Basket

Your basket is empty

View BasketCheckout >>
We accept Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, Solo, American Express, Visa Electron and Visa Delta or you can pay with Google Checkout or PayPal.
Verisign - click to verify McAfee Secure

To pay by phone call
(UK) 0800 612 2186

 
Add to Wishlist
 

What is a wishlist?

Save on Delivery

Free 1st class delivery when you spend £25
 

Need Help?

Find answers to frequently asked questions in our Help and Information.
 
 
Freephone (UK):
0800 612 2186
Outside the UK:
+44 (0)1244 389 345
 

Satisfaction Guarantee

Not happy with any item, return it within 30 days for a full refund.
 

See our returns policy for more Information.

 

On Prayer

by Archimandrite Sofronii

Availability:
Free Delivery: when you spend £25

Format: paperback

RRP £8.99
Price £8.54
Buy More, Save More
10+20+
£8.09£7.64

 

Buy Together

Buy On Prayer with Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference for just £18.03 saving you £0.95

On Prayer & Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference
£18.03 saving £0.95

Return to Top

About This paperback

This collection of articles on prayer and the spiritual life, together with some of the author's own prayers, is a moving testimony to the relevance of Christ, who, for Archimandrite Sophrony, is "all, and in all, the beginning and the ending" of all things (cf. Colossians 3:11; Revelation 1:8).
Archimandrite Sophrony was born in Russia on September 22, 1896. He trained as an artist at the Moscow School of Fine Art. After the October Revolution he settled in France, where he continued to work as an artist and exhibited in the Paris salons. For a brief period he read theology at the St Sergius Institute but in the autumn of 1925 left to become a monk at the Monastery of St Panteleimon on Mount Athos in northern Greece.
In 1930 he was ordained deacon by Bishop Nikolai Velimirovich. About this time he met Staretz Silouan, who became his spiritual guide. After the Staretz' death in 1938, Fr Sophrony spent seven years living as a hermit in the "desert" of Athos, first at Karoulia, then in a cave near St Paul's Monastery. He became a priest in 1941 and soon after was elected spiritual confessor for several of the monastic communities on the Athonite peninsula.
On returning to France in 1947 he edited and published the writings Silouan had entrusted to him, adding an introduction. Because of serious illness he was unable to return to the Holy Mountain. In the spring of 1959, helped by friends, he moved to England with a small group of men and women. For many years he received people from all walks of life for spiritual direction. In his latter years he was particularly attentive to those afflicted with cancer. Archimandrite Sophrony died on July 11, 1993 at Tolleshunt Knights, in the community which he had founded and inspired till the end of his days. His life is marked by the tragic events of this century but more profoundly so by his meeting with Staretz Silouan, whom he lived to see canonized.

Return to Top

Book Details

Author / ArtistArchimandrite Sofronii
Book Formatpaperback
PublisherSt Vladimirs Seminary Press
Date Published1999-06-30
Weight300g
Number of Pages208
Thickness19 mm
Height234 mm
Width156 mm
ISBN9780881411942
ISBN-100881411949
Product ID19289

Return to Top

Category

Christian Books > Christian Life Issues > Teaching on Prayer


Return to Top

Be the first to review On Prayer

If you already own this, why not review it and help others trying to decide?
Click here to review On Prayer


Return to Top

Bookmark This Page

Facebook Diggit Stumble Upon Del.ico.us Reddit
What are these?

 
McAfee Secure Verisign - click to verify HitWise Top 10 Website
We Accept: MasterCard, Maestro, Visa, Visa Electron, Visa Delta, Solo & American Express. You can also pay by PayPal or Google Checkout.

Eden Interactive Ltd, Evans Estate, Minerva Avenue,
Chester, CH1 4QL, United Kingdom
International Phone: +44 (0)1244 389345

0800 6122 186
 

Your Feedback

 

We have redesigned our website to make it easier and more enjoyable for you to use. We would love to know what you think of the changes we have made, good or bad...