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To hear about a Catholic monk who meditates and seeks nondual union
with Christ doesn't seem so astonishing anymore. That's because Bede Griffiths
began blazing a trail to the East as far back as 1955. You might call Bede
the Thomas Merton of England, except that Bede delved further into Eastern
spirituality than Merton ever dreamed of doing. In Beyond the Darkness,
Shirley Du Boulay traces Bede's ascetic tendencies back to early experiments
in communal living after graduating from Oxford. A staunch atheist, Bede,
like his professor and friend C.S. Lewis, then rediscovered the spiritual
profundity of the Christian tradition. After entering the monkhood, a certain
unarticulated pantheism led Bede to pursue the wide-open spiritual landscapes
of the East, and to "discover the other half of my soul." In the 1950s,
when the rest of the West turned to science and materialism for salvation,
he donned the saffron robes of a Hindu monk and started a Catholic ashram
in southern India. Left to his own devices by Rome, Bede, through his implacable
kindness and theological writings, drew an increasingly large following,
right through 1992 when he was drawing thousands of people to talks all
over the world. Beyond the Darkness reveals a man who was called
a saint while he lived but who achieved that status only through sustained
curiosity and sincerity in his search for the truth behind all religions.
--Brian Bruya
Book Description
Even though the English Benedictine monk Bede Griffiths was well known
during his lifetime (1906-1993) for his efforts to harmonize the spiritual
practices of East and of the West, the full range of his influence is only
just becoming widely appreciated. Now, from respected journalist and biographer
Shirley du Boulay, comes the first major biography of Griffiths's life,
Beyond the Darkness. Du Boulay shows the transformation of Griffiths
from an idealistic, highly intelligent, serious, and... |