Mystery
something secret or unexplainable
Mysteryis something unexplainable or unknown.
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Quotes
edit- Man has always been afraid of anything mysterious, forgetting that the key to the mystery is within himself. One must free oneself from all impeding conditions or circumstances, which are different for everyone. Progress depends upon free will that is directed toward good.
- Agni Yoga,Supermundane I,(1938)
- Augustinediscussed theTrinityby means of ananalogywith the three fundamental phases ofpersonality—knowing, willing, and feeling—although ultimately he believed it to be a mystery beyond human comprehension.Godis the perfection ofknowledge,power,andgood will.His attributes areomniscience,omnipotence,andsupreme kindliness.
- Albert Edwin Avey,Handbook in the History of Philosophy.New York: Barnes & Noble. 1954. p. 70.
- I have sometimes suspected that the only thing that holds no mystery ishappiness,because it is its own justification.
- Jorge Luis Borges,"Unworthy",In Praise of Darkness(1969), tr. Andrew Hurley,Collected Fictions(1998).
- Mysteries abound where most we seek foranswers.
- Ray Bradbury,in "All flesh is one: what matter scores?" inWhen Elephants Last In The Dooryard Bloomed: Celebrations For Almost Any Day In The Year(1975).
- I cannot forecast to you the action ofRussia.It is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma; but perhaps there is akey.Thatkeyis Russian national interest.”
- Winston Churchill,BBC radio address “The Russian Enigma” (1 October 1939) - (partial text).
- It seems to me there is so much more to theworldthan the average eye is allowed to see. I believe if you look hard, there are morewondersin thisuniversethan you could ever havedreamedof. It's colour! Colour that holds thekey!I can hear the colours,listento them. Every time I step outside, Ifeelnatureis shouting at me. Come on! Come and get me! Come on! Capture my mystery!
- Richard Curtis,writer of "Vincent and the Doctor",portrayingVincent van Goghconversing with theeleventh incarnation of the Doctorin theDoctor Whotelevision series.
- Everybody is wonderin' what and where they all came from.
Everybody is worryin' 'bout where they're gonna go when the whole thing's done.
But no one knows for certain 'n' so it's all the same to me.
I think I'll just let the mystery be.- Iris DeMent,"Let the Mystery Be", track 1 on her debut studio albumInfamous Angel(1992)
- The mostbeautifulthing we canexperienceis the mysterious. It is the source of all trueartandscience.He to whom thisemotionis astranger,who can no longer pause towonderand stand rapt in awe, is as good asdead:hiseyesare closed.
- Albert EinsteininMein Weltbild(1931), as quoted inIntroduction to Philosophy(1935) by George Thomas White Patrick and Frank Miller Chapman, p. 44.
- It is enough for me to contemplate the mystery of conscious life perpetuating itself through all eternity, to reflect upon the marvelous structure of the universe which we dimly perceive, and to try humbly to comprehend an infinitesimal part of the intelligence manifested in nature.
- Albert EinsteininMein Weltbild(1931), as quoted inIntroduction to Philosophy(1935) by George Thomas White Patrick and Frank Miller Chapman, p. 44.
- There are some mysteries so big that they will take the wholeworldto solve them.
- Rebecca Helm,in aTwitter post,quoted inYou Can Help Solve One of the Mysteries of the Ocean(April 24, 2019) by Chantel Delulio,Fodor's
- Reasonquite properly rejects contradiction, butrationalismabhors mystery, which every heresy attempts in its own way to resolve.
- Michael Horton,Pilgrim Theology(14 January 2013), p. 177
- Theangelwhich I saw stand upon theseaand upon theearthlifted up hishandtoheaven,and sware byhim that livethfor ever and ever,who created heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are therein, that there should betimeno longer: but in thedaysof thevoiceof the seventhangel,when he shall begin tosound,the mystery ofGodshould be finished, as he hath declared to his servants theprophets.
- John of Patmos,Revelation10:5-7 (KJV)
- I'm for mystery, not interpretive answers.… The answer is never the answer.What's really interesting is the mystery. If you seek the mystery instead of the answer, you'll always be seeking. I've never seen anybody really find the answer, but they think they have.So they stopthinking.But the job is to seek mystery, evoke mystery, plant agardenin whichstrangeplants grow and mysteries bloom.The need for mystery is greater than the need for an answer.
- Ken Keseyin "The Art of Fiction" - interview by Robert Faggen,The Paris ReviewNo. 130 (Spring 1994), p. 92.
