Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Praying with the Creed: Meditations from the Oratory, Our Sunday Visitor, 2007; Questions and Answers About Your Journey to God, Our Sunday Visitor, 2007; Everyday Encounters with God: What Our Experiences Teach Us about the Divine, Word Among Us, 2008; Experiencing the Mystery of Christ: Meditations from Oratory, Our Sunday Visitor, 2008
The Power at Work Among Us – Meditations For Lent (1967) Who is This Jesus (1968) What’s Life For: That They May See (1968) Death. Niles died on 17 July 1970. [2]
And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth. The New International Version translates the passage as: The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us.
The first edition of The Word Among Us, a monthly Christian magazine, was published in December 1981 by members of the Mother of God Community who hand stapled the first copies together. The magazine gradually grew and was eventually translated into several languages and distributed worldwide.
This style of meditation later resulted in meditation using narrative images, the first of which was eventually printed by Dinkmut in Ulm, Germany. The use of "image directed rosary meditation" soon gained popularity and at the end of the 16th century the most widely used rosary meditation in Germany was not a written one, but a picture text. [8]
La Nativité du Seigneur, neuf méditations pour orgue (The Birth of the Lord, nine meditations for organ) is an important work for organ, written by the French composer Olivier Messiaen in 1935 in Grenoble. [1] It is a testament to Messiaen's Roman Catholic faith, being divided into nine "meditations" inspired by the birth of Jesus.
The English meditation is derived from Old French meditacioun, in turn from Latin meditatio from a verb meditari, meaning "to think, contemplate, devise, ponder". [11] [12] In the Catholic tradition, the use of the term meditatio as part of a formal, stepwise process of meditation goes back to at least the 12th-century monk Guigo II, [12] [13] before which the Greek word theoria was used for ...
[citation needed] Meditation, on the other hand, for many centuries in the Western Church, referred to more cognitively active exercises, such as visualizations of Biblical scenes as in the Ignatian exercises or lectio divina in which the practitioner "listens to the text of the Bible with the 'ear of the heart', as if he or she is in ...