The Role of Death in the Ladder of Divine Ascent and the Greek Ascetic Tradition
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Oxford Early Christian Studies
ISBN-10
0198724942
ISBN-13
9780198724940
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Feb 19th, 2015
Print length
274 Pages
Weight
562 grams
Dimensions
24.20 x 16.60 x 2.40 cms
Product Classification:
The Early ChurchChristian theologyChristian spirituality & religious experience
Ksh 25,250.00
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This book is a study of the Ladder of Divine Ascent by the Palestinian ascetic, John Climacus (c.570-c.649), examining the role of death in the development of Christian identity both within the text and in other Greek literature in the centuries preceding its composition.
The Ladder of Divine Ascent, the work of an otherwise shadowy figure, John Climacus (meaning of the Ladder), abbot of St. Catherine''s, Sinai (ca. 579-649 CE), is one of the most popular and enduring classics of Greek ascetic spiritual direction. Hailed as the great synthesis of early ascetic writings, the Ladder presents a spirituality self-consciously rooted in the literary and theological tradition of the Desert Fathers and the Great Old Men of Gaza. Despite its incredible popularity among monastic and lay readers, the Ladder is virtually unknown in scholarship. In this work, Jonathan L. Zecher offers a sustained study of the Ladder''s spiritual vision, which is contextualized within an equally sustained genealogical survey of Climacus'' own tradition.The Ladder is built up through the ''memory of death'', a term referring to admonitions of early authors to remember one''s inevitable but unknowable death and to contemplate the divine judgment which would follow to cultivate particular ascetic, Christian, lifestyles in their readers. In the literature that formed Climacus, every aspect of the ''memory of death'' varied considerably, but Climacus draws these together in the Ladder so that death and the judgment which follows defines a symbolic framework within which monks reflect on their past and approach the future. Climacus also took up metaphorical practices of dying to oneself and others to craft an idea of spiritual progress in the imitation of Christ taking into account failure and frailty. At the heart of this study is the abiding question of how tradition forms, and in the Ladder is an outstanding example of how unflinching fidelity to tradition results in a creative, synthetic achievement.
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