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?The Little Book of Eternal Wisdom is among the best of the
writings of Blessed Henry Suso, a priest of the Order of St.
Dominic, who lived a life of wonderful labours and sufferings, and
died in the Fourteenth century with a reputation for sanctity which
the Church has solemnly confirmed. . . . It would be difficult to
speak too highly of this little book or of its author. In soundness
of teaching, sublimity of thought, clearness of expression, and
beauty of illustration, we do not know of a spiritual writer that
surpasses Henry Suso.? from the introduction by C. H. McKenna
Father Faber writes in Growth in Holiness: "I should also mention
old Walter Hilton's Treatise to a Devout Man of Secular State,
though it is not easy to procure." It is with great pleasure that
we make this work easy to procure. We have added the second part
from Father John Henry's Manual of Self-Knowledge and Christian
Perfection
This is a photographic reprint of the original to insure accuracy.
OF all the old English ascetical works which were extant before the
Reformation none have maintained their reputation longer than
Walter Hilton's "Scale of Perfection." Hilton was a canon of
Thurgarton in Nottinghamshire, and died in 1395. His "Scale of
Perfection" is found in no less than five MSS. in the British
Museum alone. Wynkyn de Worde printed it at least three times-in
the years 1494, 1519 and 1525. Many other editions were printed at
the same period. After the Reformation it was a favourite book of
Father Augustine Baker's, the well-known author of "Sancta Sophia,"
and his comments on it are among his manuscripts at Downside. In
1659 Father Baker's biographer and editor, Dom Serenus Cressy,
O.S.B., published an edition of the "Scale," the title-page of
which claims that "by the changing of some antiquated words it is]
rendered more intelligible." Another edition appeared in 1672, and
yet another in 1679. Within our own times two editions have been
published-one by the late Father Ephrem Guy, O.S.B., in 1869, the
other, a reprint of Cressy's, in 1870.
THE LITTLE BOOK OF ETERNAL WISDOM is among the best of the writings
of Blessed Henry Suso, a priest of the Order of St. Dominic, who
lived a life of wonderful labours and sufferings, and died in the
Fourteenth century with a reputation for sanctity which the Church
has solemnly confirmed. Gregory XVI. granted to the whole Order of
St. Dominic the privilege of celebrating his office, and of
offering the Mass yearly in his honour, appointing the Second of
March for his festival. The Order of St. Dominic, known in the
Church both as the Order of Truth and the Order of Preachers, so
rich in pontiffs, martyrs, and confessors, is also illustrious for
its theologians, its ascetic writers, its great masters of the
spiritual life. Its mystic theologians stand in the first rank of
those who have scaled the wondrous heights of sublime perfection.
Not only have they stood on the mountain tops of the spiritual
life, but they have pointed out, with a clearness surpassed by no
other writers, the path of ascent, marking for the unwary its every
danger. The wiles of the enemy are exposed; where, when, and how he
seeks to accomplish our ruin. Our defence is first outlined, and
then given in detail. The source of strength is pointed out, and
thus the perilous journey may safely be made.
Much like Thomas A Kempis' "Imitation of Christ" this book reveals
the mystic way toward right living, loving, and yearning for God.
This was the dignity and worth of man's soul by nature at his first
creation, which thou hadst in Adam before the first sin. But when
Adam sinned, choosing love and delight in himself and in the
creatures, he lost all his excellency and dignity, and thou, also,
in him, and fell from that Blessed Trinity into a foul, dark,
wretched trinity; that is to say, into forgetting of God and
ignorance of himself, and into a beastly love and liking of
himself, and all this he did wittingly and willingly.
Due to the very old age and scarcity of this book, many of the
pages may be hard to read due to the blurring of the original text.
Due to the very old age and scarcity of this book, many of the
pages may be hard to read due to the blurring of the original text.
This was the dignity and worth of man's soul by nature at his first
creation, which thou hadst in Adam before the first sin. But when
Adam sinned, choosing love and delight in himself and in the
creatures, he lost all his excellency and dignity, and thou, also,
in him, and fell from that Blessed Trinity into a foul, dark,
wretched trinity; that is to say, into forgetting of God and
ignorance of himself, and into a beastly love and liking of
himself, and all this he did wittingly and willingly.
THIS 22 PAGE ARTICLE WAS EXTRACTED FROM THE BOOK: Goad of Love, by
Walter Hilton. To purchase the entire book, please order ISBN
1564595609.
Much like Thomas A Kempis' "Imitation of Christ" this book reveals
the mystic way toward right living, loving, and yearning for God.
Due to the very old age and scarcity of this book, many of the
pages may be hard to read due to the blurring of the original text.
THIS 22 PAGE ARTICLE WAS EXTRACTED FROM THE BOOK: Goad of Love, by
Walter Hilton. To purchase the entire book, please order ISBN
1564595609.
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