Originally Posted by
Athos
(I assume this discussion is open to all and don't want to appear as an intruder, but the topic has been of interest to me for a long time. So here are some comments on what has been written so far).
Hesychasm, Transcendental Meditation, Centering Prayer, and "The Cloud of Unknowing" all describe a technique of meditation. The techniques are so similar that we can assume a common source - probably in India 2 or 3 millenia ago. The proponents, however, each see their own practice as unique. Once relegated to monks and mystics, the practice has been described by Herbert Benson in his book "The Relaxation Response" which demystifies it and brings it to the masses without its religious trappings. An effective method of coping with stress and even capable of bringing on "oceanic feelings", it is another question entirely whether this is a means to union with the divine.
Hesychasm (the Jesus prayer) is Orthodox, TM is from Hinduism, and the remaining two from Catholic Christianity.
Aside from meditation, the Sufi dervishes seek union through dance; the Tao is filled with mystical, often light-hearted contemplations of the divine (although it doesn't use that term); and Zen, a Japanese mix of Chinese Tao and Indian Buddhism, employs the koan as a way to enlightenment. The philosophers Plato and Pythagoras are both seen as early mystics.
The point being - all traditions have sought the divine within even though the terms can be different: God, Atman, Nirvana, Brahman, etc. We all, East and West, seem to be prey to the need to realize ultimate reality with the methods used being remarkably similar, the crucial difference being the "self" as mentioned in my post above.
It is noteworthy that mystics in the West have often been looked upon with suspicious eyes by the established Church. Where Francis of Assisi toed the line, Madame Guyon went her own way and was soon off in la-la land with her clairvoyance, mental telepathy, levitation (never observed) and wound up in prison (17th century France). She is a good example of what the spiritual masters in all traditions have warned against, and what mysticism is NOT.
A good survey of the whole subject remains Evelyn Underhill's book "Mysticism" written about one hundred years ago.
(Excuse the interruption and please continue).