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In this enriching book Father Pennington reveals how the spiritual insights of centering have profoundly changed the lives of contemporary Christians everywhere.
 
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PendleHillLibrary | otra reseña | Sep 27, 2023 |
 
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SrMaryLea | Aug 22, 2023 |
Trappist monk Pennington traces the rosary's long history and shows how it aids concentration and lends tangibility to spiritual practice. Vividly relating it to the Scriptures, Pennington takes readers step-by-step through the traditional 15 mysteries and explores alternative formats for individual and group use.
 
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StFrancisofAssisi | otra reseña | Dec 11, 2022 |
Basil Pennington was a spiritual master who also experienced the difficulties of persevering in prayer. In this work he shares profound yet practical ideas from the Catholic tradition on facing the challenges of prayer. Those familiar with Pennington's works will greatly appreciate his down-to-earth style. All who want to build a regular prayer-life and delve more deeply into the practice of centering prayer will find much to ponder in these pages. This book, originally published 20 years ago, continues to guide students of prayer.
 
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john1chris | Jan 2, 2021 |
Who was/is Mary, the Mother of God, and what is her role in Christian history? Mary Today addresses these questions and others to show how things human and fundamental in our own lives also touched the life of this woman of Nazareth.
 
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StFrancisofAssisi | Mar 21, 2020 |
M. Basil Pennington’s The Eucharist Yesterday and Today viewed the Eucharist as new wine, rich with promise that can only burst old skins. This was seen as “breaking out of the bonds of our ecclesiastical past and enlivening the whole humanity through a Church that is not a confirming old sack, but a gushing source of life and love for every woman, child, and man on the face of the earth.”
Pennington describes Eucharist as the coming together to celebrate “a memoria, a sacramental memorial, not only a calling to mind but a making present of the passion, death, resurrection, and ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Through this supreme act of all creation, Christ’s Passover draws to itself everything in creation - “That they may be one, Father, as you in me and I in you, that they may be one in us” for we are being made according to the image of the Creator.

Beginning of the Eucharist

Each Eucharist begins with a preparatory rite that involves purification and conversion. So when the president speaks the word of absolution we should know of what we are being absolved and receive the healing and purifying grace deep within our being. As a purified people of God gathered together, we constitute a holy place, an indwelling place for God himself. We are the gateway to heaven, there to celebrate in a more transcendent way.
It is explained when the officiating president prays for us. His prayer has been traditionally called a collect. He has to collect our prayers, the prayers of the community. So we must have time to pray, to lay before God our Lord the concerns that lie in our hearts, so that they may be collected. The priest then articulates in his collect what has been flowing from the hearts of the assembled gathering.

The Liturgy & Homily

The liturgy is a school: it effectively teaches us and leads us into reality if we are attentive to what is happening, what is being said. Once again Christ Jesus proclaims his Good News of salvation. As God is truly present in his Eucharist in the tabernacle, he is truly present in his Word on the lectern. How good is the Good News, and all that surrounds it should be good – the best!
According to Pennington the homily is the time to hear the Lord and prepare to respond. We assent to the notions, these ideas, the propositions of faith is a gift from the Lord. It requires on our part a certain humility which truthfully acknowledges that God does know more than we do and that it is wise to listen to him. We pray the creed that makes us aware of our dependence. God is the Maker, we are the made; he is the Savior, we are the saved. It makes us aware too how much we are loved: “for us and for our salvation.” It is the climactic moment which is called the Liturgy of the Word. This becomes a moment of communion when the leader of the assembly breaks the bread of the Word and shares its source of life - the living faith. Meanwhile, the people wait for their hungry souls to be filled. In the homily the priest is sharing the two-thousand-year-old story of the historical Jesus of yesterday, today, and the same forever.

