Showing posts with label Celtic Spirituality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celtic Spirituality. Show all posts

Thursday, April 8, 2021

Celtic reading



With an Eagle's Eye: A Seven-Day Sojourn in Celtic Spirituality by John Miriam Jones, S.C. (Ave Maria Press, July 1998)

The Music of What Happens: Celtic Spirituality - A View from the Inside by John J. Ó Ríordáin CSsR (Dublin: Columba, September 1996; Saint Mary's Press, December 1996)

How the Irish Saved Civilization: The Untold Story of Ireland's Heroic Role from the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Medieval Europe by Thomas Cahill (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, February 1995)

The Wisdom of the Celtic Saints by Edward C. Sellner (Notre Dame: Ave Maria Press, 1993; revised and expanded edition, Bog Walk Press, February 2006)

The Celtic Way of Prayer: The Recovery of the Religious Imagination by Esther de Waal (Doubleday, August 1997)

Every Earthly Blessing: Rediscovering the Celtic Tradition by Esther De Waal (Morehouse, July 1999)

The Celtic Vision: Prayers, Blessings, Songs, and Invocations from the Gaelic Tradition edited by Esther De Waal (Saint Bede's, July 1990; revised edition, Liguori/Triumph, November 2001)

Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom by John O'Donohue (Cliff Street Books/HarperCollins, October 1997)

Celtic Inheritance by Peter Berresford Elis (London: Constable, 1985; New York: Dorset, 1992)

Soulfaring: Celtic Pilgrimage Then and Now by Cintra Pemberton, O.S.H. (Morehouse, October 1999)

In Search of Sacred Places: Looking for Wisdom on Celtic Holy Islands by Daniel Taylor (Bog Walk Press, 2005)

Celtic Threads: Exploring the Wisdom of Our Heritage by Padraigín Clancy (Dublin: Veritas, 1999)

Celtic Christian Spirituality: An Anthology of Medieval and Modern Sources edited by Oliver Davies and Fiona Bowie (SPCK & Continuum, 1995)

Celtic Spirituality edited and translated and introduced by Oliver Davies ; with the collaboration of Thomas O'Loughlin (Paulist Press, 1995)

A Doorway in Time: Memoir of a Celtic Spiritual Journey by Herbert O'Driscoll (Harper & Row, San Francisco, 1985)

Man of Aran by Pat Mullen (E. P. Dutton, 1935; M.I.T. Press, 1970)

George MacLeod: Founder of the Iona Community by Ronald Ferguson (London: Collins, 1990; Glasgow: Wild Goose, April 2001)

Glendalough: A Celtic Pilgrimage by Michael Rodgers and Marcus Losack (Morehouse, February 1997)

I Will Arise and Go Now, memoir by Herbert O'Driscoll (Church Publishing, 2021)

Listening for the Heartbeat of God: A Celtic Spirituality by J. Philip Newell (Paulist Press, January 1997)

David Adam, The Rhythm of Life: Celtic Daily Prayer (SPCK, 2007)

JRL+

Monday, October 1, 2012

seasons of the year




Our celebrations as a church follow a pattern - a pattern set by custom and tradition and calendar, but also by the natural cycles of the year, the seasons of the sun and phases of the moon.



You know when it’s fall. You know when it’s winter, and springtime, and summer, and fall again. That is the Earth's natural year, the round of the seasons. It follows the sun, as our planet’s course through the heavens brings us closer and then takes us farther away from that stellar source of light.

Seasons vary from place to place, from time to time: we know them not by clock or calendar but by the rhythms of life and light. There are measurements of course: solstice and equinox, and halfway between these, the quarter days. These have been codified by calendars, to give us a handle on what is happening to us as days grow shorter or lengthen. The liturgical round of the
Christian year follows this pattern.

The ancient Celtic calendar was also built around the seasons of the sun. The Celtic calendar included not only the winter and summer solstices and the spring and fall equinoxes but also the days halfway between them, which they called the quarter days. Each is associated with an element of nature.

Samhain, associated with the element of earth, at the end of October and the beginning of November, marks the turning of the Celtic year. Imbolc, the festival of light, comes at the beginning of February. Beltaine, associated with fire, is May Day. Lughnasa, feast of the air and wind, is August 1st.

The year, in this imaging, starts in a gathering darkness, when the seed in the ground, planted earlier, begins in silence to take root and grow. Something is ended; something new has begun. It is like our understanding of death and resurrection. It is a harvest time for past things, looking back, and, looking forward, to what is already but not yet come into our world, a time of hidden new life.


The Christian year, and the Church calendar, reflect the seasonal rhythms of the natural cycle of the solar year – and it shows us that in its own cycle of feasts and fasts. These, too, following the seasons of the sun, are arranged around the solstices and equinoxes and the quarter days between them.

