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Full Description
For centuries the Jesus Prayer has been leading Orthodox Christians beyond the language of liturgy and the representations of iconography into the wordless, imageless stillness of the mystery of God. In more recent years it has been helping a growing number of Western Christians to find a deeper relationship with God through the continual rhythmic repetition of a short prayer which, by general agreement, first emerged from the desert spirituality of early monasticism. In this study James Wellington explores the understanding and practice of the psalmody which underpinned this spirituality. By means of an investigation of the importance of psalmody in desert monasticism, an exploration of the influence of Evagrius of Pontus and a thorough examination of selected psalm-commentaries in circulation in the East at this time, he reveals a monastic culture which was particularly conducive to the emergence of a Christ-centred invocatory prayer.
Contents
Contents: Updating an Alsatian - The Spirit and Practice of Monastic Psalmody - The Relationship between Psalmody and Prayer - Encountering Christos in the Scholia ad Psalmos - The Development by Diadochus of Photice - Other Commentaries - The Invocation of Christ as Onoma - The Invocation of Christ as Prosōpon - The Invocation of Christ as Partner - The Invocation of Christ as Deliverer.



