Richard Smoley

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Richard Smoley



Average rating: 3.94 · 1,694 ratings · 174 reviews · 43 distinct worksSimilar authors
Inner Christianity: A Guide...

4.15 avg rating — 356 ratings — published 2002 — 9 editions
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Forbidden Faith: The Secret...

3.82 avg rating — 362 ratings — published 2006 — 14 editions
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Hidden Wisdom: A Guide to t...

4.12 avg rating — 180 ratings — published 1999 — 9 editions
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How God Became God: What Sc...

3.75 avg rating — 112 ratings — published 2016 — 7 editions
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The Dice Game of Shiva: How...

3.99 avg rating — 76 ratings — published 2009 — 5 editions
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Supernatural: Writings on a...

3.39 avg rating — 71 ratings — published 2013 — 4 editions
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The Deal: A Guide to Radica...

3.64 avg rating — 61 ratings — published 2015 — 9 editions
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The Essential Nostradamus

2.96 avg rating — 27 ratings — published 2006 — 9 editions
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A Theology of Love: Reimagi...

4.33 avg rating — 18 ratings4 editions
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The Truth About Magic

3.45 avg rating — 20 ratings6 editions
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More books by Richard Smoley…
Quotes by Richard Smoley  (?)
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“someone with access to an inner source of spiritual insight does not need the church—or does not need it as ordinary people do. Furthermore, such a person often has an inner authority lacking in many leaders of established religions. This was precisely the response Jesus evoked when he began to preach: “And they were astonished at his doctrine: for he taught them as one that had authority and not as the scribes” (Mark 1:22).”
Richard Smoley, Forbidden Faith: The Secret History of Gnosticism

“Broadly speaking, religion fulfills two main functions in human life. In the first place, it’s meant to foster religious experience, to enable the individual soul to commune with the divine. In the second place, it serves to cement the structure of society, upholding values and ideals that preserve the common good. The word religion derives from the Latin religare, meaning “to bind back” or “bind together.” Religion’s function is to bind individuals both to God and to one another.”
Richard Smoley, Forbidden Faith: The Secret History of Gnosticism

“Traditionally, reaching the state of illumination symbolized by the center bestows a different fate from that of the ordinary person who accepts salvation. For the latter, life after death will persist in many different planes of being — higher ones, no doubt, where existence is less painful and burdensome and where spiritual aspiration faces less resistance. But those who attain gnosis are freed from this spiral entirely. They can choose to return to manifestation for a special purpose or can dwell in absorption into God — known in the Christian tradition as the “beatific vision.” They are, to use T. S. Eliot’s famous words in Four Quartets, “at the still point of the turning world.”

In the Gospels, one name for this still point is “the eye of the needle.” As Christ says, “It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God” (Mark 10:25). This means that the “I” has to be very fine and subtle to reach this still center of being. A “rich man” — one who is encumbered not only with property but with the heavy baggage of a pompous self-image — is too big to make it through. Obviously, this is an inner condition and so does not necessarily refer to all rich people, though in practice it probably applies to most. Francis de Sales, a Catholic spiritual teacher of the early seventeenth century, observes:

A man is rich in spirit if his mind is filled with riches or set on riches. The kingfisher shapes its nests like an apple, leaving only a little opening at the top, builds it on the seashore, and makes it so solid and tight that although waves sweep over it the water cannot get inside. Keeping always on top of the waves, they
remain surrounded by the sea and are on the sea, and yet are masters of it. Your heart . . . must in like manner be open to heaven alone and impervious to riches and all other transitory things.

Money — “mammon,” as Christ called it — is only one of the forms the force of the world takes. There are people for whom money holds no allure but who are beguiled by sex, pleasure, or power. And for those who are indifferent even to these temptations, there is always the trap of apathy (accidie or acedia, derived from a Greek word meaning “not caring,” are names sometimes used in the tradition). There are many variations, which will take on slightly different forms in everyone. Freeing oneself from the world requires overcoming these drives in oneself, however they appear.”
Richard Smoley, Inner Christianity: A Guide to the Esoteric Tradition



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