The liturgical year begins with Advent, the season of preparation, for four Sundays before Christmas. Just past the winter solstice comes the feast of the Nativity of Our Lord. We celebrate light and life and the incarnation of the holy one of God. The celebration continues through the twelve days of Christmas, and the feast of the Epiphany, into January’s Sundays, including the 
Baptism of Our Lord

The next feast comes around the time of the quarter day at the beginning of February, when we celebrate Candlemas (Candelaria in Mexico). It’s a perfect reason for another party, as we remember the Presentation of Our Lord in the Temple, completing the cycle of the birth of our King. In some traditional cultures, the winner of the prize baked into the Epiphany cake brings treats for all to share on this day (let’s see what happens here). 

Seasons and celebrations begin to change; days lengthen. Shrove Tuesday comes; we celebrate with a pancake supper. 

There is a shift now, at Ash Wednesday, remembering the water of Baptism and the coming themes of death and resurrection. We prepare, through Lenten discipline, for the great events of Holy Week, from Palm Sunday through to Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Holy Saturday, Easter Eve and 
Easter Day. Fifty great days later – eight days after the Ascension – is the feast of Pentecost.

Breaking into the midst of the Lent/Easter/Pentecost cycle (which is tied to the phases of the moon well as the seasons of the sun) is the feast of unexpected news, the revelations of the 
Annunciation, on March 25, just after the vernal equinox.

We celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit, the fulfillment of baptismal promise, and the growing body of Christ’s faithful people, through summer and into fall. 

 
The summer solstice comes just around the feast of our patron, Saint Alban, and just before the feast of the Nativity of St John, the Baptist on June 24 (six months from Christmas). 

Around the time of the quarter day at the beginning of August we celebrate The Transfiguration (and Picnic Sunday). 

As the autumnal equinox indicates a change of season toward the end of September, so do the feasts of St Michael and All Angels and St Francis of Assisi  (with the Blessing of the Animals).

St John said of our Lord, ‘he must increase, I must decrease’ - and now indeed the days slowly shorten, imperceptibly at first, until the season’s quickening accelerates into autumn, harvest, and the eve of All Saints’ appears on the horizon of our year. At All Saints, we remember and thank God for the saints of the past, celebrate with those present with us today, and pray for those who will join the Kingdom in the future.


All Saints' Day and the Commemoration of All Faithful Departed (in Mexico, el Día de los Muertos), November 1st and 2nd, falling at the quarter day, provide an opportunity to offer thanks for what we have received from what has come before and give us a chance to pray for what is to come.

All things come of thee, and of thine own have we given thee— words of David, how appropriate they sound, in the season of thanksgiving, as we celebrate the in-gathering of pledges and the offering of our own blessings back to the source of all blessings, God who creates, redeems, and sustains.


The Sundays just before Advent are a season of anticipation – they focus on the Kingdom of Christ. This culminates on the last Sunday of the church year, in the feast of Christ the King.
  

Look back with gratitude, 

Look forward with anticipation, 
In all things give thanks
– Christine Sine

What season of the year, you may wish to ask yourself, fits your spirit? Where do you find resonance with your own spirituality? What is the season that speaks to your heart? 


Are you in a season of anticipation – of the Advent of Christ? Does the Incarnation fill your heart with quiet longing, with loud rejoicing, with the sureness of peace, the future of hope, the promise of love, represented by Christmas? Have you welcomed the new into the kingdom of your heart, giving due obeisance, like the three kings of Epiphany, to the presence of the true ruler of the universe – however humbly he appears now to our eyes? Are you embarked upon a journey of preparation – the long desert trek of Lent? Are you in Easter, full of the reality of the risen life in Christ? Are you in the middle of summer days, in the long green season of Pentecost, watching things grow and helping them along, anticipating the fullness of fall’s harvest celebrations? Are you celebrating the kingdom season, the end of days after Pentecost, and the in-breaking (already-but-not-yet) reign of God?

All these seasons are filled with possibilities; meanings that may speak to you each in their turn.


You are invited into relationship with God, in each season of the year, and in each chamber of your heart.


You are beckoned by God, through Christ, into relationship with the eternal Word and holy Spirit, who together with the Father, the source of all Being, are the One true home, the One true light, the One true timeless reality that lies beneath and beyond all our days.


Come into celebration – come in quiet or in laughter, in sorrow or in delight; come to Christ at harvest and planting, breathe in the Spirit in summer’s air and winter’s, and walk with God in every season of your life. 


Come with us on the journey together. We are one family – the household of God. And you are always welcome under His roof.


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sources


Marcus Losack, “Celtic Spirituality and the Pre-Christian Tradition”, Lecture in the Chapel of the Ascension, Markree Castle, Co. Sligo, May 22, 2007.


Herbert O'Driscoll, Prayer Among Friends (Toronto: Path Books, 2008).


Hugh Stevenson, "The Secularization of the Calendar", St. Patrick's Grapevine, Newsletter of St. Patrick's Episcopal Church, Kenwood, Calif., July/August 2010.


