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Binding: Hardcover ASIN: 1557254699 Manufacturer: Paraclete Press (MA) Average Customer Review: (From 4 total reviews)List Price: Amazon Price: $11.97 (25 new 11 used available) Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours (Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping)
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Editorial ReviewsBook Description: First Fruits of Prayer will bring readers of all denominational backgrounds into the prayer experience of first millennium Christianity through immersion in this fascinating text, a poetic hymn written in the eighth century. This extraordinarily beautiful work, still chanted by Eastern Christians every Lent, weaves together Old and New Testament scriptures with prayers of hope and repentance. It offers ancient ways of seeing Christ that will nevertheless feel new to most readers today. This insightful book offers all readers an opportunity to walk through a classic text from the Christian East in a series of 40 prayerful readings, with accompanying commentary and questions for further reflection. Customer Reviews
This book makes one look at their own shortcomings and sins, but also shines the light of a loving and merciful God as the help and healer of our human spiritual ailments. I really am enjoying reading and being challenged by this book.
Mr. Zxerce seems to be looking at the theology of the book through a Protestant/Reformed lens. No doubt, if this is the case some of what he sees will seem strange, even foreign, to his understanding of the Faith. An example of this is his putting forth of several implicit or explicit “either/or’s.” But from an Orthodox perspective these are seen more as “both/and’s.” Salvation is found through “a Savior to be embraced” and “an example to be followed.” One aspect of soteriology doesn’t preclude or negate the other. Of course, one must “embrace” the Saviour before one can follow Him, but it the Orthodox mind the two are not radically separate. Salvation is a gift of God’s grace, without a doubt. But that doesn’t eliminate the need to live a Christ-like life. To put it in Western terms, righteousness is both “imputed” and “infused.” It’s not one or the other. The ransom/redemption texts of Scripture that Mr. Zxerce quotes will fit just as well into the Orthodox paradigm of salvation as rescue, as they do into the Western understanding of the “substitutionary atonement,” which of course the Orthodox believe, albeit not in the same way. Sin and death are definitely real enemies–I’m not sure how one could come away with any other idea after reading the Canon of St. Andrew. The difference between Orthodoxy and Protestant Christianity in this regard is the manner in which the two sides see those enemies being defeated. It is important to remember that the Western “substitutionary atonement” model of the death of Christ isn’t all there is. For centuries before that model became the dominant one in the Western Church, the Eastern Fathers (and many Western ones as well) held to the view that the Orthodox hold today. For further reading on this I’d recommend Mathewes-Green’s earlier book THE ILLUMINED HEART and Matthew Gallatin’s THIRSTING FOR GOD. These two books also contain references that point the way to deeper, more scholarly works on the subject. Similar Products
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Tags: devotionals, frederica mathewes-green, orthodoxy, prayerbooks, spiritual healing

(From 4 total reviews)