Content area
Full text
THE GETHSEMANI ENCOUNTER: A DIALOGUE ON THE SPIRITUAL LIFE BY BUDDHIST AND CHRISTIAN MONASTICS. Edited by Donald W Mitchell and James Wiseman, O.S.B. New York: Continuum, 1997. 306 pp.
Ever since the landmark meeting of Thomas Merton and the Dalai Lama in 1968, the Christian and Buddhist contemplative communities have been building toward the kind of deeply spiritual encounter that is so ably narrated in this book. For five days in July of 1996, a pantheon of advanced spiritual practitioners, led by the Dalai Lama, met at Thomas Merton's monastery in Kentucky to dialogue on the spiritual life. The resulting exchanges provided not only mutual aid on the spiritual journey but were themselves a spiritual path. In recounting this meeting, The Gethsemani Encounter marks a watershed in the spiritual dialogue between Christianity and Buddhism.
A history of interfaith contacts and the deeply spiritual character of intermonastic dialogue prepared the way for the success of this historic encounter. In 1978, ten years after the death of Thomas Merton, two dialogue commissions were created: the "Monastic Interreligious Dialogue" (MID) in North America, and the "Dialogue Inter-Monastic" (DIM) in Europe. These commissions fostered a rapid expansion in the number of nuns and monks engaged in interfaith dialogue. Christian monastics spent time living in Tibetan and Zen monasteries in the East, and Buddhist nuns and monks were guests of Christian monasteries in the West. These encounters gradually evolved into a profound discussion of the spiritual life in all its nuances and its implications for humankind.
The inspiration for the Gethsemani Encounter came from the Dalai Lama. At the Parliament of the World's Religions in 1993, during a morning session on "Emptiness and Kenosis," the Tibetan leader suggested that the conversation continue in a monastic setting. His idea was to gather a small group of mature Buddhist and Christian monastics who are teachers of spirituality. They would dialogue about the practice of spirituality and its value for the world in a setting where they could also live, meditate, and celebrate together.
A variety of Buddhists reflecting the diversity of contemporary Buddhist practices were invited to Gethsemani. These...





