Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 352
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7425-6276-9 • Hardback • August 2008 • $119.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7425-6277-6 • Paperback • July 2009 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
Ori Z. Soltes is Goldman Professorial Lecturer in theology and fine arts at Georgetown University and a regular lecturer at the Smithsonian Institution.
Introduction: What is Mysticism?
Chapter 1 The Birth and Development of the Abrahamic Faiths
Chapter 2 The Roots of Judaism and Christianity
Chapter 3 The Emergence of Jewish Mystical Thought
Chapter 4 Early Christian Mysticism
Chapter 5 A Third Player on the Stage: Muslim Mysticism from the Qur'an to Ibn 'Arabi
Chapter 6 Medieval Jewish Mysticism form Merkavah to Kabbalah
Chapter 7 Medieval Christian Mysticism from Assisi to Avila
Chapter 8 The Spread of and Variety within Sufism
Chapter 9 Variations within Jewish and Christian Mysticism from the Renaissance through Emancipation
Chapter 10 Still Searching: The Persistence of Mysticism in the Modern Era
Chapter 11 Unfinished Epilogues
Suggestions for Further Reading
This book is brilliant, learned, insightful, and of great importance at this time of religious tension.
— Karen Armstrong, author of A History of God
Ori Soltes' book represents a breakthrough in the teaching of comparative mysticism. The author transforms the esoteric into the comprehensible and affords the reader a window into a subject which has heretofore been the possession of an eclectic minority. Soltes' writing style is scintillating and captivating.
— Rabbi Harold S. White, Georgetown University
Recommended. Two-star review.
— Choice Reviews, March 2009
Ori Soltes writes with deep understanding, broad learning, and a flair for making history and ideas come alive. He shows the common quest for transcendence in Jewish, Christian, and Muslim mysticism from antiquity to the present and brings the three traditions into dialogue with each other, something they could not do themselves. This book is a must-read for anyone interested in Jewish, Christian, Islamic, and contemporary spirituality.
— David Ariel, Baltimore Hebrew University, author of Kabbalah