Huainanzi (Selections)
by Liu An
📚 Related Sacred Texts
The Analects
by Confucius
The Analects is a small grove of conversations where Confucius and his students polish the mirror of the heart. Rather than a system, it is a mosaic of brief scenes and sayings that teach how learning ripens into character, how ritual steadies the pulse of daily life, and how humane concern called ren shapes family, friendship, and rule. We watch the slow making of a junzi the exemplary person through study, self examination, and courteous action. The book favors guidance over metaphysics and asks that we govern by virtue, speak with precision, honor our elders, and keep promises. Quiet yet practical, it offers a path to harmony in restless times.
The Sepher Ha-Zohar (The Book of Light)
by By Burho De Manhar
The Book of Light, in this classic early English rendering, opens the Torah like a lamp in the night. Through dialogues of wandering sages and parables that shimmer with secrecy, it reads Genesis as a living map of creation, the soul, and the ten emanations of the Divine. This selection follows the story from the opening verses to Lekh Lekha, weaving mythic images with precise symbolic hints. Expect a narrative rhythm rather than academic argument, a text to be pondered more than parsed. For seekers of Kabbalah, it offers a doorway into luminous depths and quiet astonishment.
The Confessions of Saint Augustine
by Saint Augustine
The Confessions is a soul speaking to God, part memoir, part prayer. Augustine traces his journey from youthful desires and borrowed philosophies to the quiet thunder of grace. In Carthage, Rome, and Milan he wrestles with ambition, Manichaean shadows, and a restless heart no lover or book could soothe. His mother Monica prays like a steady flame; Bishop Ambrose opens Scripture; a child’s voice says take and read. He confronts a stolen pear, the mystery of memory, and the vast river of time. The later books rise into meditation on creation and praise. For seekers, it offers candor, beauty, and a homeward path.
Gospel of Mary
by by Mark M. Mattison
Part dialogue and part vision, the Gospel of Mary opens with missing pages and a hush, then lets Mary Magdalene speak as a trusted student who carries the Savior’s secret counsel. Matter dissolves back to its root, sin is named a pattern of ignorance rather than a cosmic stain, and the way is inward where the mind finds its true child. Mary’s vision guides a trembling circle of disciples through fear and rivalry, and her authority is contested then affirmed. Mark M. Mattison’s clear rendering from Coptic lets this early Christian voice glow with calm fire, inviting seekers of wisdom to listen within.
On The Shortness of Life
by Lucius Seneca
Seneca speaks to a busy friend and to us, arguing that life is not short but squandered. He urges us to guard time as a treasure, to step back from the bustle that feels like purpose yet steals our days, and to claim leisure as a school for virtue. Philosophy becomes a compass and a hearth, teaching us to live now rather than forever preparing to begin. He shows how good actions bank the past safely and free the mind to meet the present. This lucid Stoic dialogue offers a stern kindness and a clear mirror, inviting you to simplify, to choose what is yours, and to cultivate a well tended life.