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[[File:Labyrinth at Olcott 2016.jpg|250px|right|thumb|Labyrinth at Olcott. Photo by Patrick Layden]] | |||
A '''Labyrinth''' (from the Greek λαβύρινθος labyrinthos) was in Greek mythology an elaborate structure designed to hold the Minotaur, a mythical creature that was half man and half bull. The Minotaur was killed by the Athenian hero Theseus who was able to escape with the aid of Ariadne, who provided him with a skein of thread. | A '''Labyrinth''' (from the Greek λαβύρινθος labyrinthos) was in Greek mythology an elaborate structure designed to hold the Minotaur, a mythical creature that was half man and half bull. The Minotaur was killed by the Athenian hero Theseus who was able to escape with the aid of Ariadne, who provided him with a skein of thread. | ||
Scholars today distinguish between a maze (a multicursal puzzle with choices of path and direction) and a labyrinth (a single, non-branching path, which leads to the center). | Walking a labyrinth has become a spiritual practice in many cultures and religtions. Scholars today distinguish between a '''maze''' (a multicursal puzzle with choices of path and direction) and a '''labyrinth''' (a single, non-branching path, which leads to the center), also known as a '''meander'''. | ||
== Labyrinth at Olcott == | == Labyrinth as archetype == | ||
[[File:Labyrinth at Olcott.jpg| | [[File:World Labyrinth Day.jpg|250px|right|thumb|Labyrinth event in May, 2019]] | ||
Behind the Rogers Building, on the west side of the campus, is a seven-circuit Cretan labyrinth. Composed of large stepping stones on a field of pebbles, the labyrinth symbolizes the seven aspects of the cosmos and the human being. Walking its winding path from the circumference to the center and back out again represents the involution and evolution of the universe, the birth and passing from life of an individual, and a quest to the center of our being and subsequent return to our divine source. Many visitors come to Olcott to walk the labyrinth throughout the daylight hours, when the grounds are open. | [[John Algeo]] wrote of the significance of labyrinths: | ||
<blockquote> | |||
[The labyrinth] is an archetype in the human mind. Labyrinth patterns are universal, being found as archaic petroglyphs, Amerindian basket-weaving designs, and paintings or drawings from all over the world. The earliest reported labyrinth was a two-story stone building in Egypt, described by the Greek historian Herodotus, but the name comes from the Cretan structure in the myth of Ariadne, Theseus, and the Minotaur, a pattern that also appears on ancient Cretan coins. In the Christian Middle Ages, labyrinths were often formed with colored paving stones in the floors of cathedral naves, especially on the Continent. Later, labyrinths were sometimes constructed of turf, herbaceous borders, or hedges – frequently in maze patterns and especially in England... | |||
All labyrinths are a kind of game, but that does not negate their seriousness. According to Hindu lore, the universe itself is a game, a lila, that the gods play. Walking a labyrinth is following in the steps of Shiva Nataraja, the Divine Transformer who is Lord of the Dance.<ref>John Algeo, "The Labyrinth: A Brief Introduction to its History, Meaning and Use" Quest 89.1 (January-February, 2001), 24-25. Available at [https://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/the-layrinth-a-brief-introduction-to-its-history-meaning-and-use?highlight=WyJsYWJ5cmludGgiXQ== Quest website]</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
== Labyrinth walking as spiritual practice == | |||
While some labyrinths are designed purely for entertainment, most are intended to serve spiritual practice. Walking a labyrinth can be a surrogate for a pilgrimage or as a means of walking [[meditation]]. | |||
[[John Algeo]] described the experience, using the labyrinth at the [[Theosophical Society in America]] as an example: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
You walk the Olcott labyrinth by entering from the northwest, where the stepping-stone path begins. You follow the path to the center, where you may wish to pause for a few moments. Then you reverse your direction and retrace your path back out to the starting point. In walking any labyrinth, you should always complete the pattern by following the path both inward and outward, rather than cutting across the pattern at any point. The inward movement needs to be complemented by a corresponding outward return. | |||
