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   Book Info

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Endless Trace: The Passionate Pursuit of Wisdom in the West  
Author: Christopher Bamford
ISBN: 1930337078
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
In a collection of essays, Bamford, director of Lindisfarne Books, explores Sophia, or divine feminine wisdom, as expressed throughout the hermetic or esoteric tradition in Christianity, and in the profound insights of many great Western thinkers and poets, and potentially in each of us as we learn to act like Wisdom herself, opening to receive what God gives. Bamford embraces a difficult subject with personal passion, rendering it with a poetry and incision that sincere readers will find deeply inspiring. Bamford describes the way feminine wisdom acts as the companion and helper to God, a kind of omnipresent cloud or mist that mirrors God's creation. Creation, we learn, took place as a great sigh of compassion, as Sophia helped God become known by becoming incarnate in all that exists. "Sophia's other name, revealed since the Mystery of Golgotha, is primordial cosmic human nature itself," writes Bamford. Christianity is founded upon the belief that Christ is not a teacher or a teaching, but an act of divine creation that reprises the original creation. Through Christ, God enters creation again and again; if only our hearts could awaken to see how "the sacred is in the commonplace and the ordinary is the potentially divine." Bamford proceeds to give a thrilling glimpse of what it might mean to awaken to our original, pure nature, to become wise and to know the world and ourselves through the Incarnation. Ranging through Western tradition, from the ancient Hermetic tradition to the medieval troubadours to the Romantics, Bamford offers a jewel box full of gems about what it can mean to be compassionate and open-hearted, to be Sophia. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
Through the vast plain of European philosophic and religious thought meanders a small stream of unorthodox, sometimes occult belief that Bamford traces comprehensively, from the hermetic and Orphic traditions of ancient Greece, to the Celtic world's vision of Christianity, down to the fellowship of the Rosy Cross and the Romantics. Bamford argues that far from being invariably dualistic and body-denying, Western thought has always included a competing vision of wholeness and sensual joy. Many of the figures and schools of thought (the troubadours, Novalis) he examines are familiar to readers of perennial philosophy, but Bamford introduces lesser-known material as well and views familiar subjects from a uniquely optimistic standpoint. His chapter on Johann Georg Hamann, the "Magus of the North," describes that visionary philosopher's idiosyncratic but profound interpretation of the Bible as a revelation of mystical experience, and those on walking as prayer and the occult significance of the rosary offer unusual perspectives. Learned but accessible, Bamford's vision of the Western tradition may be embraced by many. Patricia Monaghan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Joscelyn Godwin, author of Harmonies of Heaven and Earth
A book to be read and revisited as one's own wisdom grows, hopefully, to meet it.


Arthur Versluis, author of Restoring Paradise, Wisdom's Children
We are fortunate indeed to have such a voice in times like these.


Publishers’ Weekly (September 2003)
A jewel box full of gems about what it can mean to be compassionate and open-hearted, to be Sophia.


Booklist (October 2003)
Learned but accessible, Bamford’s vision of the Western tradition may be embraced by many.


Philip Zaleski, editor of The Best Spiritual Writing series and The Book of Heaven
Sagacity and beauty ... reading a text like this sets the heart on fire with love of God and gratitude.


Book Description
Two powerful motives weave beneath the surface of our spiritual history: the desire to know and the desire to love. The secret history of the West is the story of saints, mystics, alchemists, poets, and philosophers trying to unite these two streams and celebrate - in the world and in their own persons - the sacred marriage of Logos and Sophia, Word and Wisdom. This book, an impressionsitic history of the Western spiritual tradition, follows - from anceint Greece to modern times - the traces of those who sought to know the world and themselves, while realizing that they must overcome themselves to love the world and one another. Included are chapters on Pythagoras, Sophia, Celtic Christianity, the Troubadours, the Grail, the Rose Cross, Renaissance spirituality, Romanticism, nineteenth-century occultism, and twentieth-century esotericism. Inspirational interludes place the whole within an atmosphere of Christian mysticism. Tracking this endless trace of our evolving relationship with one another, God, and Nature, we begin to understand how human consciousness has changed and evolved and perceive the present purpose of humankind.


