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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian religious experience
A book of moral and religious reflections written by a Carolingian
noblewoman for her teenage son in the middle of the 9th century.
Intended as a guide to right conduct, the book was to be shared in
time with William's younger brother. Dhuoda's situation was
poignant. Her husband, Bernard, the count of Septimania, was away
and she was separated from her children. William was being held by
Charles the Bald as a guarantee of his father's loyalty, and the
younger son's whereabouts were unknown. As war raged in the
crumbling Carolingian Empire, the grieving mother, fearing for the
spiritual and physical welfare of her absent sons, began in 841 to
write her loving counsel in a handbook. Two years later she sent it
to William. The book memorably expresses Dhuoda's maternal
feelings, religious fervor and learning. In teaching her children
how they might flourish in God's eyes, as well as humanity's,
Dhuoda reveals the authority of Carolingian women in aristocratic
households. She dwells on family relations, social order, the
connection between religious and military responsibility, and,
always, the central place of Christian devotion in a noble life.
One of the few surviving texts written by a woman in the Middle
Ages, Dhuoda's ""Liber manualis"" was available in only two faulty
Latin manuscripts until a third, superior one was discovered in the
1950s. This English translation is based on the 1975 critical
edition and French translation by Pierre Riche. Now available for
the first time in paperback, it includes an afterword written by
Carol Neel that takes into account recent scholarship and the 1991
revised edition of Riche's text.
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Journey into Newness
(Hardcover)
Patrick C Heston; Foreword by John Featherston
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R1,362
R1,088
Discovery Miles 10 880
Save R274 (20%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In a world that's difficult to make sense of, and a season that's
so often overtaken by consumerism, here you'll find heart-stirring
illustrations and thought-provoking meditations designed to show
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Has the joy of the holiday season become painfully dissonant with
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many of us, Christmas has lost its wonder. What if we stopped
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today? From celebrated artist and storyteller Scott Erickson comes
Honest Advent, 25 days of illustrations and meditations that will
help you rekindle the wonder of this season. Honest Advent creates
a space for you to encounter the Incarnate Christ in unexpected
places: like a pregnancy announcement in an era of political unrest
and empirical bloodshed, the morning sickness of a Middle Eastern
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the sanitized brand of Christmas as we know it today. Within the
pages of Honest Advent, Erickson teaches us the valuable lessons
he's learned about: Finding hope and light in the darkest winters
What it means to embrace the unexpected How God uses everyday
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honest reflection, you'll discover how the wonder of God-with-Us is
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year." --Jonathan Merritt, author of Learning to Speak God from
Scratch "Beautiful. Evocative. A wake-up call to the mystery of
life." --John Mark Comer, author of The Ruthless Elimination of
Hurry
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