Omslagafbeelding van de show Many Lamps, One Flame

Many Lamps, One Flame

Podcast door James Nerlinger

Engels

Geschiedenis & Religie

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Over Many Lamps, One Flame

Many Lamps, One Flame explores spiritual formation, contemplative practice, and the lived experience of faith through the lens of Christian and Jewish mystical tradition. Drawing from desert spirituality, the dark night of the soul, and interfaith wisdom, this podcast traces the movement from formation through awakening to responsibility and restraint. Each series addresses the challenges of spiritual dryness, the collapse of familiar certainty, and what happens when traditional practices stop working. These recordings are not instructional lectures. They are meant to be entered in order and listened to without haste—unhurried, contemplative, and attentive to the quiet ways moral and spiritual transformation takes shape through human action. Each series forms a self-contained arc, released intentionally as a complete work. The audio complements more detailed written essays published at ManyLampsOneFlame.com. Topics: spiritual formation, dark night of the soul, contemplative spirituality, Christian mysticism, Jewish mysticism, desert fathers, Ignatian spirituality, Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross, spiritual dryness, mystical theology, interfaith dialogue

Alle afleveringen

6 afleveringen

aflevering Ep. 5 — The Tapestry and the Tear artwork

Ep. 5 — The Tapestry and the Tear

When does tradition become obstacle? When does structure obscure what it was meant to protect? This episode examines the tension between fidelity and preservation—between honoring tradition and recognizing when it has calcified into something that no longer serves formation. Drawing from mystical theology and contemplative practice, it explores institutions not as villains, but as necessary frameworks that require discernment rather than blind loyalty or reflexive rejection. In spiritual formation, the moment often comes when the structures that once carried us begin to constrict. This is not a call to abandon tradition, but to distinguish honesty from destruction, and repair from denial. Some things must be named before they can be healed. Repair begins where denial ends. Topics: spiritual formation, tradition, institutional religion, discernment, fidelity, contemplative spirituality, reform, mystical theology, dark night of the soul, spiritual honesty

20 jan 2026 - 5 min
aflevering Ep. 4 — What Was Never Meant to Be Outgrown artwork

Ep. 4 — What Was Never Meant to Be Outgrown

What does spiritual maturity actually mean? Is it independence from obligation? Freedom from mystery? The end of needing faith? This episode challenges the modern assumption that maturity means outgrowing dependence on God, tradition, or spiritual practice. Drawing on Paul's distinction between childhood and adulthood (1 Corinthians 13), growth is reframed not as subtraction, but as increased responsibility—bearing more, not less. In contemplative and mystical traditions, spiritual maturity does not mean escaping obligation. It means carrying it more honestly. What is abandoned is not trust, but indulgence. What is left behind is not faith, but the refusal to bear its weight. Some things are not left behind. They are carried. Topics: spiritual maturity, spiritual formation, contemplative spirituality, 1 Corinthians 13, Paul, responsibility, mystical theology, spiritual growth, desert spirituality

20 jan 2026 - 6 min
aflevering Ep. 3 — Formation Before Illumination artwork

Ep. 3 — Formation Before Illumination

What if clarity isn't the beginning of spiritual life—but its consequence? This episode challenges the modern assumption that spiritual insight should come quickly, easily, and without preparation. In Christian and Jewish mystical traditions, formation always precedes illumination—not as delay or deprivation, but as the necessary condition for insight that does not destabilize, distort, or destroy. Drawing from desert spirituality and contemplative theology, this episode examines why the dark night comes before vision, why restraint precedes revelation, and why those who seek light without formation often find themselves blinded by it. Illumination is treated as something that must be held, not seized. Capacity precedes vision. Formation is the quiet work that makes sight possible. Topics: spiritual formation, contemplative spirituality, mystical theology, dark night of the soul, desert fathers, illumination, apophatic theology, John of the Cross, purgation

20 jan 2026 - 6 min
aflevering Ep. 2 — Kotzer Ruach: When Breath Becomes Short artwork

Ep. 2 — Kotzer Ruach: When Breath Becomes Short

What happens when you're too exhausted to receive good news? When even hope feels like a burden you can't carry? Drawing from the Hebrew concept of kotzer ruach (shortness of breath) in the Book of Exodus, this episode examines spiritual constriction—the condition where breath becomes too short to receive what is being offered. This is not moral failure. It is exhaustion named honestly. In mystical and contemplative tradition, spiritual dryness often manifests as physical constriction—a tightness in the chest, a shortness of breath, an inability to expand. This episode explores that experience without blame, without judgment, and without rushing toward resolution. Capacity precedes response. Formation begins not with effort, but with the acknowledgment that breath has become short—and that this, too, is part of the journey. Topics: spiritual exhaustion, spiritual dryness, kotzer ruach, desert spirituality, contemplative practice, spiritual formation, breath prayer, Exodus, Jewish mysticism

20 jan 2026 - 6 min
aflevering Ep. 1 — Consent to the Night artwork

Ep. 1 — Consent to the Night

What happens when spiritual practices stop working? When the language that once carried meaning feels hollow, and familiar certainties no longer hold? This episode explores what Christian and Jewish mystical traditions call "the dark night of the soul"—not as punishment or failure, but as a necessary threshold in spiritual formation. Drawing from desert spirituality and contemplative practice, it examines the moment when familiar language, belief, and certainty stop working—not because something has gone wrong, but because something deeper is being asked. The night is not treated as a malfunction to be fixed, but as a threshold that cannot be crossed accidentally. Consent, restraint, and honesty become the conditions for what follows. This is spiritual formation that precedes clarity—formation that happens in darkness, not despite it. Topics: dark night of the soul, spiritual dryness, contemplative spirituality, spiritual formation, desert spirituality, mystical theology, John of the Cross, Teresa of Avila This is not an introduction. It is an entry.

20 jan 2026 - 7 min
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