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The Meditations with a Monastic Commentary

William of Saint-Thierry Thomas X. Davis, OCSO David N. Bell

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English
Liturgical Press
16 December 2022
The Meditations, written over a period from 1125 to 1137, are a personal account of William of Saint-Thierry’s ascent into Trinitarian intimacy. Writing to the monks of Mont Dieu sometime around 1144, he proposed the Meditations as helpful in forming minds in prayer. These Meditations, with their accompanying commentary, are now presented as helpful in forming an intimate relationship with the triune God.
By:  
Foreword by:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   Liturgical Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 16mm
Weight:   340g
ISBN:   9780879071646
ISBN 10:   0879071648
Series:   Cistercian Fathers Series
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  ELT Advanced ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Contents Acknowledgments  xi Abbreviations  xiii Foreword, by David N. Bell xvii The Meditations  1    Preface  3    The Meditations  5 The Beginning of William’s Contemplative Ascent into Intimacy with the Triune Divinity as Presented in His Meditations: A Monastic Commentary   89    Two Protagonists: Meditation 1.1–6   91    Foreknowledge and Predestination: Meditation 1.2–6   94    Divine Foreknowledge as Eternal Wisdom: Meditation 1.7–10   96    Bonding between Eternity and Time: Meditation 1.8   97    Ascending vs Circling: Meditation 1.9   99    Divine Predestination/Intimate Relationship: Meditation 1.11   100    Pride: Meditation 1.12–13   102    Go to Him and be Enlightened: Meditation 2.1–3   104    A Remarkable Scriptural Image and Metaphor: Meditation 2.2–8   107      Divine and Human Darkness: Meditation 2.5–8   108    Imagination in Respect to a Vision of God that Enlightens: Meditation 2.9–12   110    Two Categories of Understanding: Meditation 2.13–15   113    Enlightened Understanding Coming from Above: Meditation 2.14   113    Face and Countenance: Meditation 3.1–5   116    Meaning of the Face   117    Meaning of the Countenance   117    A Succinct Unfolding of the Meditations   118    The Paradigm of Your Countenance   118    Your Love: Meditation 3.6–7   120    Divine Revelation: Meditation 3.7–8   123    Understanding from Reason: Meditation 3.9–11   125    Understanding God: Meditation 3.12–13   127    Understanding the Trinity: Meditation 3.14   128    Embracing the Trinity: Meditation 3.15–16   130    Personal Change via the Lord’s Prayer: Meditation 4.1–5   132    Nine Factors Bringing Personal Change: Meditation 4.6–19   133    1. Opening Personal Inner Depths: Meditation 4.6   134    2. Good Conscience: Meditation 4.10   135    3. Reason in Its Proper Responsibility: Meditation 4.11   136    4. Knowledge of One’s Personal God as the Fruit of Solitude: Meditation 4.12   136    5. A Desire to Taste, See, and Delight in This Personal God: Meditation 4.13–14   137    6. Pursuing the Place Where God Is: Meditation 4.15   138     7. Removing All Types of Idols Formerly Used to Comprehend God: Meditation 4.16   139    8. Becoming Intelligent and Devoutly Knowledgeable: Meditation 4.17   140    9. Authentic Listening to God: Meditation 4.18–19   141    The Prayer of Jesus: Meditation 5.1–3   143    Prayer as Being Crucified, Concrucifixus, with the Lord Jesus: Meditation 5.4   144    Concrucifixus and Its Consequences: Meditation 5.5   145    A Treacherous Problem: Meditation 5.6   147    Christ’s Prayer on the Cross: Meditation 5.7–10   147    Love and Truth: Meditation 5.10–12   149    William’s Bonding to the Human and Divine Natures of Christ: Meditation 5.14–15   151    Mutual Anointing and the Amplexus: Meditation 5.15–19   152    Heaven’s Open Door: Meditation 6.1   155    Earthly Heaviness and Human Pride: Meditation 6.2–5   155    Jesus, Incarnate Merciful Love, Is the Open Door into Heaven: Meditation 6.6–7   157    The Proper Way to Think Regarding Heaven and Earth: Meditation 6.8–9   158    Further Thoughts on Heaven: Meditation 6.10–14   159    Heaven Is Likeness to the Creating God: Meditation 6.15   161    The Comprehensiveness of the Incarnation: Meditation 6.16–19   161    The Obedience of Charity and the Charity of Obedience: Meditation 6.18   162    The Pierced Heart of Jesus: Meditation 6.20–22   164      A Yearning to Rejoice with the Saints: Meditation 6.23–27   164    Boldness in Seeking God’s Face: Meditation 7.1   167    Two Aspects of Humility: Meditation 7.2–4   167    Signs of the Divine Face: Meditation 7.6–8  169    To Know by Not Knowing: Meditation 7.9–11   170    The Implication of Being Illumined: Meditation 7.11   173    Good Will, Good Zeal: Meditation 8.1–2   175    The Kiss of Truth and Mercy: Meditation 8.3   176    The Passion of Christ as a Contemplative Spousal Kiss: Meditation 8.4–5   177    The Sacred Heart as Hiding Place: Meditation 8.6   179    Ruminating on the Passion: Meditation 8.7   180    Delightful Love: Meditation 8.8–9   184    The Effects of Christ’s Face upon a Human Face: Meditation 8.10   184    Torment of Hell: Meditation 8.11–14   185    William Descends into His Inner Self: Meditation 9.1–2   187    Rowdy Thoughts Hinder Inner Peace: Meditation 9.3–7   187    Total Openness in God’s Presence: Meditation 9.8–9   189    Experiences of Alternations: Meditation 9.10–11   190    Truth, Accurate Self-knowledge, Comes from God’s Presence: Meditation 9.12–13   191    The Fullness of Love Depends on the Fullness of Faith: Meditation 9.14–17   191    An Intuitive Vision of God: Meditation 10.1–2   193    The Bonding Role of This Wisdom: Meditation 10.3   195    Prayer with Images: Meditation 10.4–10   196     The Incarnate Christ as the Open Door to Eternal Life: Meditation 10.9–12   200    The Theme of Ascent: Meditation 11.1–3   203    The Scriptural Image of Bartimeus of Jericho (Mark 10:46): Meditation 11.4–11   204    Word of God, the Divine Protagonist: Meditation 11.12   206    His Total Destiny, the Discovery of God’s Truth, Is in God’s Hands: Meditation 11.13–14   207    Scrutinizing Intention, Thoughts, Soul, and Spirit: Meditation 11.15–33   208    Intention: Meditation 11.15–20   208    Joints: Meditation 11.21–24   210    Marrow: Meditation 11.25–30   211    A Dialogue between William’s Spirit and His Soul: Meditation 11.31–33   214    Your Love: Meditation 12.1   217    William Addresses His Past Life: Meditation 12.2–8   218    Your Love as an Advocate: Meditation 12.9–10   219    Your Love, an Experience of Love: Meditation 12.11   221    The Life of the Trinity Working in William: Meditation 12.12–13   222    Your Love Expands Conscience: Meditation 12.14–15   223    Way of Ascent: A Will—Great, Enlightened, Ardent: Meditation 12.16–20   224    Great Will 225 Enlightened and Ardent Will: Meditation 12.20–21   227    Your Love Imparts Participation with the Saints: Meditation 12.22   228    Your Love Reshaping Persons: Meditation 12.23–24   228     Your Love Forms Unpretentious Persons: Meditation 12.25–27   229    Eucrasis and the Saints   230    To Love Much: Meditation 12.28–30   231    Meditation Thirteen   234 Bibliography   241

