Mysticism is all about love. Mystics love God and want to get in touch
with Him. To this end, they follow a tortuous path through the intimacy
of their own souls, driven by desire. The Lord may not be the easiest of
lovers, but this does not prevent them from longing for Him. In fact,
his perceived absence, physical and even mental, makes their love burn
all the fiercer. And this burning love is far from thoughtless. The
difficulty of loving God is precisely one of the main reasons why
mystics have always felt the need to reflect profoundly upon their
relationship with Him. The mystical canon testifies in various ways to
its authors’ extensive and diversified thinking on their intense
spiritual love lives. And these reflections all have their elaborate,
subtle theories of love.
It is from this perspective that the contributions to this volume approach several important works in the Christian mystical tradition, from the Seven Ways of Minne by Beatrice of Nazareth, via Novalis’s Hymns to the Night, to the Prologue by Simone Weil. These writings are examined for their specific theoretical schemes and backgrounds. At the same time, the question is also dealt with how the theory and the experience of love relate to one another in these texts. Investigations of the reflections on this topic by modern thinkers like Jean-Paul Sartre and Michel Foucault round off this exploration of mysticism and its love theories.