Adam Hinds
Perennial wisdom  /  contemplative practice  /  spiritual independence

Truth
higher
than tribe.

The world's mystical traditions disagree about many things. God's name, sacred history, the nature of salvation, the proper authority of scripture. These disagreements are real and should not be papered over.

But look at the contemplative depths of these same traditions and something else emerges: a recurring encounter with divine reality, a shared suspicion of the ego, a consistent insistence that practice reveals what doctrine alone cannot. That convergence is worth taking seriously.

This is a field guide for people who find that honest. Not a plea for vague universalism. A map for reading traditions carefully, practicing seriously, and refusing to confuse institutional loyalty with truth.

01  /  Core thesis

Perennial wisdom, stated plainly

Perennial philosophy does not mean all religions are the same. They are not. The perennial claim is narrower: the mystical and contemplative depths of many traditions often converge around a shared encounter with divine reality, ego dissolution, compassion, and interior transformation. That is both less exciting and more defensible than the vague version.

Reality is deeper than it looks

The visible world is not dismissed, but it is not treated as the whole story. The Real may be named God, Brahman, Tao, the One, or divine Love. The name is not the point.

The ego is provisional

The everyday self has uses. It pays bills and takes offense. But it is not the deepest identity, and most serious spiritual systems notice this sooner or later.

Practice outranks opinion

Doctrine can point. It cannot do the walking for you. Silence, prayer, service, repentance, and sustained attention reveal whether the claims have roots.

Truth outranks ownership

No institution owns God. No brand owns wisdom. No denomination gets to fence truth and charge admission. This is as old as the prophets.

Aldous Huxley's The Perennial Philosophy gave modern English readers one of the clearest accounts of this view: that a divine Reality underlies the world of things, lives, and minds, and that the deepest traditions all point toward it. Aldous Huxley, 1944
Rabbi Rami Shapiro's perennial work is particularly useful for the spiritually independent reader: serious about wisdom, allergic to religious salesmanship, and not interested in pretending any single tribe holds the complete map. Rabbi Rami Shapiro
02  /  Symbol map

The Theosophical emblem as visual argument

The Theosophical Society's seal draws from multiple religious traditions and arranges them to express what it understands as cosmic order and spiritual unity. It is dense, strange, and clearly not produced by a committee trying to satisfy a grant officer. This is a point in its favor.

The working interpretation

The emblem is not decoration. It is a compressed argument. It places Om, the whirling cross, the ouroboros, interlaced triangles, the ankh, and a motto into one field. The composite says: reality is one, life is cyclical, spirit and matter interpenetrate, religious symbols overlap, and truth is not subordinate to any particular institution.

That does not mean every claim is equally true or useful. It means a serious seeker should test claims against truth rather than tribal reflex. The motto makes this explicit. Living up to it is harder than printing it.

The whirling cross requires a word. It is an ancient symbol of creation and cosmic process appearing across unrelated cultures. Its later use by the Nazi movement was a corruption. The Theosophical Society acknowledges both contexts. People engaged with their materials should know both as well.

Om
The absolute, the sacred sound, the unifying source prior to all division.
Whirling cross
Ancient symbol of becoming, movement, and cosmic process. Modern misuse does not erase older meaning, but older meaning does not erase modern associations. Know both.
Ouroboros
The serpent consuming its own tail: eternity, cycles, renewal, and the boundedness of finite life within something larger.
Triangles
Spirit and matter, consciousness and substance, descending and ascending movement between the human and the divine.
Ankh
Life arising from the meeting of spirit and matter. The key, in both the Egyptian and broader metaphysical sense.
Motto
"There is no religion higher than truth." A good sentence. Considerably harder to live than to display.
03  /  Compatible streams

Traditions in the same neighborhood

These streams are not interchangeable. They disagree in genuine ways about God, history, scripture, and practice. They share enough vocabulary, aspiration, or method to belong in the same broad conversation. What each gets right, and where each tends to go wrong, are both worth knowing.

Theosophy
EsotericComparative
What it contributes

Serious comparative study of religion, philosophy, science, and symbolism. Karma, reincarnation, spiritual evolution, and the project of universal brotherhood. A genuine attempt to hold multiple traditions in view at once.

Where it risks going wrong

It can become too confident about hidden masters, cosmic chronology, and systems that require joining the club before you can verify anything. Confidence exceeding evidence is a hazard in any esoteric tradition.

A Course in Miracles
ForgivenessMind training
What it contributes

A disciplined path of forgiveness, undoing fear, releasing guilt, and training the mind toward Love. The workbook is practical. The theology is radical. Neither is a passing interest.

Where it risks going wrong

It uses Christian language while substantially revising traditional Christian doctrine. That is not inherently dishonest, but it needs to be stated plainly. It should not be mistaken for orthodox Christianity by people who did not ask to leave it.

Contemplative Christianity
SilenceUnion
What it contributes

Prayer, stillness, interior purification, the direct experience of divine love, humility, and union with God. One of the deepest wells in the Western tradition, drawing from centuries of disciplined practice.