The Nature of the Mass

The elaborate offertory rite that has been developed in the Middle Ages has been set aside and the Mass has been brought back to its simpler origins. “It is much richer – pregnant with symbolism and association. It takes us back to the first Mass, the Last Supper, and our Jewish origins, to the divine liberation from bondage, to salvation history.” Christ himself is all gift. The Eucharist is the great prayer of thanksgiving. This prayer always retains a few variables for great feasts and seasons. Meal and sacrifice are one, meant to bring about true communion. They were to make a memoria of what Jesus did on the night before he died, a ritual act that would reach into God’s now and make historically present the very act of Calvary – his supreme act of sacrificial love. But there is also participating love of every one of his members, his body, who have entered by faithful love into communion with his act of love.
Pennington saw heresies when they began to deny that the words of the institution brought about the real presence of the Christ-God in the host and the chalice, the consecrated species were held up to give the faithful a chance to proclaim their belief in the manifest act of adoration. This powerful visual and symbolic proclamation of holding the host and the chalice aloft for a moment gives our faith a chance to be called forth more fully and respond more completely.
It is only in this context of a full attitude, life and meditation that a priest can truly pray his priestly prayer at the Mass in a way that will bring forth from the people a wholehearted, empowered “Amen!” A good priest’s generosity and goodness as a person can and should always be affirmed. A positive word of encouragement the people must add, a suggestion or the expression of hope or expectation can have him preside to his fullest potential.
 
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erwinkennythomas | 2 reseñas más. | Nov 2, 2019 |
LENT Journey in a Holy Land provides excellent material for meditation during Lent since it closely retraces the steps of Christ in his own final earthly journey. It would also be a great guide for anyone who plans to visit the Holy Land.
 
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StFrancisofAssisi | Oct 18, 2019 |
Introduces the concept of centering prayer, offers suggestions on how to pray, and discusses the purpose and benefits of prayer.
 
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StFrancisofAssisi | otra reseña | Jul 11, 2019 |
The Salve Regina was written in the ninth century by a monk and it quickly became the favority evening song of monks everywhere. [31]

"Using strings of beads to accompany silent or spoken prayers is a tradition found not only in Christianity, but in Buddhism, Islam, and other spiritual traditions as well." The author is a Trappist monk. Here he examines a tradition of prayer and finds it a viable form of "spirituality". It aids concentration and gives prayer a tangibility. Beads.
 
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keylawk | otra reseña | Jul 1, 2019 |
40 scriptural passages accompanied by short essays that intend to demonstrate the method of lectio divina. A good introduction to lectio divina as a practice.
 
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pdever | otra reseña | May 21, 2019 |
My wife and I read this devotional during the evenings of Lent. We sort of petered out at the end but I did enjoy the late Basil Pennington's reflections on the life of Christ.

Each of the entries in this book are based on Lectio Divinas Pennington did on passages from the life of Christ. They cover the whole arc of Jesus' earthly life. The reflections are presented under three categories: Beginnings, Teachings and Healings, and Passion & Resurrection.

For the most part Pennington's reflections are rather great and I gleaned some insights and learned to see particular scriptures in a different way. Though there is a certain unevenness to these. My wife and I read and let the reflections guide are evening prayers. But I found sometimes the reflections merely explicated Pennington's own views rather than helped us delve into the truth of the gospel. Thankfully some chapters were more nourishing than that.

Also occasionally these reflections seem directed specifically to fellow monks (but not always) so adjustments have to be made on how you read this.

Still it was good.
 
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Jamichuk | otra reseña | May 22, 2017 |
An entry by Father +Basil on 2 July, while visiting Gregoriou Monastery on the Holy Mountain, discloses the author's humility and candor. These qualities are difficult to sustain throughout a single text. However, Father Basil nurtures less resistance within himself toward the Lord Christ and risks importune rejections by monks on the Holy Mountain thanks to his sober view. On July 2, Father Basil records his embarrassment over offending monks of Gregoriou Monastery.

Just one day prior he had reached Gregoriou, which is proximal to Simonas Petras Monastery to the south along the western coastline of the Holy Mountain. There he had met with the Hegumen (abbot of the Monastery), Father Georgias, from whom Father Basil learned of resistance among the Monastery's Elders to a non-Orthodox man visiting them. The details concerning resistance from the Elders provide sufficient information about their point of view without belaboring the historical events of the prior three centuries of Jesuit and Dominican incursions in Greece.

