A monk in the world Cultivating a spiritual life

Wayne Teasdale

Book - 2002

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Subjects
Published
Novato, Calif. : New World Library 2002.
Language
English
Main Author
Wayne Teasdale (-)
Physical Description
237 pages
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9781577311812
  • Acknowledgments
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: Living as a Monk in the World
  • Chapter 1. The World As Presence and Community
  • Chapter 2. Intimacy with the Divine: Spiritual Practice and Mystical Experience
  • Chapter 3. Timeless Mother: The Church As Matrix
  • Chapter 4. Spiritual Friendship: A Jewel in the Midst of Life
  • Chapter 5. Keeping Our World in Order: The Preciousness of Time, the Sacredness of Work, and the Use of Money
  • Chapter 6. Light in the Streets: The Urgent Call of the Homeless
  • Chapter 7. Dancing on the Edge: The Struggle to Promote Change
  • Chapter 8. Tough Grace: A Contemplative Understanding of Suffering
  • Chapter 9. Interspirituality: The Mystical Thread of a Monk in the World
  • Chapter 10. Living in the Heart of Awareness
  • Epilogue: Toward a New Catholicity
  • Chapter Notes
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Choice Review

Teasdale, who was a lay monk in New Hampshire's Hundred Acres Monastery, tells his story, which begins with his accepting an invitation to stay for a while at a Christian Ashram located in India. He eventually accepted Indian monkhood, but as a Christian rather than as a Hindu. This volume gives the story of his subsequent life, which is centered in what he calls "the eternal changeless reality of the ultimate," a commitment that is "absolute and final." Teasdale's desire was to become a monk who lived and worked in the world rather than in a monastery, because he wished to serve those who most need help, understanding, and support. In the ten chapters of this book he discusses the world as community, the world as a presence, the individual's relation to God, the Christian church as matrix, spiritual friendship, keeping the world in order, the homeless, suffering, spiritual awareness, and a new catholicity. Highly recommended for all levels. M. C. Rose emeritus, Goucher College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

Drawing on the wisdom of the world's great religions, lay monk Teasdale explores such fundamentals as the meaning of friendship, the inherent dignity of work, the nature of suffering, and ways to enact social change. So doing, he offers spiritual guidance to religious seekers who want to effectively and meaningfully balance prayer, work, study, and leisure. Teasdale, who himself lives in the heart of a big American city (Chicago), explains how to cultivate contemplation and integrate monasticism into everyday life in a busy world. The contemplative attitude can be nourished, he suggests, by developing the capacity to see one's surroundings in a new and selfless way, which involves things as simple as taking time to appreciate what one has. At his most heartfelt and optimistic, Teasdale advocates a truly kinder, gentler society, in which compassionate and loving hearts may transform the crass and dehumanizing aspects of capitalism. Mostly, however, he depicts the contemplative person as an agent of social change, a revolutionary in the most expansive, spiritual sense of the word. --June Sawyers

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

With his new book, Teasdale (The Mystic Heart), a Catholic lay monk, answers that most pressing of questions for all who look to live in spiritually disciplined ways in the real world: How then shall we live? Teasdale himself was set to live as a sannyasi a renunciate in a Christian ashram in India until his teacher Bede Griffiths, a Benedictine, gently kicked him out, challenging him to be a monk in the world. And so it has been for Teasdale, who teaches and writes in the thick of urban life in Chicago. The author tells of his practical teachers: the homeless of the city, a recent bout with cancer, the need to make a living, the constraints of working within a church he loves but with which he has publicly disagreed. As his examples from life demonstrate, he practices what he preaches about living simply, with compassion and deep respect for the world's religious traditions. The book is on firmest ground when the author recounts his experiences and affectionately describes the persons who have greatly shaped him, from Bede Griffiths to his Uncle John to the Dalai Lama. Concluding chapters are more conceptual than concrete, and suffer from some woolliness. But what Teasdale lacks in precision he makes up for with evident passion and persistence in championing the universal spiritual truths of compassion for sentient beings and mystical higher awareness. (June 19) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Publishers are responding to an increased demand for books that can help people lead more meditative lives, and these inventive essay collections will please progressive Christian and New Age readers alike. In The Soul's Religion, Moore's companion volume to his 1992 best seller, Care of the Soul, brief essays by the famed therapist and former monk offer perspectives on the soul-deepening potential of coping with failed relationships, natural disaster, and the fools and saints around us. Moore uses a variety of spiritual traditions, including Zen, Taoism, and Christianity, to show readers how they can enhance their spiritual development. In Bringing God Home, a Unitarian minister and son of former senator Frank Church has crafted a poetic autobiography in the form of brief meditations. Lay people will savor Church's originality as well as his insights from childhood with a famous father, and English teachers will find inspiration for their classrooms in his thoughts on the pilgrimage literature of John Bunyan, Thomas Wolfe, and Nathaniel Hawthorne. Teasdale's A Monk in the World gives practical tips for enhancing spirituality and promoting social justice. A Hindu monk with a Catholic upbringing, Teasdale teaches at three colleges in the Chicago area. His gentle reflections are punctuated by reminiscences of personal ordeals as well as poignant character sketches of street people. Teasdale's more ambitious The Mystic Heart: Discovering a Universal Spirituality in the World's Religions has been popular, and his new work should be, too. All three books can be added to larger public libraries, but those that can afford just one should consider purchasing Moore's, which will be in demand owing to the author's widespread popularity. Joyce Smothers, Student, Princeton Theological Seminary, NJ (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.