Where it risks going wrong

Without ethics and community, contemplation can become a comfortable private interior life that relieves the practitioner of the inconvenience of obedience, repair, and ordinary human responsibility.

Jewish mysticism
KabbalahRepair
What it contributes

Sacred language, divine immanence, tikkun olam, symbolic depth, the holiness of embodied daily life. A tradition that roots mystical aspiration firmly in practice, law, and community.

Where it risks going wrong

Detached from Jewish life and learning, it becomes costume jewelry for the metaphysical marketplace. The symbols without the practice and community are decoration.

Sufism
LoveRemembrance
What it contributes

Purification of the heart, remembrance of God, surrender to the divine will, annihilation of the ego in love. One of the great spiritual traditions of the world, with a literature of extraordinary depth.

Where it risks going wrong

Western readers often reduce it to Rumi quotations with no Islam attached. Convenient but thin. The poetry emerged from a full tradition. Separating it from that tradition produces something much smaller.

Vedanta
NondualLiberation
What it contributes

Rigorous inquiry into the nature of the Self, Brahman, liberation, illusion, and consciousness. One of the most systematic philosophical approaches to the deepest questions of existence.

Where it risks going wrong

Nondual slogans can be used to avoid moral accountability. "All is one" is not a substitute for making amends or showing up to the consequences of one's actions. Liberation is not a hall pass.

Buddhist thought
AwakeningCompassion
What it contributes

A clear-eyed analysis of suffering, impermanence, and the constructed self. Practical methods for nonattachment, mindfulness, and compassion, developed across millennia and multiple cultures.

Where it risks going wrong

Western Buddhism can become therapy with statues and a gentle nod toward impermanence. Useful, sometimes. Not the same thing as what produced it.

Taoist philosophy
SimplicityNaturalness
What it contributes

Naturalness, humility, the limits of rigid systems, nonforcing action, and the wisdom of not making everything worse by trying harder. A useful corrective to almost everything.

Where it risks going wrong

"Go with the flow" is not a complete philosophy. Sometimes the current is moving toward a drainage ditch. Discernment still applies.

04  /  Contemplative thought

Silence is not emptiness. It is training.

Contemplative practice is the disciplined move from thinking about God or truth toward a receptive openness to them. It does not reject theology. It refuses to stop there. Good doctrine points. It cannot do the walking for you.

Father Thomas Keating and Centering Prayer

Father Thomas Keating was one of the principal modern teachers of the Christian contemplative revival. Centering Prayer is a method of consenting to God's presence and action within the soul. It uses silence, a sacred word, and the repeated, gentle release of thoughts — not because thoughts are evil, but because the will needs training in letting go.

The point is not mystical experience or interior fireworks. The point is consent, surrender, humility, and the slow healing of what Keating called the false self: the defended, performing, frightened ego that mistakes itself for the whole person.

That is less dramatic than visions. It is also more useful, and more verifiable. The test is not whether prayer felt profound. The test is whether a person gradually becomes less reactive, less defended, and more genuinely loving.

01
Choose a sacred wordA simple word: God, Love, Peace, Trust, Jesus, Abba. The word is not magic. It is a symbol of interior consent. Overthinking the choice is already the ego at work.
02
Sit in silenceTwenty minutes is standard. Sit comfortably. Eyes closed. No particular posture required. No theatrical stillness needed.
03
Return without wrestlingWhen thoughts arise — and they will, constantly — return gently to the sacred word. Do not fight the mind. It enjoys a fight. The return itself is the practice.
04
Carry it into the rest of the dayThe test is not whether the prayer felt deep. The test is whether you become, over time, less reactive, less controlled by fear, and more genuinely present to the people around you.

Thomas Merton

Brought monastic contemplation into modern language while engaging Buddhism, social criticism, solitude, and the anatomy of the false self. A good starting point for serious reading.

Cynthia Bourgeault

Major contemporary teacher of contemplative Christianity, Centering Prayer, and wisdom tradition. Her work on attention and surrender is practical and serious.

Richard Rohr

Franciscan teacher of nondual awareness, ego critique, and the move from performative religion toward genuine transformation. Accessible, with real theological depth.

Henri Nouwen

A pastoral and contemplative writer who took seriously the wounds beneath religious performance. His work on belovedness and service has aged well.

Evelyn Underhill

Classic interpreter of mysticism. Useful for understanding the stages, discipline, and psychology of the mystical life. Still worth reading in full.

Meister Eckhart

A bold medieval mystic of detachment, divine birth in the soul, and the ground of being that lies beyond ordinary religious language. Dense, but rewarding.

05  /  Holy rascal

Sacred troublemaker,
not smug contrarian.

Rabbi Rami Shapiro uses "holy rascal" for the spiritually serious person who refuses to confuse God with the official machinery built around God. The holy rascal is not a troll, not a cynic, and not someone who has simply decided organized religion is for other, less enlightened people.