If several persons walk a labyrinth together, they may pass one another, going in either the same direction or opposite to each other. They may pass in meditative silence or quietly salute each other by a nod of the head or a raising of the hands. The effect of meeting fellow pilgrims on the path is part of the labyrinthine experience. The labyrinth is a joyfully sacred space. You do not need to be somber around it, but if someone is walking the labyrinth, it is courteous to respect the need they may have for quiet concentration. | |||
As you enter the labyrinth, you may focus your thoughts on a question or concern. You may walk the labyrinth with a quiet mind, sensing without particularizing the wonder of the pattern. Or you may walk it with some of its many symbolic meanings held in your mind as seed thoughts. In the labyrinth, as in life, there is no single right way to follow the path.<ref>John Algeo, 24-25.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
== Types of labyrinths == | |||
Construction of walking labyrinths is typically of stone and gravel, or garden plantings. Finger labyrinths can be created using paper, ceramics, fabrics, or other materials. There are several common designs for labyrinths, with many variations. These are the Cretan style (left), Chartres style (center), and spiral (right): | |||
{|style="margin: 0 auto;" | |||
| [[File:Cretan Labyrinth.jpg|200px]] [[File:Chartres Labyrinth.jpg|200px]] [[File:Spiral Finger Labyrinth.jpg|200px]] | |||
|} | |||
== Theosophical Society and Labyrinths == | |||
[[File:Labyrinth at Olcott.jpg|180px|right|thumb|Labyrinth at Olcott campus]] | |||
Several Theosophical centers have built labyrinths to encourage this meditative practice. | |||
=== Labyrinth at Olcott === | |||
Behind the [[L. W. Rogers Building]], on the west side of the [[Olcott (campus)|headquarters campus]] of the [[Theosophical Society in America]], is a classical seven-circuit Cretan labyrinth. Composed of large stepping stones on a field of pebbles, the labyrinth symbolizes the seven aspects of the cosmos and the human being. Walking its winding path from the circumference to the center and back out again represents the involution and evolution of the universe, the birth and passing from life of an individual, and a quest to the center of our being and subsequent return to our divine source. Many visitors come to Olcott to walk the labyrinth throughout the daylight hours, when the grounds are open. | |||
[[File:Labyrinth at Krotona.jpg|right|230px|thumb|Labyrinth at Krotona]] | |||
=== Labyrinth at Krotona === | |||
[[Krotona Institute of Theosophy]] in Ojai, California has a simple hill-top labyrinth of stones set in a grassy field. | |||
== Online resources == | == Online resources == | ||
=== Websites === | |||
* [https://labyrinthsociety.org/home The Labyrinth Society] | |||
* [https://labyrinthlocator.com/ Worldwide Labyrinth Locator] | |||
===Articles=== | ===Articles=== | ||
*[ | * [https://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/the-layrinth-a-brief-introduction-to-its-history-meaning-and-use?highlight=WyJsYWJ5cmludGgiXQ== The Labyrinth: A Brief Introduction to its History, Meaning and Use] by John Algeo | ||
*[ | * [https://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/going-around-in-circles-the-labyrinths-of-theosophy?highlight=WyJsYWJ5cmludGgiXQ== Going Around in Circles: The Labyrinths of Theosophy] by Atala Dorothy Toy | ||
* [https://educationsvoice.wordpress.com/2016/03/26/mindfulness-in-the-classroom-finger-labyrinth-meditation/ Mindfulness in the Classroom - Finger Labyrinth Meditation]. Blog entry posted March 26, 2016. | |||
===Videos=== | ===Videos=== | ||
*[http://www.theosophical.org/news/2111-betty-bland-on-labyrinths-theosophy-a-prayer-# Betty Bland on Labyrinths, Theosophy, & Prayer] interview by Susan Diamond and Erika Harris. | * [http://www.theosophical.org/news/2111-betty-bland-on-labyrinths-theosophy-a-prayer-# Betty Bland on Labyrinths, Theosophy, & Prayer] interview by Susan Diamond and Erika Harris. | ||
== Notes == | |||
<references/> | |||
[[Category:Theosophical worldview]] | [[Category:Theosophical worldview]] | ||
[[Category:Miscellaneous]] | [[Category:Miscellaneous]] |
Latest revision as of 13:44, 30 August 2024
A Labyrinth (from the Greek λαβύρινθος labyrinthos) was in Greek mythology an elaborate structure designed to hold the Minotaur, a mythical creature that was half man and half bull. The Minotaur was killed by the Athenian hero Theseus who was able to escape with the aid of Ariadne, who provided him with a skein of thread.
