8 Chapters on Perfection & Angels' Song

8 Chapters on Perfection & Angels' Song PDF Author: Walter Hilton
Publisher: Cistercian Publications
ISBN: 9780728300965
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 22

Get Book Here

Book Description
In ‘Eight Chapters on Perfection’ the humanity and wisdom of Walter Hilton are revealed, as he explores the possibilities of friendship and love between those drawn to prayer. In ‘Angels’ Song’ this fourteenth-century English mystic considers how in the spiritual life the action of grace can be distinguished from illusion.

8 Chapters on Perfection & Angels' Song

8 Chapters on Perfection & Angels' Song PDF Author: Walter Hilton
Publisher: Cistercian Publications
ISBN: 9780728300965
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 22

Get Book Here

Book Description
In ‘Eight Chapters on Perfection’ the humanity and wisdom of Walter Hilton are revealed, as he explores the possibilities of friendship and love between those drawn to prayer. In ‘Angels’ Song’ this fourteenth-century English mystic considers how in the spiritual life the action of grace can be distinguished from illusion.

Eight Chapters on Perfection & Angels’ Song

Eight Chapters on Perfection & Angels’ Song PDF Author: Walter Hilton
Publisher: SLG Press
ISBN: 0728303922
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 56

Get Book Here

Book Description
Fairacres Publications 85 Eight Chapters on Perfection is Hilton’s translation of a Latin text by the Aragonese Friar Dom Lluis de Font, and is the only surviving record of that manuscript. It is a text of great humanity and wisdom about the possibilities of friendship and love between those drawn to prayer. In Angels’ Song Hilton’s own spirituality is revealed as he considers how, in the spiritual life, the action of grace can be distinguished from pious illusion.

A Strange Tongue

A Strange Tongue PDF Author: John D. Green
Publisher: Peeters Publishers
ISBN: 9789042912366
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 244

Get Book Here

Book Description
This book is the product of both historical and personal interest in the grounds of religious conviction. It deals with the practice and development of the tradition of 'discernment of spirits' in the late fourteenth-century England and sixteenth-century Spain as reflected in the classical texts of the mystics of the periods; Julian of Norwich, the Cloud Author and Walter Hilton in England and Ignatius of Loyola and John of the Cross in Spain. The tradition of 'discernment' came into being at the very beginning of the Church's history and has been appropriated, adapted and developed throughout its history. The book explores how the tradition is expanded and maintains continuity with its origins and suggests that it reaches some apogee in sixteenth-century Spain for Christian lives of apostolic mission and contemplation. It illustrates how the cultural circumstances of the times moulded the manner in which the experiences of the mystics were perceived. 'Discernment of Spirits' is about how Christians reach some conviction that the stirrings within consciousness which seem to originate so strangely, and yet beckon so persistently, are 'real' in the sense of authentically divine. They are stirrings which call for a response in the lives of mystics. Rowan Williams at the beginning of his influential book, The Wound of Knowledge, refers to 'the intractable strangeness of the ground of belief that must constantly be allowed to challenge the fixed assumptions of religiosity; it is a given whose question to each age is fundamentally one and the same'. This book illustrates how the question is addressed in the texts of the mystics. In our own time the strange stirrings which intimate the question tend to be drowned by a multiplicity of competing voices. The suggestion is made that when we listen to the voices of the past we may be encouraged to wonder about the question posed by the stirrings within our own consciousness, hitherto unheard or dismissed as simply 'strange'.

Pilgrimage in Medieval English Literature, 700-1500

Pilgrimage in Medieval English Literature, 700-1500 PDF Author: Dee Dyas
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
ISBN: 9780859916233
Category : Literary Criticism
Languages : en
Pages : 300

Get Book Here

Book Description
The meaning of pilgrimage and its development over 800 years, reflected in contemporary writings.

