Search results for ""Author Jean LeClercq""
Fordham University Press The Love of Learning and The Desire God: A Study of Monastic Culture
The Love of Learning and the Desire for God is composed of a series of lectures given to young monks at the Institute of Monastic Studies at Sant'Anselmo in Rome during the winter of 1955-56.
£31.50
Patrimonium Aachen Ein Humanist wird Eremit Paul Giustiniani 14761528
£14.80
Monte Carmelo San Bernardo y el espritu cisterciense
En esta obra, el gran conocedor de san Bernardo, que fue D. Jean Leclercq, nos hace una síntesis admirable sobre la figura del santo pasando revista a los diversos aspectos de su vida y de su obra. Dios le prodigó extraordinariamente, por lo que brilló en las áreas más diversas (teólogo y literato, artista y músico, hombre de biblia y filósofo, poeta en la Iglesia y liturgo). Pero uno de los dones más insignes que recibió fue su cualidad de escritor en la que resplandece su verdadera grandeza por la que fue maestro espiritual y doctor de la Iglesia.
£13.92
Classiques Garnier Nietzsche Et La Phenomenologie: Entre Textes, Receptions Et Interpretations
£51.76
Paulist Press International,U.S. Bernard of Clairvaux: Selected Works
"...a milestone in American religious publishing." New Catholic World Bernard of Clairvaux-Selected Works translation and foreword by G.R. Evans introduction by Jean Leclercq, O.S.B. preface by Ewert H. Cousins "Lord, you are good to the soul which seeks you. What are you then to the soul which finds? But this is the most wonderful thing, that no one can seek you who has not already found you. You therefore seek to be found so that you may be sought for, sought so that you may be found." —Bernard of Clairvaux (1090–1153) Born in Fontaines-lès-Dijon in 1090, Bernard had become, by his twenty-fifth birthday, the abbot of a Cistercian monastery which he had founded in the valley of Clairvaux near Aube, France, some four years earlier. There in those isolated and rugged surroundings he became the spokesman for a revival of monastic life in an age when the radical spirit of religious life was endangered by a movement, best seen in the excesses of the monks of Cluny, that stressed the adaptation of the rule of St. Benedict to the exigencies-and taste for princely comforts-of the royal courts of twelfth-century France. But Bernard's dedication to the strict observance of Benedict's rule was mingled not with the abrasive, shrill style of the prophet but with a sweetness and purity of vision that earned him the title Doctor mellifluous. For he possessed a sense of the love of God, the importance of humility, and the sheer beauty of holiness that has made his writings favorites of scholars and laymen alike throughout the ages. Here in a new translation by G.R. Evans are the writings that have had such a major role in shaping the Western monastic tradition and influencing the development of catholic mystical theology. Together with an introduction by the master of Bernard studies, Jean Leclercq, they comprise a volume that occupies a place of special importance in the chronicle of the history of the Western spiritual adventure. †
£24.29