Walking a labyrinth has become a spiritual practice in many cultures and religtions. Scholars today distinguish between a maze (a multicursal puzzle with choices of path and direction) and a labyrinth (a single, non-branching path, which leads to the center), also known as a meander.
Labyrinth as archetype
John Algeo wrote of the significance of labyrinths:
[The labyrinth] is an archetype in the human mind. Labyrinth patterns are universal, being found as archaic petroglyphs, Amerindian basket-weaving designs, and paintings or drawings from all over the world. The earliest reported labyrinth was a two-story stone building in Egypt, described by the Greek historian Herodotus, but the name comes from the Cretan structure in the myth of Ariadne, Theseus, and the Minotaur, a pattern that also appears on ancient Cretan coins. In the Christian Middle Ages, labyrinths were often formed with colored paving stones in the floors of cathedral naves, especially on the Continent. Later, labyrinths were sometimes constructed of turf, herbaceous borders, or hedges – frequently in maze patterns and especially in England...
All labyrinths are a kind of game, but that does not negate their seriousness. According to Hindu lore, the universe itself is a game, a lila, that the gods play. Walking a labyrinth is following in the steps of Shiva Nataraja, the Divine Transformer who is Lord of the Dance.[1]
Labyrinth walking as spiritual practice
While some labyrinths are designed purely for entertainment, most are intended to serve spiritual practice. Walking a labyrinth can be a surrogate for a pilgrimage or as a means of walking meditation.
John Algeo described the experience, using the labyrinth at the Theosophical Society in America as an example:
You walk the Olcott labyrinth by entering from the northwest, where the stepping-stone path begins. You follow the path to the center, where you may wish to pause for a few moments. Then you reverse your direction and retrace your path back out to the starting point. In walking any labyrinth, you should always complete the pattern by following the path both inward and outward, rather than cutting across the pattern at any point. The inward movement needs to be complemented by a corresponding outward return.
If several persons walk a labyrinth together, they may pass one another, going in either the same direction or opposite to each other. They may pass in meditative silence or quietly salute each other by a nod of the head or a raising of the hands. The effect of meeting fellow pilgrims on the path is part of the labyrinthine experience. The labyrinth is a joyfully sacred space. You do not need to be somber around it, but if someone is walking the labyrinth, it is courteous to respect the need they may have for quiet concentration.
As you enter the labyrinth, you may focus your thoughts on a question or concern. You may walk the labyrinth with a quiet mind, sensing without particularizing the wonder of the pattern. Or you may walk it with some of its many symbolic meanings held in your mind as seed thoughts. In the labyrinth, as in life, there is no single right way to follow the path.[2]
Types of labyrinths
Construction of walking labyrinths is typically of stone and gravel, or garden plantings. Finger labyrinths can be created using paper, ceramics, fabrics, or other materials. There are several common designs for labyrinths, with many variations. These are the Cretan style (left), Chartres style (center), and spiral (right):
Theosophical Society and Labyrinths
Several Theosophical centers have built labyrinths to encourage this meditative practice.
Labyrinth at Olcott
Behind the L. W. Rogers Building, on the west side of the headquarters campus of the Theosophical Society in America, is a classical seven-circuit Cretan labyrinth. Composed of large stepping stones on a field of pebbles, the labyrinth symbolizes the seven aspects of the cosmos and the human being. Walking its winding path from the circumference to the center and back out again represents the involution and evolution of the universe, the birth and passing from life of an individual, and a quest to the center of our being and subsequent return to our divine source. Many visitors come to Olcott to walk the labyrinth throughout the daylight hours, when the grounds are open.
Labyrinth at Krotona
Krotona Institute of Theosophy in Ojai, California has a simple hill-top labyrinth of stones set in a grassy field.
Online resources
Websites
Articles
- The Labyrinth: A Brief Introduction to its History, Meaning and Use by John Algeo
- Going Around in Circles: The Labyrinths of Theosophy by Atala Dorothy Toy
- Mindfulness in the Classroom - Finger Labyrinth Meditation. Blog entry posted March 26, 2016.
Videos
- Betty Bland on Labyrinths, Theosophy, & Prayer interview by Susan Diamond and Erika Harris.
Notes
- ↑ John Algeo, "The Labyrinth: A Brief Introduction to its History, Meaning and Use" Quest 89.1 (January-February, 2001), 24-25. Available at Quest website
- ↑ John Algeo, 24-25.