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The Benedictines by David Knowles
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The Benedictines

by David Knowles (otherwise under David Knowles)

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211,838,716 (5)None

ViaCassian's review

Word for word, perhaps the best description of Benedictine monastic life. Like the Rule of St. Benedict, “The Benedictines” sets out Benedictine ways in broad lines, but with precise detail where needed to illuminate both the Benedictine balance and its uniqueness.

All of the following is a quote and summary from the book:

"Benedictine monachism presents an objective form of life, sane, strong, unchanging from year to year, a life of work and liturgical prayer which can be seen and heard, lived in conditions which aim at representing all that is best in the basic family life of Christianity, aided by all human courtesies, reverences, and affections.

"It is nothing secret or esoteric, nor an impossibility, but an ordered form of ordinary life. It is a religious life which is free from all that is doctrinaire or experimental. It is the Christian life writ large for all to see, with all the non-Christian elements removed that are normally interwoven with the devout life as lived in the world.

"The message of Saint Benedict is simple and direct. Work, obey, keep silent, praise God in common, and if you wish to pray to Him alone, enter the Church and pray.

"It is for Benedictines to see to it that they are a living commentary on the Rule, remembering that just as they hope to save their own souls by living the regular life, so by their example they may, in what small measure soever it may be, have something of the same influence over their contemporaries of today that their predecessors had over a chaotic and pagan Europe."
  ViaCassian | Nov 23, 2008 |

All member reviews

Word for word, perhaps the best description of Benedictine monastic life. Like the Rule of St. Benedict, “The Benedictines” sets out Benedictine ways in broad lines, but with precise detail where needed to illuminate both the Benedictine balance and its uniqueness.

All of the following is a quote and summary from the book:

"Benedictine monachism presents an objective form of life, sane, strong, unchanging from year to year, a life of work and liturgical prayer which can be seen and heard, lived in conditions which aim at representing all that is best in the basic family life of Christianity, aided by all human courtesies, reverences, and affections.

"It is nothing secret or esoteric, nor an impossibility, but an ordered form of ordinary life. It is a religious life which is free from all that is doctrinaire or experimental. It is the Christian life writ large for all to see, with all the non-Christian elements removed that are normally interwoven with the devout life as lived in the world.

"The message of Saint Benedict is simple and direct. Work, obey, keep silent, praise God in common, and if you wish to pray to Him alone, enter the Church and pray.

"It is for Benedictines to see to it that they are a living commentary on the Rule, remembering that just as they hope to save their own souls by living the regular life, so by their example they may, in what small measure soever it may be, have something of the same influence over their contemporaries of today that their predecessors had over a chaotic and pagan Europe." ( )
  ViaCassian | Nov 23, 2008 |

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