- We met in secret: mystery is to love
Like perfume to the flower; the maiden's blush
Looks loveliest when her cheek is pale with fear.- Letitia Elizabeth Landon,The London Literary Gazette(18th May 1822),Poetic Sketches.Second Series - Sketch the ThirdRosalie
- Ever desireless, one can see the mystery.
Ever desiring, one can see the manifestations.
These two spring from the same source but differ inname;
this appears asdarkness.
Darkness within darkness.
The gate toallmystery.- Laoziin theTao Te Ching,Ch.1, as translated by Gia-Fu Feng & Jane English (1972).
- Taocan be talked about, but not theEternalTao.
Names can be named, but not the Eternal Name.
As the origin of heaven-and-earth, it is nameless:
As "the Mother" of all things, it is nameable.
So, as ever hidden, we should look at its inner aspects.
As always manifest, we should look at its outer aspects.
These two flow from the same source,
though differently named;
And both are called mysteries.
The Mystery of mysteries is theDoorofallessence.- Laoziin theTao Te Ching,Ch.1, as translated by John C. H. Wu (1990).
- Free from desire, you realize the mystery.
Caught in desire, you see only the manifestations.
Yet mystery and manifestations
arise from the same source.
This source is called darkness.
Darkness within darkness.
The gateway to allunderstanding.- Laoziin theTao Te Ching,Ch.1, as interpreted byStephen Mitchell(1992).
- Freed from desire, you can see the hidden mystery.
By having desire, you can only see what is visibly real.
Yet mystery and reality
emerge from the same source.
This source is called darkness.
Darkness born from darkness.
The beginning of all understanding.- Laoziin theTao Te Ching,Ch.1, as trans. byJ.H.McDonald (1996)[Public domain translation]
- The unwantingsoul
sees what's hidden,
and the ever-wanting soul
sees only what it wants.
Two things, one origin,
but different in name,
whose identity is mystery.
Mystery of all mysteries!
The door to the hidden.- Laoziin theTao Te Ching,Ch.1, as interpreted byUrsula K. Le Guin(1998).
- Mysteries are irritated by facts.
- Norman Mailer,Superman Comes to the Supermarket.(November 1960)
- Mystery is an emotion which is repugnant to a political animal.
- Norman Mailer,Superman Comes to the Supermarket.(November 1960)
- Why else lead a life of bad banquet dinners, cigar smoke, camp chairs, foul breath, and excruciatingly dull jargon if not to avoid the echoes of what is not known.
- Norman Mailer,Superman Comes to the Supermarket.(November 1960)
- Sex and death have in common the fact that they are the two biological aspects of themysterium tremendum.Mystery—defined here as a situation in which the data impinge on the problem—has its ultimate meaning in these two human experiences.
- Rollo May,Love and Will(New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1969), Ch. 4: "Love and Death", Death and the Obsession with Sex (last paragraph)
- Some things must needs gain in mystery before we can at all undertake to think upon them. Without mystery they are all obscure. Who can think, for instance, of theinfinityofspacewithout adding inconceivable things to his meditation?
- Alice Meynell,"A Hundred Years Ago", inThe Second Person Singular and Other Essays(Oxford University Press, 1921), p. 69
- The ultimate gift of conscious life is a sense of the mystery that encompasses it.
- Lewis Mumford,The Conduct of Life(New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1951), p. 57
- A mystery is only a mystery for a time, for it relies upon a sense of wonder and curiosity to maintain its air, and that needs energy. If it is not revealed before the energy runs out, then the mystery becomes a conundrum, a problem, an annoyance, and a pestilence.
- Jody Lynn Nye,The Dreams of the Sea(2013), in J. E. Mooney andBill Fawcett(eds.),Shadows of the New Sun(p. 305)
- Taomysticsnever talk aboutGod,reincarnation,heaven,hell.No, they don't talk about these things. These are all creations of human mind: explanations for something which can never be explained, explanations for the mystery.In fact, all explanations are against God because explanation de-mystifies existence. Existence is a mystery, and one should accept it as a mystery and not pretend to have any explanation. No,explanation is not needed – only exclamation, a wonderingheart,awakened, surprised,feelingthe mystery of life eachmoment.Then, and only then, you know whattruthis. And truthliberates.
- Osho (Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh),Never Born, Never Died(2002).