David Marshall.


Tom Cashman.


Nora Chadwick, The Celts.


Caitlin Matthews, The Celtic Book of Days.


Christine Sine, "Give Thanks with a Grateful Heart", http://msainfo.us/2012/07/31/grateful-heart/. Accessed October 1, 2012.


Adapted from "
the year's turning", an article for the Gospel Grapevine, parish newsletter of St. Alban's Episcopal Church, Edmonds, Wash., November 2010.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Celtic Spirituality reading list

Some possible choices for background reading.

Thomas Cahill, How the Irish Saved Civilization: The Untold Story of Ireland's Heroic Role from the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Medieval Europe (Doubleday, 1995)

A very good read – gives you a good idea of early Christian Irish culture.

Edward C. Sellner, The Wisdom of the Celtic Saints (Bog Walk Press, 2006)

Its introduction (about forty pages) is the best way of getting aboard Celtic Christianity in a very short time.

Esther de Waal, The Celtic Way of Prayer: The Recovery of the Religious Imagination (Doubleday, 1997)

This book takes you into the spirituality of the Celtic centuries.

Daniel Taylor, In Search of Sacred Places: Looking for Wisdom on Celtic Holy Islands (Bog Walk Press, 2005)

A humorous and self-deprecating introduction to the way of pilgrimage.

Oliver Davies, ed., Celtic Spirituality (Paulist Press, 1995)

Compendium of the classic sources of early Celtic Christian spirituality.

David Adam, The Rhythm of Life: Celtic Daily Prayer (SPCK, 2007)

Prayer is what it is all about.


Comments by Herbert O’Driscoll, Marcus Losack, and John Leech. 2011 10/26

For St Andrew's, Tacoma, celtic fair 30 october 2011.

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Monday, November 1, 2010

the year's turning

You know when it’s fall. You know when it’s winter, and springtime, and summer, and fall again. That is the Earth's natural year, the round of the seasons. It follows the sun, as our planet’s course through the heavens brings us closer and then takes us farther away from that stellar source of light.

Seasons vary from place to place, from time to time: we know them not by clock or calendar but by the rhythms of life and light. There are measurements of course: solstice and equinox, and halfway between these, the quarter days. These have been codified by calendars, to give us a handle on what is happening to us as days grow shorter or lengthen.

The ancient Celtic calendar included not only the winter and summer solstices and the spring and fall equinoxes but also the days halfway between them, which they called the quarter days. Imbolc, the festival of light, comes at the first of February. Beltaine, associated with fire, is May Day. Lughnasa, feast of the air and wind, is August 1st, and last – and first – quarter day is Samhain, associated with the element of earth. Last, and first: because Samhain, which occurs over All Saints’ Eve and the first of November, marks the end and the beginning of the Celtic year.

The year, in this imaging, begins in darkness, when the seed in the ground, planted earlier, begins to take root and grow. Something is ended; something new has begun. It is like our understanding of death and resurrection. It is a harvest time for past things, looking back, and, looking forward, to what is already but not yet come into our world, a time of hidden new life.

The Christian year, and the Church calendar, reflects the seasonal rhythms of the natural cycle of the solar year – and it shows us that in its own cycle of feasts and fasts. All Saints Day and the feast of All Faithful Departed (in Mexico, el Dia de los Muertos), November 1st and 2nd, give us a chance to give thanks for what we have received, from what – and who – have come before. They give us a chance to pray for what is to come.

All things come of thee, and of thine own have we given thee— words of David, how appropriate now, as we celebrate the ingathering of pledges and the offering of our own blessings back to the source of all blessings, God who creates, redeems, and sustains.

At the beginning of the liturgical year, four weeks before Christmas, we move into Advent, the season of preparation. Just past the winter solstice comes the feast of the Nativity of Our Lord. We celebrate light and life and the incarnation of the holy one of God. The celebration continues through the twelve days of Christmas season, and the feast of Epiphany, into January’s Epiphany Sundays, including the Baptism of Our Lord.

Things begin to change when we celebrate Candlemas (Candelaria in Mexico). It’s a perfect reason for another party, as we remember the Presentation of our Lord in the Temple, completing the cycle of the birth of our King. In some traditional cultures, the winner of the prize baked into the Epiphany cake brings treats for all to share on this day (let’s see what happens here).

There is a shift now, remembering the water of Baptism and the coming themes of death and resurrection, as we prepare through Lenten discipline for the great events of Holy Week, from Palm Sunday through to Holy Thursday, Good Friday, Easter Eve and Day. Fifty great days later – eight days after the Ascension – is the feast of Pentecost.

Breaking into the midst of the Lent/Easter/Pentecost cycle is the feast of unexpected news, the revelations of the Annunciation, on March 25, just after the vernal equinox.

We celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit, the fulfillment of baptismal promise, and the growing body of Christ’s faithful people, through summer and into fall. The summer solstice comes just around the feast of our patron, Saint Alban, and just before the feast of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist on June 24 (six months from Christmas).

St John said, ‘he must increase, I must decrease’ - and now indeed the days slowly shorten, imperceptibly at first, until the season’s quickening accelerates into autumn, harvest, and the eve of All Saints’ appears once more on the horizon of our year.

What season of the year, you may wish to ask yourself, fits your spirit? Where do you find resonance with your own spirituality? Are you in a season of anticipation – of the Advent (the coming) of Christ our King, of preparation – the long desert trek of Lent?

Does the Incarnation fill your heart with quiet longing, with loud rejoicing, with the sureness of peace, the future of hope, the promise of love, represented by Christmas?

Have you welcomed the new into the kingdom of your heart, giving due obeisance, like the three kings of Epiphany, to the presence of the true ruler of the universe – however humbly he appears now to our eyes?

Are you in the middle of summer days, in the long green season of Pentecost, watching things grow and helping them along, anticipating the fullness of fall’s harvest celebrations?

Are you in Easter, full of the reality of the risen life in Christ?

All these things are possible to you – and may come in their turn.

You are invited into relationship with God, in each season of the year, and in each chamber of your heart.

You are beckoned by God, through Christ, into relationship with the eternal Word and holy Spirit, who together with the Father, the source of all Being, are the One true home, the One true light, the One true timeless reality that lies beneath and beyond all our days.

Come into celebration – come in quiet or in laughter, in sorrow or in delight; come to Christ at harvest and planting, breathe in the Spirit in summer’s air and winter’s, and walk with God in every season of your life. Come with us on the journey together. We are one family – the household of God. And you are always welcome under His roof.


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sources

Marcus Losack, “Celtic Spirituality and the Pre-Christian Tradition”, Lecture in the Chapel of the Ascension, Markree Castle, Co. Sligo, May 22, 2007.

Herbert O'Driscoll, Prayer Among Friends.

Hugh Stevenson, "The Secularization of the Calendar", St. Patrick's Grapevine, Newsletter of St. Patrick's Episcopal Church, Kenwood, Calif., July/August 2010.

David Marshall.

Tom Cashman.

Nora Chadwick, The Celts.

Caitlin Matthews, The Celtic Book of Days.



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For the Gospel Grapevine, parish newsletter of St Alban's Episcopal Church, Edmonds WA

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Saturday, October 23, 2010

A Hundred Thousand Welcomes: a celebration of Celtic spirit, story and song



A Hundred Thousand Welcomes

(that’s céad míle fáilte in the Irish)

Would you like to hear a good story?

Good stories are part of a ceilidh – an evening’s gathering to share stories and tales, poems and ballads, songs and music, among your friends and neighbors. It’s a Celtic hootenanny in other words. It’s a spontaneous celebration including everybody’s gifts.

Listen to the music, join in the laughter, sing along with the songs. Tell your own story. Come along to the ceilidh – at St Alban’s on Friday evening October 22nd, we’ll be gathering in our parish hall around 7 o’clock. If you’d like to bring some dessert to share please bring that as well. And let your friends know: all are welcome at St Alban’s church.

Saturday, October 23rd, we’ll continue the celebration of Celtic spirit, story and song, in a day’s teaching and music-making with Tom Cashman, Carla Pryne, and Tara Ward. We’ll begin at 9:30 – have a cup of tea, or a mug of coffee. Brett’s Catering will provide lunch. We’ll close with a Celtic Eucharist.

Carla Pryne is rector of the church of the Holy Spirit on Vashon Island; she is a co-founder of Earth Ministry. Tom Cashman teaches spiritual formation and Celtic spirituality in the Mars Hill Graduate School. Tom and Carla led a pilgrimage to Celtic Ireland and Scotland last year.

Singer-songwriter Tara Ward is worship architect for the Church of the Beloved (http://belovedschurch.org/hope/)

It’s all part of “A Hundred Thousand Welcomes” – our harvest-time celebration of the bountiful goodness of God.

Register for $30/early-bird price is $25 before October 14th. Call the church office at 425-778-0371 or email stalbansedmonds@gmail.com or register online at http://ceidmilefailte.eventbrite.com – we’ll be glad to see you!



