Front cover image for Conferences

Conferences

John Cassian (Author), Colm Luibhéid (Translator, Writer of preface), E. Pichery (Writer of introduction)
At the turn of the sixth century, the Mediterranean world was witnessing the decline of Roman rule that had formed the bedrock of its civil order. During the chaos of those years, there arose in the deserts of Egypt and Syria monastic movements that offered men and women a radical God-centered alternative to the present society. Among the most eloquent interpreters of this new movement to Western Europe was John Cassian (c. 365-c.435). Drawing on his own early experience as a monk in Bethlehem and Egypt, he journeyed to the West to found monasteries in Marseilles and the region of Provence. Included in this volume is Cassian's masterpiece, the Conferences, which is a study of the Egyptian ideal of the monk. The new translation by Colm Luibheid is coupled with an insightful introduction by the distinguished Regius Professor Emeritus of Modern History, Cambridge University, Owen Chadwick, who writes of Cassian's achievement: "Like the Rule of St. Benedict, his work was a protection against excess and a constant recall to that primitive simplicity where Eastern spirituality met Western"--back cover
Print Book, English, 1985
Paulist Press, New York, 1985
Early works to 1800
xv, 208 pages ; 23 cm.
9780809126941, 9780809103614, 9780281041763, 080912694X, 0809103613, 0281041768
12417729
Conference one: The goal or objective of the monk
Conference two: On discernment
Conference three: The three renunciations
Conference nine: On prayer
Conference ten: On prayer
Conference eleven: On perfection
Conference fourteen: On spiritual knowledge
Conference fifteen: The gifts of God
Conference eighteen: The three kinds of monk
"Translation is based on the text prepared for Sources chrétiennes by Dom E. Pichery"--Page ix