Description

Book Synopsis
The practice of continuous prayer has been known in the Christian church as early as the second century AD, well before the beginning of Christian monasticism. One of the ways early Christians practiced continuous prayer was through the repetition of short bible verses throughout the day. While this mode of prayer did not have any specific name until the twentieth century, its practice has always been characterized by the imagery of warfare and, more specifically, the use of arrows. It was probably this that gave rise to its name, the Arrow Prayer, on account of its brevity and its use to attack evil thoughts. However, most research on continuous prayer only focuses on the Jesus Prayer, and presumes that the Arrow Prayer and other prayer practices are extensions of it. In this book, Fr Anthony St Shenouda scrutinizes this conclusion by examining the sources that attest to any practice of continuous prayer, and the cultural backdrop that gave rise to these practices. Ultimately, he argues that the tradition of the Arrow Prayer is much older than the Jesus Prayer, and that it is the parent tradition out of which the Jesus Prayer arose.

Table of Contents
Chapter 1: An Arrow Shot from the Saint Chapter 2: Give me a Word that I Might Live Chapter 3: There Shall Be No One in the Monastery Who Does Not Learn to Read Chapter 4: Blessed Are Those Who Hold His Commands in Memory Chapter 5: Meditates Day and Night on the Law of the Lord Chapter 6: Whatever You Do, Do it According to the Testimony of the Scripture

At War in Prayer: The History of the Practice of

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    A Hardback by Fr. Anthony St. Shenouda, Pope Tawadrous, II

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 20/01/2020
      ISBN13: 9781978709812, 978-1978709812
      ISBN10: 1978709811

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The practice of continuous prayer has been known in the Christian church as early as the second century AD, well before the beginning of Christian monasticism. One of the ways early Christians practiced continuous prayer was through the repetition of short bible verses throughout the day. While this mode of prayer did not have any specific name until the twentieth century, its practice has always been characterized by the imagery of warfare and, more specifically, the use of arrows. It was probably this that gave rise to its name, the Arrow Prayer, on account of its brevity and its use to attack evil thoughts. However, most research on continuous prayer only focuses on the Jesus Prayer, and presumes that the Arrow Prayer and other prayer practices are extensions of it. In this book, Fr Anthony St Shenouda scrutinizes this conclusion by examining the sources that attest to any practice of continuous prayer, and the cultural backdrop that gave rise to these practices. Ultimately, he argues that the tradition of the Arrow Prayer is much older than the Jesus Prayer, and that it is the parent tradition out of which the Jesus Prayer arose.

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1: An Arrow Shot from the Saint Chapter 2: Give me a Word that I Might Live Chapter 3: There Shall Be No One in the Monastery Who Does Not Learn to Read Chapter 4: Blessed Are Those Who Hold His Commands in Memory Chapter 5: Meditates Day and Night on the Law of the Lord Chapter 6: Whatever You Do, Do it According to the Testimony of the Scripture

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