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Glossary›Metanoia

Glossary

Metanoia

A fundamental change of mind and heart; a transformative shift in consciousness from the Greek meta (beyond) and nous (mind).

What is Metanoia?

Metanoia, an Ancient Greek word (μετάνοια) meaning “changing one’s mind,” denotes a profound, transformative shift in consciousness, worldview, or orientation to life. The term derives from Greek metanoein—“to change one’s mind, repent”—combining meta- (beyond, after) + noein (to think), from nous (mind). In its fullest sense, metanoia signifies not a superficial change of opinion but a radical reorientation of perception, values, and identity—often precipitated by crisis, spiritual awakening, or existential confrontation.

In Christian theology, the term metanoia is often translated as “conversion” or “repentance,” though most scholars agree that this second translation does a disservice to the original Greek meaning. Modern psychological theorists such as William James (1842-1910) and Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) described processes that align with the concept of metanoia, framing it as deep psychic transformation. Across contexts—theological, psychological, existential—metanoia represents a threshold moment: a “beyond-mind” state where old structures dissolve to make way for renewal.

Origins & Lineage

The English use of metanoia dates to 1768, meaning “penitence, spiritual conversion,” from Greek metanoia “afterthought, repentance”. The first known use of metanoia in English was in 1577. In ancient Greek texts, the term retained both intellectual and moral dimensions: a reconsideration, an after-thought, a revision of judgment.

Modern English Bible translations use the word “repentance” for the Greek metanoia, with the noun metanoia translated “repentance” and its cognate verb metanoeō translated “repent” in twenty-two instances in the King James Version of the New Testament. In the Old Latin and Latin Vulgate, metanoia was translated as paenitentia, holding connotations of penance and contrition. Medieval theology focused largely on penitence, but with the Protestant Reformation, theologians reevaluated the original Greek. Martin Luther objected that metanoia retained its classical sense of “a change of mind”. A. T. Robertson called the translation of metanoia as repentance “a linguistic and theological tragedy,” and Broadus described the translation of metanoeite as “repent” as “the worst translation in the New Testament”.

In The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), William James explored cases of religious conversion characterized by despair, surrender, and a sense of rebirth. In Memories, Dreams, Reflections (1962), Jung described the psyche’s ability to self-correct through disintegration and reintegration—a spontaneous attempt of the psyche to heal itself of unbearable conflict by melting down and then being reborn in a more adaptive form. Jung’s concept of metanoia influenced R. D. Laing and the therapeutic community movement. Laing’s experimental community at Kingsley Hall in London (1965-1970) provided practical illustrations of metanoia, viewing psychotic episodes not merely as illness but as a “metanoiac voyage”—a radical change of mind akin to spiritual renewal.

How it’s Practiced

Metanoia is not practiced through a standardized technique but encountered through threshold experiences—spiritual crisis, psychotherapeutic breakthrough, contemplative discipline, or existential rupture.

In Orthodox Christianity, metanoia is linked with prayer, in which a prostration is called a metanoia, with “the spiritual condition of one’s soul being expressed through the physical movement of falling facedown before the Lord”. The Jesus Prayer—“Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner”—serves as a repetitive invocation promoting inner stillness and a change of heart, encouraging confrontation of personal sinfulness and reliance on divine mercy.

In Jungian psychology, metanoia may arise spontaneously during midlife crisis or breakdown. Jung described metanoia as a critical mental transformation frequently occurring in midlife, marking the transition from the first half of life—focused on external adaptation and persona development—to the second half, oriented toward inner individuation and confrontation with the unconscious. Practices supporting this include active imagination, dream work, and symbolic engagement with the unconscious.

In contemporary therapeutic contexts, metanoia features prominently in psychedelic-assisted therapy aimed at mindset transformation, with studies indicating that psychedelics promote radical shifts in cognition and behavior, with 83% of participants reporting major life changes.

Metanoia Today

Contemporary seekers encounter metanoia through multiple channels: contemplative retreats, depth psychotherapy, spiritual direction, trauma integration work, and consciousness research.

The Center for Metanoia Studies at Oxford brings together international researchers and practitioners for interdisciplinary study of metanoia and personal transformation, approaching the topic from theoretical, normative, methodological, and practical angles. Modern applications extend metanoia into retreats and spiritual direction, where structured programs emphasize contemplative practices to foster personal transformation.

In psychology, metanoia informs post-traumatic growth frameworks, transpersonal therapy, and existential counseling. The concept has found continued relevance in Jungian, existential, and transpersonal psychotherapies, where it denotes deep, often painful inner transformation that leads to renewal or self-integration. Spiritual communities—Christian, interfaith, and secular contemplative—use the term to describe moments of awakening or conversion that reorder a life’s priorities.

Common Misconceptions

Metanoia is not simply feeling sorry for past mistakes. Repentance isn’t about being sorry for sin, though that may flow out of repentance. The Greek root points to a cognitive and existential shift, not mere remorse.

It is not a one-time event. Understanding metanoia reveals that this change of mind is not a one-time event completed at conversion. It is an ongoing orientation, a practice of continual renewal.

It is not self-help or self-improvement. Metanoia often involves ego-death, dissolution of cherished identities, and confrontation with the unconscious or the sacred. It is transformative, not transactional.

It is not always comfortable or desirable. Jung believed that psychotic episodes in particular could be understood as existential crises which were sometimes attempts at self-reparation. Breakdown may precede breakthrough.

How to Begin

For those drawn to metanoia as a spiritual or psychological path:

Read foundational texts: William James’s The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902) and Carl Jung’s Memories, Dreams, Reflections (1962) offer formative frameworks. For theological depth, explore Orthodox Christian texts on repentance or study Greek New Testament passages (Mark 1:15, Acts 2:38).

Engage contemplative practice: Begin with daily meditation, centering prayer, or the Jesus Prayer. Create space for inner silence and self-observation.

Seek qualified guidance: Work with a depth psychologist, spiritual director, or contemplative teacher trained in transformation work. Metanoia rarely unfolds in isolation.

Embrace liminal space: Honor periods of uncertainty, crisis, or disorientation as potential thresholds. Resist the urge to prematurely resolve tension.

Join a community of practice: Whether a contemplative order, a Jungian study group, or a transformative retreat center, companionship supports the metanoiac journey.

Related terms

repentancespiritual awakeningdark night of the soulindividuationcontemplative prayerpost traumatic growth
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