Schuon's life, they argue, is a quest for the inner meaning of religious experience, as is indicated by his connections to Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, and Native American Shamanism. Spiritual seekers from all backgrounds will appreciate this comprehensive study of this towering figure of comparative religion.
Unlike certain modernist theologians, who in the interest of fostering harmony among the religions are prepared to jettison the Incarnation and to reduce Jesus to purely human and historical categories, Schuon is adamant in his defense of the traditional doctrine. "The mainspring of Christianity," ...