The second of Gregory’s Dialogues, tells the life and miracles of Benedict of Nursia. In this paper, I will first introduce the Gregorian concepts of spiritual “stability” (stabilitas) and of the spiritual “ruler” (rector), along with the spiritual journey by which “stability” is recovered. Second, focusing on episodes that call attention to Benedict’s physical self-disposition (seated, standing, walking), I will read his life doubly. Under one reading, these episodes proffer moral exempla wherein Benedict’s physical self-possession outwardly manifests a spiritual ruler’s proper response to attacks on him and on his community. Under another reading, the organization and emphases of these same episodes add up to an over-arching narration of ...
The Rule of St. Benedict continues to attract those who seek to live a deeper life, connected to Chr...
Other articles are found on this site of a similar nature.St. Benedict of Nursia, the founder of wes...
Gregory was the first monk to be pope; proverbially, he would have preferred to have remained a monk...
The second of Gregory’s Dialogues, tells the life and miracles of Benedict of Nursia. In this paper,...
grantor: University of TorontoPope Gregory the Great (590-604), valued in the Middle Ages ...
In Gregory the Great’s Pastoral Care the balance of the Christian life of the clergy not only permea...
Gregory is generally acknowledged as the first of the medieval popes and the last of the Fathers. He...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142135/1/emed12254.pdfhttps://deepblue...
Pope Gregory the Great, in his only hagiographical work, the Dialogues, left elaborate teaching on v...
The eight-century Whitby Vita Gregorii is one of the earliest examples of Anglo-Saxon hagiography, a...
This paper explores St Ignatius Loyola’s relationship to the medieval tradition of theologia mystic...
The aim of this research was to trace the stages in Gregory's career, and the writings he produced d...
In his introduction to this commentary on the Rule of Benedict, Abbot Georg Holzherr offers this ana...
The life of Saint Benedict (480-547) written by the Pope Saint Gregory the Great († 604) in the “Boo...
In the late sixth and early seventh centuries, asceticism continued as a frequent expression of Chri...
The Rule of St. Benedict continues to attract those who seek to live a deeper life, connected to Chr...
Other articles are found on this site of a similar nature.St. Benedict of Nursia, the founder of wes...
Gregory was the first monk to be pope; proverbially, he would have preferred to have remained a monk...
The second of Gregory’s Dialogues, tells the life and miracles of Benedict of Nursia. In this paper,...
grantor: University of TorontoPope Gregory the Great (590-604), valued in the Middle Ages ...
In Gregory the Great’s Pastoral Care the balance of the Christian life of the clergy not only permea...
Gregory is generally acknowledged as the first of the medieval popes and the last of the Fathers. He...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142135/1/emed12254.pdfhttps://deepblue...
Pope Gregory the Great, in his only hagiographical work, the Dialogues, left elaborate teaching on v...
The eight-century Whitby Vita Gregorii is one of the earliest examples of Anglo-Saxon hagiography, a...
This paper explores St Ignatius Loyola’s relationship to the medieval tradition of theologia mystic...
The aim of this research was to trace the stages in Gregory's career, and the writings he produced d...
In his introduction to this commentary on the Rule of Benedict, Abbot Georg Holzherr offers this ana...
The life of Saint Benedict (480-547) written by the Pope Saint Gregory the Great († 604) in the “Boo...
In the late sixth and early seventh centuries, asceticism continued as a frequent expression of Chri...
The Rule of St. Benedict continues to attract those who seek to live a deeper life, connected to Chr...
Other articles are found on this site of a similar nature.St. Benedict of Nursia, the founder of wes...
Gregory was the first monk to be pope; proverbially, he would have preferred to have remained a monk...