Native Mesoamerican spirituality : ancient myths, discourses, stories, doctrines, hymns, poems from the Aztec, Yucatec, Quiche-Maya and other sacred traditions
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Bibliographic Information
Native Mesoamerican spirituality : ancient myths, discourses, stories, doctrines, hymns, poems from the Aztec, Yucatec, Quiche-Maya and other sacred traditions
(The classics of Western spirituality)
Paulist Press, c1980
- : pbk
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Note
Bibliography: p. 281-286
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
"For sheer publishing courage and imagination, what can surpass...The Classics of Western Spirituality (TM)?"
Publishers Weekly
"...of fundamental importance to any student or scholar interested in the development and dimensions of the religious ideas and experiences of man."
Mircea Eliade
Native Meso-American Spirituality
Ancient Myths, Discourses, Stories Doctrines,
Hymns, Poems from the Aztec, Yucatec, Quiche-
Maya and Other Sacred Traditions
edited with a foreword, introduction and notes by
Miguel Leon-Portilla, preface by Fernando Horcasitas
How has your heart decided,
Giver of Life?
Withhold your displeasure;
Grant you compassion,
I am at your side, you are
God.
The Sage King Nezahualcoyotl (1402-1472)
This volume presents a carefully edited and translated collection of Pre-Columbian ancient spiritual texts. It presents relevant examples of those sacred writings of the indigenous peoples of Central America, especially Mexico, that have survived destruction. The majority of texts were conceived in the 950-1521 A.D. period. Their authors were primarily anonymous sages, priests and members of the ancient nobility. Most were written in Nahuath (also known as Aztec or Mexican), in Yucatec and Quiche-Maya languages. This volume has been edited by Miguel Leon-Portilla of the Institute of Historical Research at the National University of Mexico. Dr. Leon-Portilla in his introduction says: "These Native American Classics of Spirituality when properly dealt with are no longer to be regarded as alien in the sense that there cannot exist a consubstantial bridge between them and the spiritual masters of the West....A realm of unsuspected wisdom will then begin to manifest itself."
Fernando Horcasitas in his fine Preface calls on the reader to become "captured by the beauty of the lines" and to leave his mind "less cluttered with stereotypes" of the native American. He suggests opening the book at random to find "verses here and there, composed in the night, in the wind, that will bring ease to his heart as he walks between the abyss on one side and the ravine on the other. And those who are weary of all the conflicting elements in our present realities, who long to shatter 'this sorry state of things entire', will find heart if they can get a glimmering-even though it be faint-of the jade and turquoise the Indian poet sought and found in his songs."
by "Nielsen BookData"