The Pastoral Art of the English Mystics

The Pastoral Art of the English Mystics PDF Author: Julia Gatta
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
ISBN: 1592444571
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 146

Get Book Here

Book Description
Spiritual Direction from the English Mystics: 'The Revelations of Divine Love', by Julian of Norwich 'The Cloud of Unknowing', Anonymous 'Scale of Perfection', Walter Hilton The current popularity enjoyed by these 14th century English mystics lies in their vocation to seek union with God. Here, for the first time, Julia Gatta shows these mystics to be prototypes for the modern spiritual director, displaying keen insights into that pastoral art. At the heart of the mystics' writings is their own intense desire not merely to see and know God for themselves, but also to bring others to this union with God.

Soul-Health

Soul-Health PDF Author: Daniel McCann
Publisher: University of Wales Press
ISBN: 1786833328
Category : Literary Criticism
Languages : en
Pages : 212

Get Book Here

Book Description
1. This study is a new, contextually sensitive methodology for pinpointing the emotional aspects of medieval texts. 2. It is a unique appraisal of the therapeutic significance of medieval religious literature: the largest body of writing in the period. 3. A move beyond the limitations of emotions studies and medical humanities, showing the interactions between literature and medicine in the period, and the importance of composite and layered emotional states.

The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ

The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ PDF Author: Nicholas Love
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 0429588925
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 775

Get Book Here

Book Description
Published in 2005: At a time when the church sought to control and constrain lay access to vernacular and paramystical texts, the author’s translation, sanctioned by the Archbishop of Canterbury, met a pressing need for religious guidance among lay people. It became one of the most copied works of the fifteenth century.

The Middle English Mystics

The Middle English Mystics PDF Author: Wolfgang Riehle
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 0429560532
Category : Literary Criticism
Languages : en
Pages : 222

Get Book Here

Book Description
Originally published as an English translation in 1981, The Middle English Mystics is a crucial contribution to the study of the literature of English mysticism. This book surveys and analyses the language of metaphor in the writings of such mystics as Richard Rolle, Walter Hilton, Julian of Norwich, and in such anonymous works as The Cloud of Unknowing and the Ancrene Wisse. The main emphasis of this comparative and stylistic study is not theological but rather the means by which theological concepts are communicated through language. The book sets the English mystics in perspective by establishing their place in the European mystical movement of the Middle Ages. It shows how intricate the relationship between English, and continental mysticism really is. The book suggests that there is clear links between English and German female mysticism, yet the mysticism is in the main due not so much to specific influences as to the common background of Christian theology and mysticism.

English Mystics of the Middle Ages

English Mystics of the Middle Ages PDF Author: Barry A. Windeatt
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 0521327407
Category : History
Languages : en
Pages : 325

Get Book Here

Book Description
First collection of late medieval English mystical writing, which has been newly edited with notes and glossary.

Visionary Philology

Visionary Philology PDF Author: Matthew Sperling
Publisher: OUP Oxford
ISBN: 0191004448
Category : Poetry
Languages : en
Pages : 217

Get Book Here

Book Description
Interviewed in 1966, Geoffrey Hill said, 'Language contains everything you want - history, sociology, economics: it is a kind of drama of human destiny'. This book shows how the work of one of the major post-war writers in English has been charged by a mythological sense of language's historical drama, by reading the whole body of Hill's poetry from sixty years against a tradition of visionary poet-philologists that he himself has delineated. That line runs from the present-day editors of the Oxford English Dictionary, through Gerard Manley Hopkins and Richard Chenevix Trench in the Victorian era, to Samuel Taylor Coleridge in the early nineteenth century, and ultimately back to Saint Augustine's theory of language. Through detailed close readings of Hill's work and its scholarly inspirations, and extensive fresh archival research, new light is shed upon poetry's relation to lexicography, etymology, and theological understandings of language. Key themes include language's fallenness from prelapsarian origins, its infection and enrichment by original sin and error, the possible recovery of its pristine origins through surrogates such as music, Hebrew, or the language of angels, and its status as an arena of political and historical contestation. The book considers a wider range of Hill's writings, in greater detail, than criticism of his work has so far done, and it is the first to make substantial use of recently available archive materials. It thereby presents one of the fullest and most authoritative accounts of the work of a living writer in recent years.