"The holy rascal honors truth wherever she appears, serves people rather than ideas, and keeps humility in the kit at all times — because spiritual vanity is particularly ugly and particularly common."

The holy part
  • Takes truth, compassion, and practice seriously. Not as performance. Seriously.
  • Honors wisdom wherever it appears, regardless of the institution that houses it.
  • Serves actual people rather than accumulating interesting positions.
  • Keeps humility in the kit. Easy to forget. Usually the first thing to go.
  • Understands that wisdom requires practice, not just correct identification of it.
The rascal part
  • Questions religious authority when authority uses itself to protect itself rather than truth.
  • Laughs at spiritual vanity, including his own. This is important. Especially the last part.
  • Refuses tribal captivity without pretending to have transcended the need for any tradition.
  • Recognizes that piety can become costume, theater, and in the wrong hands, a business model.
  • Stays in the conversation without letting the institution set all the terms.
Not anti-religion

The holy rascal can love a tradition. He just refuses to worship the container instead of the contents. The traditions themselves often make exactly this point.

Not permission to believe anything

Spiritual independence is not a license to believe whatever is convenient before lunch. It still requires practice, study, honest self-examination, and something recognizable as moral fruit.

Not for sale

The holy rascal is deeply skeptical of spiritual branding. Not every retreat, online course, and personality-centered community deserves money and deference. This is perhaps obvious. And yet.

06  /  Critique

Organized religion: the whole ledger.

Organized religion preserves memory, disciplines practice, forms communities, feeds people, buries the dead, educates children, and keeps wisdom alive across generations. It also protects power, hides abuse, rewards conformity, and turns living truth into procedure. Both columns belong on the ledger. Neither cancels the other.

What it gets right
  • Shared ritual, calendar, and ceremony that marks the human passages.
  • Formation across generations, not just information transfer to individuals.
  • Real community, not just a personal collection of interesting ideas.
  • Consistent service to the poor, sick, grieving, and isolated.
  • Texts, teachers, music, symbols, and centuries of accumulated wisdom.
What goes wrong
  • Institutional self-protection elevated above truth or accountability.
  • Clergy ego and spiritual performance mistaken for genuine holiness.
  • Political capture and the misuse of religious loyalty for partisan ends.
  • Abuse concealment and the double standards that protect perpetrators.
  • Doctrinal gatekeeping used as a substitute for actual moral transformation.
Christianity

Can confuse correct doctrine with transformed life, church loyalty with actual discipleship, and culture war positioning with faithfulness to the teaching it claims to follow.

Judaism

Can harden sacred practice into boundary maintenance and tribal identity when the interior fire that gave those practices meaning has gone quiet.

Islam

Can become rigid legalism when law is detached from the mercy, beauty, and inward purification that Islamic scholars have consistently insisted are its essential companions.

Hindu traditions

Can be romanticized by Western admirers who ignore caste, nationalism, hierarchy, and the distortions produced by treating a vast living tradition as a spiritual product line.

Buddhism

Can become mindfulness branding, institutional hierarchy, or personal wellness practice with better aesthetics. Useful, sometimes. Not what produced the tradition.

New Age spirituality

Can become spiritual consumerism: cultural borrowing without context, magical thinking without accountability, and emotional certainty without any sustained practice behind it.

07  /  Practice model

Structure for the spiritually independent.

A spiritually independent life needs structure. Without it, spiritual independence becomes a playlist of interesting beliefs. Decent background music. Not much backbone.

1

Silence

Daily contemplative prayer, meditation, or quiet attention. Start with ten minutes. Do it the way you brush your teeth — not because you feel like it, but because the alternative is worse over time.

2

Study

Read primary texts slowly. One tradition at a time. Do not build a theology from social media excerpts or other people's summaries. The originals are almost always better and stranger than the summaries suggest.

3

Service

Help real people. Mysticism that never reaches duty becomes self-absorption with softer lighting. Service is not optional. It is how you find out if the interior work is real.

4

Discernment

Keep reason, conscience, tradition, experience, and evidence in the same room. None should govern alone. A claim that demands you silence any one of these is worth examining closely.

08  /  Library

Recommended reading & resources.

Start here. Read slowly. Keep a notebook. Compare claims across traditions. Watch for fruit, not just insight. Avoid teachers who require constant applause and cannot be questioned.

More names worth following

Raimon Panikkar, Bede Griffiths, Eknath Easwaran, Ananda Coomaraswamy, Ken Wilber, James Finley, Julian of Norwich, Teresa of Ávila, John of the Cross, and Meister Eckhart.

Useful search terms

Perennial philosophy, contemplative Christianity, Centering Prayer, apophatic theology, nondual awareness, mysticism, comparative religion, wisdom traditions, interspirituality.

Red flags worth knowing

Enlightenment behind a paywall. Leaders above correction. Sexual access framed as spiritual initiation. Anti-intellectualism. Contempt for ordinary duties. Any group that works to isolate you from family or conscience.