NOEME WILLEM
VISSER Wie en Waarom

LITURGIE &CETERA Thema's
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Liturgie

LITURGIEK
Liturgiek TVG

Liturgiegeschiedenis

Joods

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HYMNOLOGIE

Geschiedenis van de Hymnodie

Oud Joodse Hymnodie
Vroeg Christelijke Hymnodie
Griekse Hymnodie tot 900AD
Latijnse Hymnodie
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Nederlandse Gemeentezang
na de Reformatie

Engelse Hymnodie

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Kunstgeschiedenis

Prehistorie, Oudheid en Vroege Middeleeuwen
Middeleeuwen
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Negentiende Eeuw
Twintigste Eeuw



 

Geschiedenis van de Christelijke Mystiek rond personen (16)
Middeleeuwen: Johannes Tauler
The contrast in type between Eckhart and his two most famous disciples is an interesting one. All three were Dominican friars; all were devout followers of St. Augustine, the Areopagite, St. Bernard, and Aquinas; all had been trained in the schools of Cologne, where Albert the Great and St. Thomas had taught, and where their powerful influence still lived. The mysticism of Eckhart, so far as he allows us to see it in his sermons and fragmentary writings, is objective - one might almost say dogmatic. He describes with 'an air of almost terrible certainty and intimacy, not that which he has felt, but the place or plane of being he has known - "the desert of the Godhead were no one is at home." He is a great scholar, a natural metaphysician passionately concerned with the quest of Absolute Truth.

Of his two pupils, John Tauler (c. 1300-1361), friar-preacher of Strassburg, was a born missionary: a man who combined with great theological learning and mystical genius of a high order an overwhelming zeal for souls. He laboured incessantly to awaken men to a sense of their transcendental heritage. Without the hard intellectualism occasionally noticeable in Eckhart, or the tendency to introspection and the excessive artistic sensibility of Suso, Tauler is the most virile of the German mystics. The breadth of his humanity is only equalled by the depth of his spirituality. His sermons - his only authentic works - are trumpet-calls to heroic action upon spiritual levels. They influenced many later mystics, especially St. Teresa and St. John of the Cross. Tauler is not a subjective writer: only by implication can we assure ourselves that he speaks from personal experience. He has sometimes, though unfairly, been described as a precursor of the Reformation. Such a claim could only be made by those who look upon all pure Christianity as a form of Protestant heresy. He attacked, like St. Hildegarde, St. Catherine of Siena, and many others, the ecclesiastical corruption of his period: but his writings, if read in unexpurgated editions, prove him to have been a fervent and orthodox Catholic.