
say, 'Of everything — aims, hopes, help and life itself.
Statement during the New Life period (1949 - 1952), 10:3481
Lord Meher (1986)
Source: The Sayings and Teachings of the Great Mystics of Islam (2004), p. 82
say, 'Of everything — aims, hopes, help and life itself.
Statement during the New Life period (1949 - 1952), 10:3481
Lord Meher (1986)
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919), Journal
“Renunciation of the World is the most essential mark of the spiritual journey to God.”
Source: The Sayings and Teachings of the Great Mystics of Islam (2004), p. 80
translated as The Cost of Discipleship (1959), p. 47.
Discipleship (1937), Costly Grace
“Life is a progress, and not a station.”
“Lord Illingworth: Discontent is the first step in the progress of a man or a nation.”
Act II
A Woman of No Importance (1893)
“The power to question is the basis of all human progress.”
"A Note To The Reader".
The Way of Chuang-Tzŭ (1965)
Context: Ecclesiastes is a book of earth, and the Gospel ethic is an ethic of revelation made on earth of a God Incarnate. The "Little Way" of Therese of Lisieux is an explicit renunciation of all exalted and disincarnate spiritualities that divide man against him self, putting one half in the realm of angels and the other in an earthly hell. For Chuang Tzu, as for the Gospel, to lose one's life is to save it, and to seek to save it for one's own sake is to lose it. There is an affirmation of the world that is nothing but ruin and loss. There is a renunciation of the world that finds and saves man in his own home, which is God's world. In any event, the "way" of Chuang Tzu is mysterious because it is so simple that it can get along without being a way at all. Least of all is it a "way out." Chuang Tzu would have agreed with St. John of the Cross, that you enter upon this kind of way when you leave all ways and, in some sense, get lost.
II. Main Part : The Unveiling of the Secret.
Parsifal and the Secret of the Graal Unveiled (1914)