St. Alban's Episcopal Church, 21405 82nd Place West, Edmonds, Washington 98026

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Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Celtic Christian Spirituality reading list

With an Eagle's Eye: A Seven-Day Sojourn in Celtic Spirituality by John Miriam Jones, S.C. (Ave Maria Press, July 1998)

The Music of What Happens: Celtic Spirituality - A View from the Inside by John J. Ó Ríordáin CSsR (Dublin: Columba, September 1996; Saint Mary's Press, December 1996)

How the Irish Saved Civilization: The Untold Story of Ireland's Heroic Role from the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Medieval Europe by Thomas Cahill (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, February 1995)

The Wisdom of the Celtic Saints by Edward C. Sellner (Notre Dame: Ave Maria Press, 1993; revised and expanded edition, Bog Walk Press, February 2006)

The Celtic Way of Prayer: The Recovery of the Religious Imagination by Esther de Waal (Doubleday, August 1997)

Every Earthly Blessing: Rediscovering the Celtic Tradition by Esther De Waal (Morehouse, July 1999)

The Celtic Vision: Prayers, Blessings, Songs, and Invocations from the Gaelic Tradition edited by Esther De Waal (Saint Bede's, July 1990; revised edition, Liguori/Triumph, November 2001)

Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom by John O'Donohue (Cliff Street Books/HarperCollins, October 1997)

Celtic Inheritance by Peter Berresford Elis (London: Constable, 1985; New York: Dorset, 1992)

Soulfaring: Celtic Pilgrimage Then and Now by Cintra Pemberton, O.S.H. (Morehouse, October 1999)

In Search of Sacred Places: Looking for Wisdom on Celtic Holy Islands by Daniel Taylor (Bog Walk Press, 2005)

Celtic Threads: Exploring the Wisdom of Our Heritage by Padraigín Clancy (Dublin: Veritas, 1999)

Celtic Christian Spirituality: An Anthology of Medieval and Modern Sources edited by Oliver Davies and Fiona Bowie (SPCK & Continuum, 1995)

Celtic Spirituality edited and translated and introduced by Oliver Davies ; with the collaboration of Thomas O'Loughlin (Paulist Press, 1995)

A Doorway in Time: Memoir of a Celtic Spiritual Journey by Herbert O'Driscoll (Harper & Row, San Francisco, 1985)

Man of Aran by Pat Mullen (E. P. Dutton, 1935; M.I.T. Press, 1970)

George MacLeod: Founder of the Iona Community by Ronald Ferguson (London: Collins, 1990; Glasgow: Wild Goose, April 2001)

Glendalough: A Celtic Pilgrimage by Michael Rodgers and Marcus Losack (Morehouse, February 1997)

Listening for the Heartbeat of God: A Celtic Spirituality by J. Philip Newell (Paulist Press, January 1997)

JRL+

Monday, September 13, 2010

A CELTIC BIBLIOGRAPHY

A CELTIC BIBLIOGRAPHY
by Tom Cashman

Adam, David Flame In My Heart: St. Aidan For Today SPCK London 1997
David Adam is Warden of the Lindisfarne Community. He writes poetically and non-academically about the Celtic apostle Aidan, who brought Christianity to the Picts of Northern Scotland, and in whose footsteps Adam today follows.

Allchin, A. M Praise Above All: Discovering the Welsh Tradition
University of Wales Press 1991 A look at the consistent emphasis on the praise of God in the Celtic tradition, including its legends, songs, poetry, hymns, from earliest times to the present.

Eriugena, John Scotus The Voice Of The Eagle (Homily On The Prologue To The
Gospel of John) Translated by Christopher Bamford Lindisfarne Books, Great Barrington, MA 2000 Eriugena is the second great theologian of the Celtic Christian world. The Gospel of John with its imagery and myticism was a primary resource for them. This commentary is primary material for understanding the Celtic Christian perspective and its Johannine roots.

Bradley, Ian The Celtic Way University Press, Cambridge 1993
Still the best basic overview of Celtic Christianity; often used as the text for initial classes. Excellent chapters on Pelagius & Augustine, and on the future of this movement of the Spirit

______________ Celtic Christian Communities: Colonies of Heaven
Northstone Publishing Kelowna, BC 2000 This recent book by Bradley takes us into practical application of the world view and spiritual practice of the Celtic Christian church. This is a “must read” for any student of the future, emerging church.

Bitel, Lisa M. Isle of the Saints: Monastic Settlement and Christian Community in Early Ireland Cornell University Press 1990 Drawn from accounts of saints lives written between 800 and 1200, Bitel gives us a vivid look at monastic life and the social networks of the medieval Irish monks.

Carmichael, Alexander Carmina Gaedelica: Hymns and Incantations Lindisfarne Press 1995 First and only English translation and compilation of the five volumes of oral history collected in the original Gaelic by Carmichael (1832-1912)
A must for any Celtic library.

Chadwick, Nora The Celts Penguin 1971 The history of Celtic culture in Britain from its origins to its transformation under the Romans and the Saxons by one of the foremost Celtic scholars of the 20th century. Excellent chapter on Celtic Christianity.

Clancy, Padraigin Celtic Threads: Exploring the Wisdom of Our Heritage Veritas Publications (Dublin) 1999 Ms. Clancy is an Irish folklorist who has gathered contributions from a wide range of authors. Articles include those from the Benedictine perspective (Sean O Duinn), the Green Party (Nuala Ahern), mystical music (Noirin Ni Riain), a feminist theologian (Mary Condren), a philosopher/story teller (John Moriarty) and Michael Rodgers of the Glendalough Retreat Centre. This is an intriguing collection of essays for the Celtic seeker.


