I liked this little book, though if you've read much Richard Rohr, you might find quite familiar, with good reason: this is a book of excerpts from his other writings. It's a nice summary of his beliefs about spiritual growth and enlightenment, including growing out of our egoic self-preoccupations and into more compassionate non-dualistic thinking, less "othering" and judging. It's unusual for a "spiritual" or "mystical" book to track so directly with the day's headlines, but it's impossible not to think about my fellow Americans refusing to wear masks because it "infringes on their freedom" when doing so would literally save the lives of others. Or about millions of white people yammering about their their precious "heritage" of slave-holding while ignoring black people being murdered in the streets and jails by law enforcement officials. They seem more concerned about statues made of stone than their fellow citizens made of flesh and blood.
I could quibble with the structure of What the Mystics Know, the "seven pathways" seem forced and kind of random. This is probably because the editor who came up with the idea died part way through the writing, so I think the big picture may have been lost. But since the readings are in small bites, and the book doesn't pretend to be a straight narrative, the structure isn't too distracting, and there are plenty of wonderful Rohr nuggets throughout. This makes a fine daily reader for meditation and journaling, and I think I'll be using it for years to come.
His last section on transforming others and society is timely, and hopeful but realistic. He recognizes that in North America, "our economy, our self-image, our very psyche have lived in a triumphalist and paranoid stance for so long that it will be hard to change to a positive and creative mode . . . a new way of living based on faith instead of fear, peacemaking instead of moneymaking, community instead of competition." May it be so!