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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian sacred works & liturgy > Liturgy > General
In a world that feels increasingly fragile, people will continue to
look for new prayers and new ways to pray. While there are a number
of anthologies of prayer available, no book - until now - has
attempted to provide a collection that focuses specifically on
prayers for a wide range of modern challenges, from the personal to
the global. "Prayers for Hope and Comfort" covers issues facing
individuals (illness, addiction); those challenged in relationships
(ageing parents, divorce); local communities (natural disasters,
unemployment); the larger world (poverty, hunger, war); and
creation itself (loss of rainforests, species extinction, global
warming). "Prayers for Hope and Comfort" offers readers solace,
comfort, and hope, drawing from the wisdom of every era, every
major faith and tradition, and the important voices of those who
have lived through such experiences themselves. The book contains
selections from some of the world's most profound poets and
thinkers: David Whyte, Eckhart Tolle, Sister Joan Chittister, and
Martin Luther King, Jr. as well as traditional prayers and verses
from every time and place.
This is a group of devotions all written by evangelist Mark Jeske.
Like flipping pages through a wedding album, the rich imagery in
His Majesty Requests paints a vivid portrait of who the Beloved
bride truly is and how she makes herself ready for the marriage
supper of the Lamb. By matting and framing the story of one
father's desire to find a suitable wife for his son in ancient
Israel, the mystery of God's love for Jews and non-Jews throughout
the ages is revealed. This devotional beautifully illuminates the
spiritual significance of the ancient Hebrew wedding customs and
how the Messiah fulfilled each one. As family heirlooms, many of
these traditions such as bride price and the veil may be
recognizable, while others will flash new insight into the
teachings and ways of a Jewish Savior. The restoration and
brilliance of these lost pictures are sure to fill the believer's
heart with a renewed love for their Heavenly Bridegroom.
"Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should
follow in his steps." 1 Peter 2:21 What must it have been like to
draw near to Christ as he drew near to the cross? Reflecting on
Michelangelo's majesticPieta, in which Mary gathers the suffering
Jesus into her arms, Ken Gire offers seven meditations on a costly
discipleship that invites us to take up our cross and follow our
Savior--through death to life everlasting.
In medieval Ashkenaz piyyut commentary was a popular genre that
consisted of 'open texts' that continued to be edited by almost
each copyist. Although some early commentators can be identified,
it is mainly compilers that are responsible for the transmitted
form of text. Based on an ample corpus of Ashkenazic commentaries
the study provides a taxonomy of commentary elements, including
linguistic explanations, treatment of hypotexts, and medieval
elements, and describes their use by different commentators and
compilers. It also analyses the main techniques of compilation and
the various ways they were employed by compilers. Different types
of commentaries are described that target diverse audiences by
using varied sets of commentary elements and compilatory
techniques. Several commentaries are edited to illustrate the
different commentary types.
This is a rich, informative, and inspiring compendium of the
Christian tradition of prayer and contemplation from the earliest
days of the Church to the present day. Included are selections from
St. Ignatius of Antioch, Justin Martyr, St. Clement of Rome, St.
Gregory of Nyssa, John Cassian, St. Augustine, St. Gregory of
Sinai, St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Bonaventure, St. Ignatius Loyola,
St. Teresa of Avila, St. John of the Cross, St. Catherine of Siena,
St. Julian of Norwich, Brother Lawrence, St. Francis de Sales, St.
Vincent de Paul, Lancelot Andrewes, St. Elizabeth of the Trinity,
St. Edith Stein, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Hans Urs von Balthasar and
Pope John Paul II. Levering has selected readings that capture how
Christian saints and spiritual leaders through the ages have
understood what prayer is, why we pray, and how we pray. The
selections also integrate the Eastern Orthodox and Western
understandings of prayer and contemplation. The book is perfect for
study, meditation, and inspiration.
This book concerns an examination of the totality of the musical
experience with a view to restoring the soul within it. It starts
with an analysis of the strands in the landscape of contemporary
spirituality. It examines the descriptors spiritual but not
religious, and spiritual and religious, looking in particular at
the place of faith narratives in various spiritualities. These
strands are linked with the domains of the musicking experience:
Materials, Expression, Construction and Values. The book sets out a
model of the spiritual experience as a negotiated relationship
between the musicker and the music. It looks in detail at various
models of musicking drawn from music therapy, ethnomusicology,
musicology and cultural studies. It examines the relationship
between Christianity and music as well as examining some practical
projects showing the effect of various Value systems in musicking,
particularly in intercultural dialogue. It finally proposes an
ecclesiology of musical events that includes both orate and
literate traditions and so is supportive of inclusive community.
Twelve Anglicists (from France, America, Poland, and Romania) who
met in Bucharest to debate Religion and Spirituality in Literature
and the Arts at the ACED Conference in June 2015 join their voices
in demonstrating the vitally spiritual power of Christianity in the
recently modern world (in twentieth and twenty-first century
literature and society). Poetry (by Eliot, Yeats, Heaney, David
Jones, Hill, G.M. Brown) and fiction (Henry James, Lodge, Evelyn
Waugh, Flannery O'Connor, Rose Macaulay and Ron Hansen),
interpreted with (Thomist and more recent) theology (J.H. Newman's,
Paul Tillich's, Hans Urs von Balthasar's, De Certeau's) and
philosophy (from Plato to Gadamer) in mind, give heartening
suggestions for transcending, along Catholic, Anglican, and
Orthodox lines, the modern secular ethos.
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