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Intro to Apophatic Prayer with friends of Pseudo Dionysius!

the Cloud of Unknowing and Centering Prayer

This week we will focus on Apophatic Prayer, spending time with the Cloud of Unknowing and Thomas Keating, in the tradition of Centering Prayer. As we discussed on Wednesday, centering prayer is born from Pseudo-Dionysius' apophatic theology.

Begin by watching the linked video of Thomas Keating leading a centering prayer session. 

The second link is a video presentation on the Cloud of Unknowing.

The Cloud of Unknowing is an anonymous work written in the 14th century, as a guide to contemplative prayer from one monastic to another. The Cloud instructs that to know God one must surrender mind and ego to a cloud of unknowing and a cloud of forgetting, at which point one may begin to glimpse the nature of God through love rather than intellectual understanding.


“For silence is not God, nor speaking; fasting is not God, nor eating; solitude is not God, nor company; nor any other pair of opposites. God is hidden between them and cannot be found by anything your soul does, but only by the love of your heart. God cannot be known by reason, nor by thought, caught, or sought by understanding. But God can be love and chosen by the true, loving will of your heart.”

~ from The Cloud of Unknowing



The following thoughts on The Cloud of Unknowing are taken from an article titled, “Knowing God by Transcending the Mind: The Apophatic Tradition” by David Robertson:


Heavily influenced by Dionysius, the author of The Cloud nonetheless takes a step further. Whereas Mystical Theology is primarily concerned with eliminating intellectual conceptualisations of God, The Cloud requires the practitioner to withdraw from the senses as well. All cognitive and sensory faculties must be pushed “beneath” the practitioner in a “cloud of forgetting”. This is so that the contemplative initiate can focus and cultivate a “blind stirring of love” toward God. This is because “[God] can well be loved, but he cannot be thought. By love he can be grasped and held, but by thought neither grasped nor held”. This emphasis on love draws from the mystical tradition of commentary on the Song of Songs, which The Cloud fuses with Dionysius’s negative approach and instructs to “forget all of God’s creation … so that your thoughts and desires are not directed and do not reach out towards any of them”. In this process of forgetting, the soul goes through a darkness where a desiring love reaches out to God in a “cloud of unknowing”. This “unknowing” is a state where the intellect and senses have been abandoned and having being stripped bare except for a love for God, the individual has opened themself up to be brought to God in grace. This aspect of clearing the way for God’s grace is a common feature among apophatic mystics and theologians and is ultimately all a person can do on their own behalf in the process of union with God.


This week take some time to become acquainted with this Cloud, as you establish a practice of centering prayer.