- Homage to you, O ye divine Lords of things, ye holy beings, whose seats are veiled! Homage to you, O ye Lords of Eternity, whose forms are concealed, whose sanctuaries are mysteries, whose places of abode are not known!
- Papyrus of Ani(c. 1250 BCE),Book of the Dead,translated byErnest Alfred Wallis Budge
- It is not in thebooksof thePhilosophers,but in thereligioussymbolismof the Ancients, that we must look for the footprints ofScience,and re-discover theMysteriesofKnowledge.
- Albert Pike,Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry(1871), Ch. XXXII: Sublime Princ.
- Ride, captain ride, upon your mysteryship,
Be amazed, at thefriends,you have here on your trip.
Ride, captain ride, upon your mystery ship,
On your way, to aworld,that others might have missed.- Mike Pineraand Frank "Skip" Konte, ofBlues Image,inRide Captain Ride(1970).
- "Can you think of anyreasonwhy someone would kill him? "
The troll scratched his head. "Well, 'cos dey wanted himdead,I reckon. Dat's a good reason. "- Terry Pratchett,The Fifth Elephant.
- "Luke, this reminds me of a puzzle"
- The Professor Layton Series
- "A true gentleman leaves no puzzle unsolved"
- Professor Layton and the Curious Village(2007)
- Mystery is delightful, but unscientific, since it depends uponignorance.
- Bertrand Russell,The Analysis of Mind(1921), Lecture I: Recent Criticisms of "Consciousness".
- Just as nature abhors a vacuum, our minds abhor a mystery. "
- Irena Sertôrian inThe Infinite Futureby Eduard Salgado-MacKenzie
- A prohibition and a mystery are the same—a locked room whose inscrutable door beckons us closer. Human curiosity impels us to open it, and the enlightenment we find inside—if it's truly worth our while—will invariably devastate us.
- Irena Sertôrian inThe Infinite Futureby Eduard Salgado-MacKenzie
- But the divine mystery is inherent in the divine, a part of the nature of God, and can never disappear. And this means that it is still a mystery even to the mystic who has directly experienced it, nay, even to God Himself. That is why it is ineffable. The mystery and the ineffability of God are one and the same thing.
- Walter Terence Stace,Time and Eternity(1952) p. 37
- Between the mysteries of death and life
Thou standest, loving, guiding,— not explaining;
We ask, and Thou art silent,— yet we gaze,
And our charmed hearts forget their drear complaining;
No crushingfate,no stonydestiny!
Thou Lamb that hast been slain, we rest in Thee.- Harriet Beecher Stowe,"Life's Mystery", reported in Charlotte Fiske Rogé,The Cambridge Book of Poetry and Song(1832), p. 544.
- Vi hồ vi hồ, chí ô vô hình; thần hồ thần hồ, chí ô vô thanh; cố năng vi địch chi tư mệnh.
- Be extremely subtle, even to the point of formlessness. Be extremelymysterious,even to the point of soundlessness.Thereby you can be the director of the opponent'sfate.
- Alternative translation:Subtle and insubstantial, the expert leaves no trace; divinely mysterious, he is inaudible. Thus he is master of his enemy's fate.'
- Alternative translation:O divine art of subtlety andsecrecy!Through you we learn to be invisible, through you inaudible and hence we can hold the enemy's fate in our hands.
- Sun Tzu,The Art of War,Chapter VI · Weaknesses and Strengths, Chapter titles from Chow-Hou Wee (2003)
- There is no mystery whatever — only inability to perceive the obvious.
- Wei Wu Wei,All Else Is Bondage: Non-Volitional Living(1964)
- Today for real mystery one has to look tocosmologyandelementary particle physics.
- Steven Weinberg,Dreams of a Final Theory.Vintage Books. 1994. p. 250.(originally published in 1992 by Pantheon Books)
Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers(1895)
edit- Quotes reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert,Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers(1895).
- Whoeverbelievesin aGodatall,believes in aninfinitemystery; and if the existence of God is such an infinite mystery, we can very well expect and afford to have many of His ways mysterious to us.
- Ichabod Spencer, p. 421.
- There is no religion without mysteries. God Himself is the great secret ofNature.
- François-René de Chateaubriand,p. 421.
- Where is the subject that does not branch out into infinity? For every grain ofsandis a mystery; so is everydaisyinsummer,and so is everysnow-flake inwinter.Both upwards and downwards, and all around us,scienceand speculation pass into mystery at last.