From the Author
Chrisopher Bamford is one of the few who can wed sagacity and beauty. Reading a text like this sets the heart on fire with love of God and gratitude for those who have devoted their lives, with whatever success, to the myriad paths of the Christian life. (Philip Zaleski, from his introduction)


About the Author
Christopher Bamford is the editor-in-chief of Anthroposophic Press / Lindisfarne Books. A Fellow of the Lindisfarne Association, he has lectured, taught, and written widely on Western spiritual and esoteric traditions, and is a contributing editor to Lapis magazine. He is the author, translator, and editor of numerous books, including Celtic Christianity: Ecology and Holiness, Homage to Pythagoras: Rediscovering Sacred Science, and The Noble Traveller. One of his essays was included in the HarperSanFrancisco anthology, Best Spiritual Writing 2000.




Endless Trace: The Passionate Pursuit of Wisdom in the West

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Two powerful motives weave beneath the surface of our spiritual history: the desire to know and the desire to love. The secret history of the West is the story of saints, mystics, alchemists, poets, and philosophers trying to unite these two streams and celebrate￯﾿ᄑin the world and in their own persons￯﾿ᄑthe sacred marriage of Logos and Sophia, Word and Wisdom.

This book, an impressionistic history of the Western spiritual tradition, follows the traces￯﾿ᄑfrom ancient Greece into modern times￯﾿ᄑof those who sought to know the world and themselves, while realizing that they must overcome themselves to love the world and each other.

There are chapters on Pythagoras, Sophia, Celtic Christianity, the Troubadours, the Grail, the Rose Cross, Renaissance spirituality, Romanticism, nineteenth-century occultism, and twentieth-century esotericism. Inspirational interludes place the whole within an atmosphere of Christian mysticism. Tracking this endless trace of our evolving relationship with each other, God, and nature, we begin to understand how human consciousness has changed and evolved and what humanity's task is now.

About the Author
Christopher Bamford is the editor-in-chief of SteinerBooks and Lindisfarne Books. He is the author, translator and editor of numerous books, including Celtic Christianity: Ecology and Holiness, Homage to Pythagoras: Rediscovering Sacred Science and The Noble Traveller. His work was included in the HarperSanFrancisco anthology Best Spiritual Writing 2000.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

In a collection of essays, Bamford, director of Lindisfarne Books, explores Sophia, or divine feminine wisdom, as expressed throughout the hermetic or esoteric tradition in Christianity, and in the profound insights of many great Western thinkers and poetsand potentially in each of us as we learn to act like Wisdom herself, opening to receive what God gives. Bamford embraces a difficult subject with personal passion, rendering it with a poetry and incision that sincere readers will find deeply inspiring. Bamford describes the way feminine wisdom acts as the companion and helper to Goda kind of omnipresent cloud or mist that mirrors God's creation. Creation, we learn, took place as a great sigh of compassion, as Sophia helped God become known by becoming incarnate in all that exists. "Sophia's other name, revealed since the Mystery of Golgotha, is primordial cosmic human nature itself," writes Bamford. Christianity is founded upon the belief that Christ is not a teacher or a teaching, but an act of divine creation that reprises the original creation. Through Christ, God enters creation again and again; if only our hearts could awaken to see how "the sacred is in the commonplace and the ordinary is the potentially divine." Bamford proceeds to give a thrilling glimpse of what it might mean to awaken to our original, pure nature, to become wise and to know the world and ourselves through the Incarnation. Ranging through Western tradition, from the ancient Hermetic tradition to the medieval troubadours to the Romantics, Bamford offers a jewel box full of gems about what it can mean to be compassionate and open-hearted, to be Sophia. (Sept.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

This eclectic but well-researched compilation of essays explores a "second river" of the Western "Wisdom tradition," or the esoteric philosophies and how they intersect with classic Christian teachings. Bamford participated in the early Lindisfarne Association (think New Age), exploring many religious traditions thoroughly before circling back to Western Christian thought. He writes with authority and a deep background in his subjects, but, more important, he has a gift for effective spiritual exposition by balancing philosophical treatise with personal experience and interpretation. These essays help us to understand not only the "what" but also the "why" of arcane philosophies of hermeticism or the Rose Cross or Novalis; we feel the excitement and passion that prompted the original thinkers. Bamford links standard Christian practices like Eucharist, the rosary, and the legend of the Grail with the complexities of the Wisdom tradition, as well as elucidating lesser-known mystics and writers. Bamford unites knowledge and spiritual insight as he explores an impressionistic selection of philosophers and mystics in the Western tradition. His insights will be useful to the novice and master alike, making this book appropriate for spiritual collections at all levels.-Sheila Peiffer, Acad. of the Holy Names, Albany, NY Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

     



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