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Love’s Deepest Abyss: A Contemplative Ecology of Darkness

Douglas E. Christie

Journal of Contemplative Studies July 23, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.57010/ilyg6107 via DOAJ

Summary

Hadewijch of Antwerp suggests that the deepest abyss of love is its most beautiful form, proposing that understanding love requires losing a narrow sense of self. This concept has resurfaced in response to profound losses across various domains, emphasizing the importance of valuing what we are losing and fostering a shared life with all sentient beings. It contributes to a new 'contemplative ecology of darkness,' promoting a spiritual practice for recognizing our connection to the larger whole.

Study at a glance

Key finding The idea of the abyss in love reflects a necessary relinquishing of self to engage with deep losses and fosters a reconnection with the shared life among all beings.

Abstract

“Love’s deepest abyss is her most beautiful form,” so claims Hadewijch of Antwerp, the great medieval Flemish mystic. This strange and alluring idea, shared by many of the apophatic tradition, reflects the sense that the abyssal (sometimes conceived of as a void, a desert, or darkness) is essential to the work of love, and that love can only be known by relinquishing the narrow conception of the self and becoming lost in the depths. The idea of the abyss has reemerged in our own time as part of a painful grammar of loss: a way of engaging and responding to social, political, cultural, environmental, spiritual, and personal losses too deep to name but impossible to ignore. It has also become critical to the work of reimagining the immense value of what we are losing, rekindling our capacity to love what is most precious to us, and helping us recover a sense of a shared life with all sentient beings (something often referred to in the Christian mystical tradition simply as “the common life”). And it has become part of an emerging “contemplative ecology of darkness”—a radical spiritual practice that can help us learn again how to behold ourselves and other living beings as part of a larger whole.

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