The Mystical Experience

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"Wonderful program. I was so happy when I saw it on Tv yesterday. I hope I will be able to see all the other episodes as well. I am trying to find out if this program is going to be on every Sunday or other days during the week. BEAUTIFUL, THANK YOU!" ~ R Maia
 
"Your Global Spirit TV program is a refreshing insight to Consciousness. Namaste & thank you for airing this program." ~ Carol
 
"I watched this program last night, and it was amazing, because they were talking about the experience I was going through at that moment. Thank you for everyone who is behind this great program, I will watch the other one too." ~ Rube
 
"With deep thanksgiving for this opportunity to personally witness and hear these spiritual teachers, bringing one to Presence, gratitude." ~ Susan
 
"Brother David, you are truly one of the most enlightening people I have ever had the pleasure of listening to. Thank you so much for sharing and for being so simplistic in your sharing." ~ Joanna V
 
"The program offers intelligent conversation among three renowned scholars of religion and spirituality."
 

The Mystical Experience

  • What is the mystical experience ? Do some mystics achieve “direct contact” with the Divine ?
  • From the ancient Jewish Kabbalah to the spiritual illumination of monastic contemplation, hear what the experts are saying.

Throughout history, the “mystical path” or the spiritual approach of achieving “direct contact” with the Divine has resulted in powerful spiritual experiences.  While often bordering on the ineffable, some of these mystical experiences have actually led to the founding of a world religion, or spawned some of the most profound ecstatic poetry ever written.

For some thousand years, mystical practices have been a small but vital part of Christian, Jewish, Islamic, Hindu, and other faiths and native traditions.  Yet those following the mystical path have so often been persecuted, being perceived as threatening to the power of the established religious orthodoxy.  It has often been said that true mystics often have more in common with each other than with the more scripture-based adherents from within their own religions, and this Global Spirit program delightfully underscores that truth.

In this Global Spirit program, host Phil Cousineau joins Brother David Steindl-Rast, Rabbi Jonathan Omer-Man and Maata Lynn Barron to shed light on some of the common attributes of those who yearn for and reach, however momentarily, what they describe as a direct experience of God or the Divine. From the ancient Jewish Kabbalah and Islamic Sufi practices, to the spiritual illumination and epiphanies experienced through monastic contemplation, “The Mystical Experience” explores both experiential and analytical approaches to this rich subject.

Program Guests

Brother David Steindl-Rast was born in Austria, where he studied art, anthropology, and psychology, receiving an MA from the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts and a PhD from the University of Vienna. Brother David emigrated to the U.S., and in 1953 he joined a newly founded Benedictine community, the Mount Saviour Monastery, of which he is now a senior member. At present, Brother David serves a worldwide Network for Grateful Living, through www.gratefulness.org, an interactive website with several thousand participants daily from more than 243 countries.

Maata Lynn Barron received formal training in classical Sufism from a shaykh in Delhi, India. Maata Lynn founded the non-profit organization The Circle of Light as a vehicle for the transmission of the innate Wisdom, Beauty and Goodness of the divine feminine principle, SHE. Maata Lynn speaks and sits in meditation with people at retreats and conferences around the country.

Rabbi Jonathan Omer-Manis a teacher, writer and lecturer, devoting much of his professional life to the dissemination and promotion of Jewish spirituality. In 1985 he established Metivta: a center for contemplative Judaism, which sought to provide an integrated approach to Jewish religious life, centered on meditation and traditional spirituality. Rabbi Jonathan also created and launched the Institute for Jewish Spirituality. He lived in Jerusalem for over twenty years, and served as the personal editor and consultant to Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz.

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