He was a Benedictine monk who wore the saffron robe of an Indian sannyasi. He celebrated Mass in Sanskrit on the banks of a Tamil Nadu river. He read the Upanishads and the Gospel of John as equally living scripture. Bede Griffiths did not argue for the meeting of East and West — he became the meeting, inhabiting the paradox fully for nearly forty years until, after a stroke in his eighties, he reported being overwhelmed by love. Not love as emotion. Love as the ground of being itself, finally unveiled. This essay traces the arc of one of the twentieth century’s most extraordinary spiritual lives — and asks what it still makes possible for those of us searching at the edge of our own tradition’s boundaries.