Muir is an important figure in American Spirituality because he morphed his childhood Christian upbringing into a union with God in Nature.
“Christianity and Mountainanity are streams from the same fountain,” he once wrote. Muir experienced a “conversion” – a “born-again” experience – in the mountains of California, and found himself “baptized” in the spray of Yosemite’s massive waterfalls. He was a prophet calling Americans to “repent” of their city ways and to embrace the gospel of the wilderness.
His writings are especially helpful for those current seekers who consider themselves “spiritual but not religious,” who find their union with the Divine primarily through Nature.
“Christianity and Mountainanity are streams from the same fountain,” he once wrote. Muir experienced a “conversion” – a “born-again” experience – in the mountains of California, and found himself “baptized” in the spray of Yosemite’s massive waterfalls. He was a prophet calling Americans to “repent” of their city ways and to embrace the gospel of the wilderness.
His writings are especially helpful for those current seekers who consider themselves “spiritual but not religious,” who find their union with the Divine primarily through Nature.
In this Powerpoint presentation, we examine the various elements of Muir’s spirituality of Nature and of the people who influenced him, including Emerson and Thoreau. Stephen Hatch’s own stunning landscape photographs is used to illustrate many of the major points.
Books by Stephen Hatch
Stephen Hatch trained with Father Thomas Keating in the 1980s and has lived acontemplative life ever since. His life work is discovering and practicing the connection between Nature and contemplation. Stephen teaches two Christian Mysticism courses at Naropa University and is the author of “The Contemplative John Muir: Spiritual Quotations from the Great American Naturalist” (2012), and “Wilderness Mysticism: A Contemplative Christian Tradition” (2018). He was interviewed in the recent film: “The Unruly Mystic: John Muir"”; (2019). Stephen lives in Fort Collins and hikes, camps and backpacks whenever he can.