Veľký pôst : (cesta k Pasche)
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Kniha sa sústreďuje na mnohoročný prameň pravoslávnej duchovnosti - cirkevnú tajomnú a liturgickú tradíciu - aby odhalila, čo by mal znamenať „Veľký pôst v našom živote“.
Alexander Schmemann bol významným východným pravoslávnym teológom a kňazom Pravoslávnej cirkvi v Amerike. Jeho diela sa sústredili na liturgiu, duchovný život a teológiu kresťanskej skúsenosti.






Kniha sa sústreďuje na mnohoročný prameň pravoslávnej duchovnosti - cirkevnú tajomnú a liturgickú tradíciu - aby odhalila, čo by mal znamenať „Veľký pôst v našom živote“.
Alexander Schmemann (1921–1983) byl jedním z nejvýznamnějších pravoslavných teologů 20. století. Od roku 1951 až do své smrti působil v Semináři sv. Vladimíra, jenž se i pod jeho vedením stal jedním z důležitých duchovních center pravoslaví ve Spojených státech. Otec Alexander však byl víc, než jen profesor nebo děkan fakulty. Na srdci mu ležela zejména jednota pravoslaví, jeho „katolicita“, jež by dokázala překonat tíhu dědictví nacionalismů v diaspoře. Snažil se formovat církevní obce, které by dokázaly žít svou víru naplno, v radosti z Kristova zmrtvýchvstání. Radost ze vzkříšení, radost z podílu na Božím království v liturgii, prostupovala nejen jeho přednáškami, promluvami do rádia, knihami, ale celým jeho životem. Ti, které doprovázel, vzdělával, vychovával na něj dodnes vzpomínají jako na někoho, koho tato radost cele opanovala a rozlévala se tak na všechny kolem. Tento výbor z deníků (orig. The Journals of Father Alexander Schmemann 1973-1983, St Vladimir's Seminary Press, 2000) z posledních deseti let jeho života, který čtenářům předkládáme, odhaluje nejen tuto radost, hluboký vztah ke Kristu, ale obsahuje také trefné postřehy týkající se společenských nešvarů, politických událostí i vnitřních zápasů křesťanství.
In For the Life of the World Alexander Schmemann suggests an approach to the world and life within it, which stems from the liturgical experience of the Orthodox Church. He understands issues such as secularism and Christian culture from the perspective of the unbroken experience of the Church, as revealed and communicated in her worship, in her liturgy the sacrament of the world, the sacrament of the Kingdom. Of what life do we speak, what life do we preach, proclaim, and announce when, as Christians, we confess that Christ died for the life of the world? In For the Life of the World Alexander Schmemann suggests an approach to the world and life within it, which stems from the liturgical experience of the Orthodox Church. He understands issues such as secularism and Christian culture from the perspective of the unbroken experience of the Church, as revealed and communicated in her worship, in her liturgy the sacrament of the world, the sacrament of the Kingdom. For over half a century For the Life of the World has challenged, illumined, and inspired readers from many backgrounds. For some it is an introduction to the Orthodox Church, while for others it is a call to plunge more deeply into the life of the Kingdom, both manifested and anticipated here and now in the liturgy of the Church. This updated edition of Schmemann s classic text includes a new foreword by Dr Edith M. Humphrey, along with new explanatory notes and an index. -- ‡c From publisher's description
The crowning achievement of Fr Schmemann's work, reflecting his entire life experience as well as his thoughts on the Divine Liturgy. schovat popis
This commentary on the Lord's Prayer has been compiled from a series of broadcasts made by Fr Alexander Schmemann on Radio Liberty to listeners in the Soviet Union. Because this single short prayer of Christ has everything that needs to be said about God, his kingdom, this life - about all of us - it is not an exaggeration to suggest that in this commentary Fr Schmemann provides us with a map for seeing anew the purpose and measure of our whole life. Fr Schmemann awakens in us a fresh understanding of these familiar petitions.
A collection of Fr Alexander Schmemann's sermons delivered over the course of many years over Radio Liberty to listeners in the Soviet Union. Selected from more than 3000 sermons, his broadcasts were widely acclaimed - both by people in the Church and figures such as Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
In his broadcasts on Radio Liberty, Fr Alexander Schmemann spoke to men and women behind the iron curtain who had endured the deprivation, persecution, and state-enforced propaganda of the Stalin years. But his words do not belong to that era alone. They are addressed just as urgently to our own time.
This is an explanation of Christian development through liturgical experience from Father Alexander Schmemann (1921-1983) a prolific writer, brilliant lecturer, and dedicated pastor. Former dean and professor of liturgical theology at St Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary, his insight into contemporary culture and liturgical celebration left an indelible mark on the Christian community worldwide.
"...In order to console himself, man created a dream of another world where there is no death, and for that dream he forfeited this world, gave it us decidedly to death. "...Therefore, the most important and most profound question of the Christian faith must be, how and from where did death arise, and why has it become stronger than life? Why has death become so powerful that the world itself has become a kind of global cemetery, a place where a collection of people condemned to death live either in fear or terror, or, in their efforts to forget about death, find themselves rushing around one great big burial plot?"- Alexander Schmemann, Radio Liberty Broadcast In this brief collection, Father Alexander Schmemann does not have the luxury for platitudes and pleasantries on the most difficult of life's ultimate questions. Taking us to the heart of Christian revelation and anthropology, he leads us unequivocally and directly, as only he can, to discole why the apostle Paul calls death the "last enemy" (1 Cor. 15:26) and Christ's decisive answer to this enemy. Father Alexander Schmemann (†1983) was a prolific writer, brilliant lecturer, and dedicated I Believe...