William of Saint-Thierry (ca. 1080–1148) was a Benedictine abbot of the Abbey of Saint-Thierry and a close friend of Bernard of Clairvaux. Because of this friendship, toward the end of his life he became a Cistercian monk at Signy l’Abbaye in the Ardenne forest. Twenty-one of his writings extant today establish his enduring legacy as a distinguished theologian of Trinitarian doctrine, Christology, and contemplative prayer. Thomas X. Davis, OCSO, has translated two works of William—The Mirror of Faith (1979) and The Nature and Dignity of Love (1981)—and published several articles on William and monastic subjects. He is the abbot emeritus of the Trappist-Cistercian Abbey of New Clairvaux.

Reviews for The Meditations with a Monastic Commentary

Thomas Davis makes an invaluable contribution in his fresh translation of the Meditations and his insightful commentary on William's account of the contemplative ascent into God, situating the abbot of Saint-Thierry's spiritual itinerary in his broader theological vision. That ascent is motivated by ardent love and longing to see God's face, yet paradoxically necessitates a descent into the truth of a person's deepest self where one comes face to face with one's utter brokenness and the need to die to self. There one also discovers the truth of one's unimaginable beloved-ness in the eternal Word. Ascending then through the Incarnation, one's will is united with God's love--the Holy Spirit--in the unitas spiritus where one's life is transformed and one's spirit is enfolded the ineffable embrace of the Divine Persons of the Trinity. Glenn E. Myers, PhD, Professor of Church History and Theological Studies, Crown College Father Thomas Davis takes his readers on an extraordinary journey through the depths and heights of William of Saint-Thierry's spirituality. The revised translation and commentary illuminate the complexity of early Cistercian thought through the lens of William's poetic imagery. Offering a guided tour through the metaphorical landscape of William's meditations, Father Davis provides intellectually rich insight, as well as a personal appreciation of Cistercian spiritual practice. This book is a source both for future Cistercian scholarship and for anyone who is drawn to the experiential, authentic nature of monastic prayer. Dr. des. theol. ?Delphine Conzelmann, University of Basel, Switzerland You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you. So wrote St. Augustine at the beginning of his Confessions, one of the most remarkable prayer-texts in the Christian tradition. Some 700 years later, a closely related insight drove William of St. Thierry to pen the meditative prayers of this book. Blessed with an intimate knowledge of the Bible and the medieval interpretive tradition, a poetic sense of imagery, a refined Christian metaphysics, and an ardent personal faith, William delivered a remarkable text to guide thoughts to God. This new volume gives us a precious new portal into one of Christian history's outstanding minds. Fr. Joseph Van House, O Cist, Our Lady of Dallas Abbey, University of Dallas


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