What is Ecumenical Spirituality?
Ecumenical spirituality is a contemplative practice and theological orientation that intentionally draws wisdom, methods, and insights from multiple religious traditions while seeking common ground in the human experience of the sacred. Unlike syncretism, which blends traditions into a new hybrid, ecumenical spirituality maintains respect for the distinct integrity of each tradition while exploring their convergent teachings on consciousness, compassion, and transcendence. Practitioners may incorporate Christian contemplative prayer, Buddhist meditation, Sufi practices, or Hindu devotional techniques within a framework that acknowledges both particularity and universality.
Origins & Lineage
The term “ecumenical” has Christian roots in the early church councils (4th-5th centuries CE), but ecumenical spirituality as a distinct practice emerged in the mid-20th century. The Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) catalyzed Catholic engagement with non-Christian traditions through Nostra Aetate, which affirmed truth and holiness in other religions. Pioneers included Thomas Merton, whose dialogue with D.T. Suzuki and other Buddhist teachers in the 1960s modeled contemplative exchange, and Bede Griffiths, who established Christian ashrams in India synthesizing Benedictine monasticism with Hindu Vedantic practice.
The 1893 World Parliament of Religions in Chicago provided an earlier institutional moment, introducing Swami Vivekananda and Soyen Shaku to Western audiences. By the 1970s, the Snowmass Interreligious Conference brought together contemplatives from nine traditions to identify shared mystical principles. Contemporaries like Wayne Teasdale coined “interspirituality” in The Mystic Heart (1999), while Raimon Panikkar developed comparative theology emphasizing “cosmotheandric” unity.
How It’s Practiced
Ecumenical spirituality manifests in contemplative practice borrowing from multiple lineages. A practitioner might begin the day with Benedictine Lectio Divina, practice Vipassana meditation at midday, and close with Sufi dhikr (remembrance). Retreats often feature teachers from different traditions offering parallel instruction—a Zen roshi and a Carmelite nun teaching silence from distinct frameworks.
Interfaith communities like the Community of the Mystic Heart or Living School integrate ritual elements: lighting Sabbath candles, reading Rumi, chanting Sanskrit mantras, and sitting zazen within a single gathering. Academic programs in comparative mysticism at institutions like the California Institute of Integral Studies formalize this study. Daily practice typically emphasizes direct contemplative experience over doctrinal adherence, with practitioners maintaining a “home tradition” while incorporating complementary methods.
Ecumenical Spirituality Today
Contemporary seekers encounter ecumenical spirituality through interfaith meditation centers like the Elat Chayyim retreat center (Jewish-Buddhist), the Esalen Institute’s comparative religion workshops, and urban sanghas offering “Sunday Assembly” models blending humanist and multi-faith elements. Teachers such as Mirabai Starr, who translates mystical texts across traditions, and Francis Bennett, co-founder of the Snowmass conferences, lead workshops and publish widely.
Online platforms host ecumenical contemplative circles via Zoom, while podcasts like OnBeing and The Wisdom Podcast feature cross-traditional dialogue. Certifications in spiritual direction increasingly include multi-faith training. The Parliament of the World’s Religions, now convening every few years, remains a gathering point. Ecumenical spirituality also appears in academic mysticism studies, with scholars like Bernard McGinn and Ewert Cousins establishing comparative frameworks.
Common Misconceptions
Ecumenical spirituality is not religious relativism claiming all traditions are identical. Practitioners recognize profound theological differences—Christianity’s incarnational focus differs fundamentally from Buddhism’s anatman (no-self) doctrine. It is not “spiritual bypassing” of tradition; serious practitioners typically ground themselves in one lineage before exploring others. Critics within orthodox communities charge that it dilutes traditions or cherry-picks appealing elements while ignoring difficult teachings. Ecumenical practice also differs from secular mindfulness, which explicitly removes religious context; ecumenical spirituality maintains sacred frameworks even while crossing boundaries.
Some confuse it with Unitarian Universalism or Baháʼí Faith, which are distinct religious movements rather than contemplative methodologies. The practice requires rigor—understanding context, lineage, and proper transmission—rather than superficial sampling.
How to Begin
Begin by establishing a contemplative foundation in one tradition—a Christian might start with centering prayer through Contemplative Outreach, while others might ground in Zen practice at a local zendo. Read comparative mystics: The Perennial Philosophy by Aldous Huxley, The Essential Mystics edited by Andrew Harvey, or The World’s Religions by Huston Smith provide overviews.
Attend an interfaith retreat or workshop at centers like Omega Institute or Esalen. Join online communities like the Center for Action and Contemplation’s offerings, which integrate Christian contemplation with global wisdom. Study with teachers trained in multiple lineages, or pursue spiritual direction with an ecumenically-oriented guide. The Monastic Interreligious Dialogue organization connects monastics across traditions and offers resources. Begin with practices emphasizing universal elements—silent sitting, breath awareness, loving-kindness—before engaging tradition-specific rituals requiring formal initiation.