It is clear, in my opinion, that Father Basil provides details of this brief visit to Gregoriou according to how he actually witnessed his place in Christ's Church. He "slipped away" from Gregoriou to cross the coastal range and return northward to Simonas Petras after he "...assisted at Orthros from the porch." He writes that he did not want "...to cause any further embarrssment to my host," which is a reference both to the pleasant Hegumen and all monks of Gregoriou Monastery.

While historical details of Latin abuses are noteworthy by way of absence in Father Basil's journal entries of 01 and 02 July, the author reports a poignant summary of the Hegumen's recommendation when Father Basil asked on 01 July to remain at Gregoriou for a week. One or more of the Elders had noted to the Hegumen that Father Basil looked Orthodox on the surface, and wondered why Father Basil was not Orthodox inwardly as well.

Trust among Father Basil and Gregoriou monks was impaired by bias, which the generous Hegumen disclosed on 01 July. Acknowledged disparity between Christ's priestly prayer of John's Gospel and such bias as the author encountered at Gregoriou -- disparity strikes author and his reader as less than "the fullness of love" in Christ.

How does a man of 45 years age (at the time of the visit) muster acceptance as this? Father Basil recounted a succinct part of St. Paul's first letter to the Church at Corinth: "Love is kind, patient, bears all things." Indeed, Love cannot be counted in the age of one, but rather in the multitude of theosis at work.

Filled by Christ is how this work of Love from Father Basil of blessed memory transports penitent to Pascha. There dawns an eternal Pascha in this book. And all are invited.
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Basileios919 | otra reseña | Mar 22, 2010 |
This book is still readily available as it has been reprinted by "St Pauls Publishing". Should anyone wish to enquire about it they should contact St Pauls Morpeth Terrace London WWC1A 2HR.020 7828 5582. This book is a must have for all catholics and Christians alike as it deals with the mystery and the sacrament of the Eucharist in an historical manner, in reader friendly language; nor does it presume any prior knowledge of the subject. Sacramental theology is full of pitfalls for the uninitiated, but this small, comprehensive - yet concise book expounds the theology in a way that is sure to deepen the reader's understanding. The Eucharist is where man meets God and communes, however briefly, with his creator. For the catholic this book will deepen spirituality and awareness of what is happening during the celebration of the sacrament central to the church's day to day living. It is a gem of a book that can teach one to treasure the Most Blessed Sacrament.
 
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GavinBowtell | 2 reseñas más. | Jul 1, 2009 |
A journal of a Roman Catholic monk who spend 7 months on Mt. Athos with the Orthodox monks. Interesting read.
 
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ctkcec | otra reseña | Jun 26, 2009 |
This has been one of those "basic" books that help us understand that prayer is so much more than a laundry list of requests to God. Prayer is listening. Prayer is being in touch with the Creator. Prayer is allowing God to come and be present in silence and in power.½
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roydknight | 3 reseñas más. | Jul 22, 2007 |
Finally an approach to prayer that assumes communication with the Almighty is much more than just babbling your want-list and repeating rote liturgies. Finally an approach to Christian prayer that realizes that the rewards of prayer ARE in fact prayer itself.

If you are buddhist oriented Christian, this is the book for you, for it will aid in your practice, yet help you maintain your sense of being a Child of Christ.
 
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Arctic-Stranger | 3 reseñas más. | Mar 13, 2007 |
Describes Thomas Merton's later years, focusing on his daily life in the monastery, and shares remembrances by his fellow monks
 
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StFrancisofAssisi | Jan 28, 2020 |
 
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holycrossabbey | Oct 7, 2019 |
Papers given at the Cistercian-Orthodox Symposium, Oxford, August 1973.: a wide varety including papers on the Desert and Cistercian Fathers.
 
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holycrossabbey | Apr 18, 2018 |
Includes10 chapters including those dealing with The Friendship between Peter the Venerable and St Bernard; Bernard and Abelard at the Council of Sens, 1140; St Benanrd and Eschatology, and a Bibliography of the Works by Jean Leclercq.
 
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holycrossabbey | otra reseña | Mar 21, 2018 |
Includes the basics of the Order: Obedience, Humility, Silence, etc., and also basic documents as the Exordium and he Charter of Charity.
 
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holycrossabbey | Mar 20, 2018 |