Cronin, Deborah K. Holy Ground Upper Room Books 1999
A beautifully written account of her personal journey into Celtic Christian Spirituality, written by an ordained Methodist superintendent and educator. Dr. Cronin weaves humor and personal insights into this jewel of a book.


Davies, Oliver and Bowie, Fiona Celtic Christian Spirituality: An Anthology of Medieval and Modern Sources. SPCK London 1995 An authoritative and scholarly collection; a wide range of both ancient and modern writings on the Celtic tradition, some appearing in English for the first time. There is a strong Welsh poetry
and praise prayer content.

Davies, Oliver Celtic Spirituality (Classics of Western Spirituality Series) Paulist Press 1999 This is the most definitive collection of source documents available in English. It includes both letters from the hand of Patrick, works from Columba and Columbanus, and hagiographies of Brigit and David, among others. This is a prime reference for any serious student of the Celtic Christian tradition.

DeWaal, Esther Every Earthly Blessing; Celebrating a Spirituality of Creation Servant Publications 1991 One of the best introductions of Celtic Spirituality, containing splendid examples from Celtic poetry and other writings.

Eriugena, John Scotus The Voice of the Eagle Lindisfarne Press 1990
Translation and introduction is by Christopher Bamford. John the Scot is the 9th century Celtic scholar who followed in the footsteps of Pelagius to anchor the theological tradition of the Celtic church. Here he reflects on the Prologue of the Gospel of John, and often speaks directly to issues of our 21st century church.

Evans, Robert F. Pelagius: Inquiries and Reappraisals Seabury Press 1968
One of the earliest of a number of contemporary theologians re-evaluating the role of Pelagius in his era as proponent of the Celtic view on sin and grace. Many are now concluding that Pelagius was the orthodox, mainstream thinker of his time and that his antagonists were the radicals. This is an excellent examination of that critique.

Ellis, Peter Berresford Ellis Celtic Women Eerdmans 1995 One of the best of Ellis’ books on women in the Celtic culture, including church leaders such as Brigit and Hilda. Intriguing insights into the life style, structure and culture of monastic communities.

Finney, John Recovering the Past; Celtic and Roman Mission Darton Longman & Todd 1996 Finney compares and contrasts the Celtic and Roman mission approach of the 6-7th centuries and shows how we can learn from them today. The differences in evangelism are particularly worth considering. Hunter follows him.

Hunter, George G. The Celtic Way of Evangelism Abingdon Press 2000
Dr. Hunter contrasts the evangelistic approach of the Celtic monks with the approach of the Church today. The acculturation method of those monks has huge implications for evangelism today and the future of the Church in a time of major transition.

Joyce, Timothy OSB Celtic Christianity: A Sacred Tradition, A Vision of Hope
Orbis 1998 Joyce is a Benedictine priest and monk, and an American Irish Catholic who writes the first significant book from this perspective. This book also covers the period from the 11th century through contemporary attempts at Celtic reclamation.

Joyce, Timothy OSB Celtic Quest; A Healing Journey for Irish Catholics
Orbis 2000 Fr. Joyce brings us another important book exploring many factors in the loss of our Celtic Christian heritage. The Irish Catholic tradition is shown as particularly impacted, and this book becomes both conduit and resource for the healing process.

Lehane, Brendan The Quest of Three Abbotts Lindisfarne Press Hudson NY 1998 This is a comprehensive look at the lives (and journeys) of three great monastic leaders, Brendan (to American), Columba (to Iona), and Columbanus (to Christianize Europe). He weaves their lives into the emergence of the Celtic Church.

Mackey, James P. An Introduction to Celtic Christianity Biddles Ltd Surrey 1995 Fourteen essays on aspects of Celtic spirituality including scripture commentary, missionary activity, literature and art. Well annotated. Some source documents.

Matthew, John Drinking From The Sacred Well HarperCollins 1998
The author is well known for his prolific pre-Christian heroic and Arthurian works. Here he produces a series of remarkably lucid, charming cameos of the lives of Celtic saints, including some not well known, such as Senan, Berach and Mochuda.

Mitton, Michael The Soul of Celtic Spirituality Twenty Third Publications 1996
Mitton uses the stories of the Celtic saints to illustrate his thesis that the ancient Celtic Church has much to say to us today. He is a co-founder of St. Aidan Trust. Originally published in the UK as Restoring the Woven Cord Darton Longman & Todd.

Moorehouse, Geoffrey Sun Dancing Phoenix London 1997
The author is a novelist and commentator who constructs an intriguing novelette of the monastic life on Skellig Michael 6th – 13th Century. The second half of the book provides a more scholarly presentation of the historical evidence that supports his suppositions and conclusions.

