoreno srce - Mostar (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Kristovo otajstvo - liturgija kao duhovno iskustvo (2003) - Zagreb (Croatia)
  • Nyitott tudat, nyitott szív (2006) - Budapest

[edit] Secondary source

  • The three spirits of the dark night of sense: A contemporary laywoman's experience (John of the Cross, Saint, Thomas Keating, Michael Washburn), by Debra J. Harmon . (Dissertation, Loyola University of Chicago, 2005) ISBN

[edit] External links

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