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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Aspects of religions (non-Christian) > Religious institutions & organizations > Religious communities & monasticism
Aelred, abbot of the Yorkshire Cistercian abbey of Rievaulx from
1147 to 1167, wrote six spiritual treatises, seven historical
treatises, and 182 liturgical sermons, many of which he delivered
as chapter talks to his monks. Translations of the first
twenty-eight of these sermons appeared in CF 58 in 2001, translated
by Theodore Berkeley and M. Basil Pennington, and sermons
twenty-nine through forty-six appeared in CF 77 in 2015, translated
by Marie Anne Mayeski. The current volume contains thirty-eight
sermons for feasts from Advent through the Nativity of Mary, taken
from the Durham and Lincoln collections, edited by Gaetano Raciti
in CCCM 2B and 2C.
Father Matthew Kelty was an especially beloved monk at the historic
Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky. Perhaps best known as Thomas
Merton's colleague and confessor in the year prior to Merton's
death, Father Matthew was also an enormously gifted spiritual
writer in his own right, one whose homilies at Gethsemani attracted
a wide following. This is the first book-length study of Matthew
Kelty's life in relation to his spiritual writings and his profound
reflections on the virtues of the monastic life in the modern age.
Written from her deep experience in the monastic tradition, Sister
Mary Margaret Funk shows us that, with faith and our given
vocations, we are more than strong enough to resist and renounce
the violence in the world around us. This book offers, both for
personal use and for the broader community, a teaching for our
troubled times, a teaching that empowers the reader to renounce
violence in all its bold and subtle forms. As a concrete example,
Funk retrieves the practice and symbolism of using holy water to
bless, cleanse, and free us from violence wherever it is
emerging-in our personal lives and in our world. This practice has
thrived in the monastic tradition and has a language with a voice.
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