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Sacred Theater and the Art of Forgiveness
Coles
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Sacred Theater and the Art of Forgiveness in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $14.29
Original price: $17.80

Coles
Sacred Theater and the Art of Forgiveness in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $14.29
Original price: $17.80
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
In the mountain passes of Korea, where fog drifts through ancient pines and drums summon spirits each spring, lives a myth most of the world has never heard—yet one that speaks to the deepest needs of our time. The Mountain Spirit of Daegwallyeong demanded something unexpected from the people who forgot him: not fear, not sacrifice, but laughter. Not prayers alone, but sacred theater. Not groveling piety, but the courage to put on masks and confess their follies through dance. In this revelatory exploration of Korean mythology, discover a complete philosophy of renewal hidden within a forgotten festival—a ritual technology for healing relationships between humans, ancestors, and the living land itself. Here is wisdom about the danger of spiritual complacency, the necessity of self-mockery, the transformative power of communal confession, and why the gods might want us to play more than we pray. Drawing on Korean Mythology, this lecture illuminates how an ancient Korean mountain spirit's prescription—"Restore the sacred theater. Let masks of man and beast speak truth"—offers profound guidance for modern souls struggling with isolation, shame, ecological crisis, and the loss of meaningful ritual. When was the last time you laughed at yourself in the presence of the sacred? When did you last dance your confession instead of speaking it? What would it mean to orient your life toward joy's return with dawn? The mountain is waiting. The masks are carved. The drums are calling. Perfect for readers of Joseph Campbell, Clarissa Pinkola Estés, Martin Shaw, and anyone seeking living wisdom from the world's sacred traditions. "A forgotten myth becomes a mirror for our age—revealing what we've lost and lighting a path back to authentic relationship with the sacred, with each other, and with the land that sustains us."
In the mountain passes of Korea, where fog drifts through ancient pines and drums summon spirits each spring, lives a myth most of the world has never heard—yet one that speaks to the deepest needs of our time. The Mountain Spirit of Daegwallyeong demanded something unexpected from the people who forgot him: not fear, not sacrifice, but laughter. Not prayers alone, but sacred theater. Not groveling piety, but the courage to put on masks and confess their follies through dance. In this revelatory exploration of Korean mythology, discover a complete philosophy of renewal hidden within a forgotten festival—a ritual technology for healing relationships between humans, ancestors, and the living land itself. Here is wisdom about the danger of spiritual complacency, the necessity of self-mockery, the transformative power of communal confession, and why the gods might want us to play more than we pray. Drawing on Korean Mythology, this lecture illuminates how an ancient Korean mountain spirit's prescription—"Restore the sacred theater. Let masks of man and beast speak truth"—offers profound guidance for modern souls struggling with isolation, shame, ecological crisis, and the loss of meaningful ritual. When was the last time you laughed at yourself in the presence of the sacred? When did you last dance your confession instead of speaking it? What would it mean to orient your life toward joy's return with dawn? The mountain is waiting. The masks are carved. The drums are calling. Perfect for readers of Joseph Campbell, Clarissa Pinkola Estés, Martin Shaw, and anyone seeking living wisdom from the world's sacred traditions. "A forgotten myth becomes a mirror for our age—revealing what we've lost and lighting a path back to authentic relationship with the sacred, with each other, and with the land that sustains us."


















