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No Christian writer, perhaps no writer at all, has ever been as eloquent as Saint Augustine. Few have been as philosophically and theologically profound, or as passionately in love with God. No passages in Augustine's writings are more eloquent than his prayers, or more profound than his prayers, or more saintly, than his prayers for prayer is the very life blood of sanctity. What better way could we have to know the heart of a man like St. Augustine than to listen to him pray? By reading his vast writings, we discover something of the saint's enormous genius and theological insight. However,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
No Christian writer, perhaps no writer at all, has ever been as eloquent as Saint Augustine. Few have been as philosophically and theologically profound, or as passionately in love with God. No passages in Augustine's writings are more eloquent than his prayers, or more profound than his prayers, or more saintly, than his prayers for prayer is the very life blood of sanctity. What better way could we have to know the heart of a man like St. Augustine than to listen to him pray? By reading his vast writings, we discover something of the saint's enormous genius and theological insight. However, through his prayers we experience his relationship to God. And yet, few collections of his prayers have ever existed - a problem solved in these pages by Sara McLaughlin, who carefully culled through his writings to find some of the most potent prayers ever composed. This book is powerful. Anyone who prays these prayers from the heart will be changed from the heart.
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Autorenporträt
Sara Park McLaughlin, author of four nonfiction books, taught freshman English at Texas Tech University for thirty-four years. Her book Meeting God in Silence (Tyndale 1993) was later translated into Korean and published in Seoul (Word of Life, 2000). She is a former award-winning newspaper columnist for the Lubbock Avalanche Journal and the Amarillo Globe-News and has published numerous scholarly articles about C. S. Lewis, G. K. Chesterton, and her original theory of humor. Now retired and living in Wisconsin, she is enjoying writing a series entitled "Misunderstanding Catholicism" for her blog: www.medium.com/@sara.mclaughlin.