- William Mountford,p. 421.
- Augustine,the father of [[theologians], was walking on theoceanshore and pondering over the truth, "three distinct persons, not separate, but distinct; and yet but oneGod;"and he came upon a little boy that was playing with a colored sea-shell, scooping a hole in the sand, and then going down to the waves and getting his shell full of water and putting it into the hole. Augustine said," What are you doing, my little fellow? "The boy replied," I am going to pour the [sea]] into that hole. ""Ah," said Augustine, "that is what I have been attempting. Standing at the ocean ofinfinity,I have attempted to grasp it with my finitemind."
- Joseph Dare,p. 421.
- Were there no mysteries in the Bible, we should doubt its being the transcript of the Eternal Mind. The "mystery of godliness" adapts it to our ruined race. Those mysteries of the Bible are like the mountains of the world; they give grandeur to the landscape and fertility to the soil.
- Joseph Dare,p. 422.
- The mysteries of the Bible should teach us, at one and the same time, ournothingnessand ourgreatness;producinghumility,and animatinghope.I bow before these mysteries. I knew that I should find them, and I pretend not to remove them. But whilst I thus prostrate myself, it is with deep gladness and exultation of spirit. God would not have hinted the mystery, had He not hereafter designed to explain it. And, therefore, are my thoughts on a far-off home, and rich things are around me, and the voices of many harpers, and the shinings of bright constellations, and the clusters of the cherub and the seraph; and a whisper, which seems not of this earth, is circulating through the soul, "Now we see through a glass darkly, but then face to face; now I know in part, but then shall I know even as also I am known."
- Henry Melvill,p. 422.
- The Bible tells me explicitly thatChristwasGod;and it tells me, as explicitly that Christ wasman.It does not go on to state the modus or manner of theunion.I stop, therefore, where the Bible stops. I bow before a God-man as my Mediator, but I own as inscrutable the mysteries of His person.
- Henry Melvill,p. 422.
- In viewing the scheme ofredemption,I seem like one viewing a vast and complicated machine of exquisite contrivance; what I comprehend of it is wonderful, what I do not, is, perhaps, more so still.
- Richard Cecil,p. 422.
- Providenceis agreatermystery thanrevelation.
- Richard Cecil,p. 423.
- That great chain ofcauses,which, linking one to another, even to the throne of God Himself, can never be unraveled by any industry of ours.
- Edmund Burke,p. 423.
- We know, and we feel, that the vast business of our redemption, arranged in the councils of the far-back eternity, and acted out amid the wonderings and throbbings of the universe, could not have been that stupendous transaction which gave God glory by giving sinners safety, if the inspired account brought its dimensions within the compass of a human arithmetic, or denned its issues by the lines of a human demarcation.
- Henry Melvill,p. 423.
- Thenatureof Christ is, I grant it, from one end to another, a web of mysteries; but this mysteriousness does not correspond to the difficulties which all existence contains.Let it be rejected, and the whole world is an enigma; let it be accepted, and we possess a wonderful explanation of the history of man.
- Napoleon Bonaparte,p. 423.
- Can any thing be more mysterious than the union of soul and body, unless it be the still greater mystery, which some have professed to believe, that matter can be so organized as to produce the amazing intellectual results which we witness in man? In believing our own existence we believe a mystery as great as any that the Christian religion presents.
- William Wirt,p. 424.
- At some turning point of your life, when some greatjoyflashed, or some greatshadowdarkened upon you all at once; when some crisis that wanted an instantaneous decision appeared,— why, what regions ofthought,purpose,plan, resolution, what wildernesses of desolatesorrow,and what paradises of blooming gladness, your soul has gone through in amoment.
- Alexander Maclaren,p. 424.
- We live in the midst of infinite existence; and widely as we can see, and vastly as we have discovered, we have but crossed the threshold, we have but entered the vestibule of the Creator's temple.In this temple there is an everlasting worship oflife,an anthem of many choruses, a hymn of incense that goes up forever.
- Henry Giles,p. 424.
- We arechildrenshut up as yet in the narrow hollow of our native valley, with all theuniverse,outside the closely engirdling hills, for a great wonderland, of which we dream childish dreams, as the light of morning or evening kindles from beyond. "Laws of Nature" — what dost thou know of them, O man? Look out on the great miracles of nature, blooming inflowersandstars,away to the gates of the city of God, what dost thou know of its laws and wonders?
- John Cunningham Geikie, p. 424.