Newell, J. Philip Listening for the Heartbeat of God Paulist Press 1997
Newell develops the Johannine theme of experiential (Celtic) Christianity contrasting it with the predominant intellectual Petrine (Roman) tradition. Most important, he shows how both are needed for balance. Also explores the Scottish Presbyterianism.

_______________ One Foot in Eden; A Celtic View of the Stages of Life
Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge 1998 This series of reflections on birth to death and beyond helps to understand in a fundamental way what our roles are at each stage of our lives. Must read!

_______________ The Book of Creation; An Introduction to Celtic Spirituality
Paulist Press 1999 This series of meditations on the seven days of creation explores aspects of God infused in the Celtic Christian ethos. Seldom does our tradition consider the wildness, the fecundity, and the creatureliness of God. But Newell does in a manner that enchants and inspires and enlarges our awareness of God in creation. Must read!

_______________ Echo of the Soul: The Sacredness of the Human Body
Canterbury Press 2000 Starting from Genesis 1 where humanity is made in the image of God, Newell explores the different manifestations that may have from seven perspectives: the mystery of self, the wisdom of self, the strength of self, the beauty of self, the creativity of self, the eternity of self, and the presence of self. Must read!

_______________ Christ of the Celts: The Healing of Creation
Jossey-Bass 2008 This book will challenge the theology of many Christians. Newell takes on the virgin birth, original sin, redemption, and a good part of the legacy of the Roman church. Must read!

O’Donoghue, Noel Dermot The Mountain Behind The Mountain
T&T Clark Ltd. Edinburgh 1993 The author grew up in SW Ireland and looks through the lens of his place and time at Celtic Creation Spirituality. He examines the writings of George Macdonald and Teilhard de Chardin as conduits illuminating the essence of Celtic Spirit in our own day.

Pemberton, Cintra OSH Soulfaring: Celtic Pilgrimage Then and Now
Morehouse Publishing 1999 Not only a detailed guide to Celtic sacred places, but
an exploration of the motivation and method of pilgrims and pilgrimage. A unique and
excellent work that will companion you intensely from the first pages.

Pennick, Nigel The Celtic Cross Blandford 1997 The definitive book on Celtic crosses, their evolving forms, symbolism, and typology. Many illustrations and photographs are provided. Various methods of cross interpretation are outlined.

Pullen, Bruce Reed Discovering Celtic Christianity
Twenty-Third Publications 1999 A “Readers Digest” generalist overview of Celtic Christianity with British emphasis by one who was a pilgrim. Despite his economy of words, his summaries are solid and well described. This is a good read for the beginner in Celtic studies.

Roy, James Charles The Road Wet, The Wind Close: Celtic Ireland
Dufour Editions 1987 Roy relates an historical journey as well as a personal one through Irelend. A most marvelous chapter on Skellig Michael begins the book. His photographs and anecdotal detail quickly lock you into this narrative.

Sampson, Fay Visions and Voyages Triangle Books London 1998
The author is a novelist who, caught up by the history of her country and her faith tradition, sets out to research and write a free narrative history of the Celtic Church. The results are very readable and remarkably insightful, but probably not for the academic.

Sheldrake, Philip Living Between Worlds: Place and Journey in Celtic Spirituality Darton, Longman & Todd 1995 The sacredness of place, earth, tuatha, and landscape are thoroughly explored by Sheldrake. He offers the “edge place” concept.

Simpson, Ray Exploring Celtic Spirituality Hodder & Stoughton Ltd 1995
Another founder of St. Aidan Trust, Ray Simpson offers a vision of the future as well as an exploration of our Celtic roots. Like Newell, he sees the Gospel of John as representative of the Celtic & Eastern Churches, balancing the Petrine & Pauline legs of the Christian tripod.

Sellner, Ed Wisdom of the Celtic Saints Ave Maria Press 1993
This is an excellent collection of stories and legends of various saints, including some of the more obscure. Particularly useful is the introduction identifying hallmarks of the Celtic Christian worldview. Lacks annotation.

____________ The Celtic Soul Friend Ave Maria Press Notre Dame IN 2002 Tracking the anamchara concept of the Celtic Christians, Dr. Sellner explores the spiritual practice of the soul-friend relationship in the Celtic church. He also follows it as an overall icon of the value of relationship in the Celtic Christian culture.

Snyder, Graydon F. Irish Jesus, Roman Jesus; The Formation of Early Irish Christianity Trinity Press International Harrisburg PA 2002 What would Christianity look like if the Jesus tradition had been first planted in a tradition other than the Roman. Snyder speculates on the results through an Irish lens, using everything from Paul’s letters to the Galatians to Irish stone crosses and architecture as data.

Toulson, Shirley The Celtic Year: A Celebration of Celtic Christian Festivals
Element 1993 A delightful compendium of saints from all the Celtic countries along with the significant Celtic festivals, month by month. A pilgrimage guide with maps is included.

