The Fathers of the Church, deeply-rooted in the Scriptures, have left us a rich treasure as inheritance, not only of texts, but also of manners, forms and gestures of prayer.
Gabriel B.
Fr.
One learns how to pray by praying, and the whole of our being is called to participate in this work: the mind, the heart, but also the body, the gaze, the senses.
Today, western Christianity in a special way, needs to rediscover the intimate union which must exist--in Prayer just as in any aspect of Christian life--between theory and practice, between contemplation and practical exercise.
The Fathers of the Church, deeply-rooted in the Scriptures, have left us a rich treasure as inheritance, not only of texts, but also of manners, forms and gestures of prayer.
Gabriel Bunge, a hermit with great spiritual discernment and profound knowledge of the Fathers of the desert, presents with masterly coherence this important unity between what one believes and what one expresses in the Practice of prayer: a fascinating rediscovery of the valuable treasure contained in the teachings of the Church Fathers on the Practice of Personal prayer.
Fr.
One learns how to pray by praying, and the whole of our being is called to participate in this work: the mind, the heart, but also the body, the gaze, the senses.
Today, western Christianity in a special way, needs to rediscover the intimate union which must exist--in Prayer just as in any aspect of Christian life--between theory and practice, between contemplation and practical exercise.
The Fathers of the Church, deeply-rooted in the Scriptures, have left us a rich treasure as inheritance, not only of texts, but also of manners, forms and gestures of prayer.
Gabriel Bunge, a hermit with great spiritual discernment and profound knowledge of the Fathers of the desert, presents with masterly coherence this important unity between what one believes and what one expresses in the Practice of prayer: a fascinating rediscovery of the valuable treasure contained in the teachings of the Church Fathers on the Practice of Personal prayer.
Fr.
One learns how to pray by praying, and the whole of our being is called to participate in this work: the mind, the heart, but also the body, the gaze, the senses.
Today, western Christianity in a special way, needs to rediscover the intimate union which must exist - in Prayer just as in any aspect of Christian life - between theory and practice, between contemplation and practical exercise.
The Fathers of the Church, deeply-rooted in the Scriptures, have left us a rich treasure as inheritance, not only of texts, but also of manners, forms and gestures of prayer