David Steindl-Rast
Brother David Steindl-Rast, O.S.B., is an Austrian-American Catholic Benedictine monk, author, and lecturer. He is committed to interfaith dialogue and has dealt with the interaction between spirituality and science.
Life and career
Steindl-Rast was born and raised in Vienna, Austria, with a traditional Catholic upbringing that instilled in him a trust in life and an experience of mystery. His family and surname derive from their aristocratic seat near the pilgrimage site of Maria Rast, today Ruše in Slovenia. Privations he experienced in youth during the Second World War were magnified by the tensions of him being one-fourth Jewish. He was drafted into the German army but did not see combat. After a year, he abandoned his post and went underground, working to set up refugee camps and to clear rubble from university grounds. He received his MA degree from the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts and his PhD in experimental psychology from the University of Vienna. He emigrated with his family to the United States in the same year and became a Benedictine monk in 1953 at Mount Saviour Monastery in Pine City, New York, a newly founded Benedictine community. With permission of his abbot, Damasus Winzen, in 1966 he was officially delegated to pursue Buddhist-Christian dialogue and began to study Zen with masters Haku'un Yasutani, Soen Nakagawa, Shunryu Suzuki, and Eido Tai Shimano.As a Benedictine monk, he spent time in various monastic communities, including 14 years at the New Camaldoli Hermitage in Big Sur, California. He spent half the year as a hermit in a monastery and spent the other half lecturing and giving workshops and retreats. His experience around the world and with the world's various religions convinced him that the human response of gratitude is a part of the religious worldview and is essential to all human life.
He co-founded the Center for Spiritual Studies with Jewish, Buddhist, Hindu and Sufi teachers in 1968, and since the 1970s has been a member of the cultural historian William Irwin Thompson's Lindisfarne Association. He received the Martin Buber Award for his achievements in building dialog among religious traditions. His writings include Gratefulness, the Heart of Prayer, The Music of Silence, Words of Common Sense and Belonging to the Universe. In 2000, he co-founded A Network for Grateful Living, an organization dedicated to gratefulness as a transformative influence for individuals and society.
Religion and mysticism
During Link TV's Lunch With Bokara 2005 episode "The Monk and the Rabbi", he stated:In that same episode, he expressed his belief in panentheism, where divinity interpenetrates every part of existence and timelessly extends beyond it.
Selected writings
- 1984, Gratefulness, the Heart of Prayer: An Approach to Life in Fullness, N.J. Paulist Press 1984.
- 1991, Belonging to the Universe: Explorations on the Frontiers of Science and Spirituality, coauthored with Fritjof Capra and Thomas Matus, Harper San Francisco,
- 1995, Music of Silence: A Sacred Journey through the Hours of the Day, coauthored with Sharon LeBell, Ulysses Press, 2. Ed. 2001,
- 1996, The Ground We Share: Everyday Practice, Buddhist and Christian, coauthored with Robert Baker Aitken. Shambhala Publications,
- 1999, A Listening Heart: The Spirituality of Sacred Sensuousness, Crossroad,
- 2002, Words of Common Sense for Mind, Body and Soul, Templeton Foundation Press,
- 2008, Common Sense Spirituality. The Crossroad Publishing Company,
- 2010, Deeper than Words: Living the Apostles' Creed, Doubleday Religion,
- 2010, David Steindl-Rast: Essential Writings, selected with and introduction by Clare Hallward,, Orbis Books,
- 2016, Faith beyond Belief: Spirituality for Our Times, coauthored with Anselm Grün. Liturgical Press,
- 2016. The Way of Silence: Engaging the Sacred in Daily Life, Franciscan Media,
- 2017, i am through you so i, Paulist Press,
- 2021, 99 Names of God, Orbis Books,
- Introduction, Words of Gratitude for Mind, Body, and Soul, by Robert A. Emmons and Joanna Hill
- Afterword, Benedict's Dharma: Buddhists Reflect on the Rule of Saint Benedict, by Norman Fischer, Joseph Goldstein and Judith Simmer-Brown, edited by Yifa, and Patrick Henry
- Foreword, Living Buddha, Living Christ, by Thich Nhat Hanh
- Foreword, This World, by Teddy Macker
- Chapter in Entheogens and the Future of Religion titled "Explorations into God", edited by Robert Forte