Tom Cashman Corporate Coaching & Consulting September, 2009


%^)

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Celtic Christian Spirituality reading list

Celtic Christian Spirituality reading list.

(The list below incorporates suggestions from Herbert O'Driscoll, Marcus Losack, Stephen Ott, and Katherine Doyle, S.M.
It is neither a required reading list nor is it exhaustive; it is intended to offer some possible choices for background reading.)


Spirituality – pilgrimage & exploration

Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom by John O'Donohue (HarperCollins, October 1997)

Celtic Threads: Exploring the Wisdom of Our Heritage by Padraigín Clancy (Dublin: Veritas, 1999)

The Celtic Way of Prayer: The Recovery of the Religious Imagination by Esther de Waal (Doubleday, 1997)

Every Earthly Blessing: Rediscovering the Celtic Tradition by Esther De Waal (Morehouse, 1999)

Glendalough: A Celtic Pilgrimage by Michael Rodgers and Marcus Losack (Morehouse, 1997)

In Search of Sacred Places: Looking for Wisdom on Celtic Holy Islands by Daniel Taylor (Bog Walk Press, 2005)

Listening for the Heartbeat of God: A Celtic Spirituality by J. Philip Newell (Paulist Press, 1997)

Living Between Worlds: Place and Journey in Celtic Spirituality by Philip Sheldrake (London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 1995)

The Music of What Happens: Celtic Spirituality - A View from the Inside by John J. Ó Ríordáin C.Ss.R. (Dublin: Columba, 1996; US: Saint Mary's Press, 1996)

Soulfaring: Celtic Pilgrimage Then and Now by Cintra Pemberton, O.S.H. (Morehouse, 1999)

The Wisdom of the Celtic Saints by Edward C. Sellner (Bog Walk Press, 2006)

With an Eagle's Eye: A Seven-Day Sojourn in Celtic Spirituality by John Miriam Jones, S.C. (Ave Maria Press, 1998)


Spirituality – anthology & compilation

Celtic Christian Spirituality: An Anthology of Medieval and Modern Sources edited by Oliver Davies and Fiona Bowie (SPCK & Continuum, 1995)

Celtic Spirituality edited and translated and introduced by Oliver Davies; with the collaboration of Thomas O'Loughlin (Paulist Press, 1995)

The Celtic Vision: Prayers, Blessings, Songs, and Invocations from the Gaelic Tradition edited by Esther De Waal (Liguori/Triumph, 2001)
Selections from Alexander Carmichael, Carmina Gadelica (Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable, 1900).


History, myth & legend

Celtic Inheritance by Peter Berresford Ellis (London: Constable, 1985; New York: Dorset, 1992)

How the Irish Saved Civilization: The Untold Story of Ireland's Heroic Role from the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Medieval Europe by Thomas Cahill (Doubleday, 1995)


Memoir & biography

A Doorway in Time: Memoir of a Celtic Spiritual Journey by Herbert O'Driscoll (Harper & Row, San Francisco, 1985)

George MacLeod: Founder of the Iona Community by Ronald Ferguson (London: Collins, 1990; Glasgow: Wild Goose, April 2001)

Man of Aran by Pat Mullen (E. P. Dutton, 1935; M.I.T. Press, 1970)


Worship resources

A Celtic Primer: The Complete Celtic Worship Resource and Collection compiled by Brendan O’Malley (Morehouse, 2002)

Iona Abbey Worship Book by The Iona Community (Glasgow: Wild Goose, 2001)

Motion Pictures

Man of Aran written, directed and filmed by Robert J. Flaherty (Gainsborough Pictures, 1934)

Waking Ned Devine written and directed by Kirk Jones (Tomboy Films, 1998)


****


Early Irish history:

David Willis McCullough, ed., Wars of the Irish Kings: A Thousand Years of Struggle from the Age of Myth through the Reign of Queen Elizabeth I (Crown, 2000; Three Rivers Press, 2002)

Seumas MacManus et al., The Story of the Irish Race, Revised Edition (Devin-Adair, 1921)


An additional book on Celtic Christian Spirituality, by a collaborator on the Classics of Western Spirituality anthology of Celtic Spirituality (Paulist, 1999) is:

Thomas O'Loughlin, Journeys on the Edges: The Celtic Tradition (Orbis, 2000) in the Traditions of Christian Spirituality Series edited by Philip Sheldrake and co-published by Darton, Longman and Todd.


For fun, a children's book on Columba of Iona:

Jean Fritz, The Man Who Loved Books (G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1981)


Picture books abound, and they include:

Dorothea Lange's Ireland (Roberts Rinehart, 1998) including photographs taken in 1954 and kept in the Oakland Museum of California.

and more typically

The Islands of Ireland, text and photographs by Kenneth McNally (W. W. Norton, 1978)