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by Sidney Goodwin
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This book tells the remarkable story of how a small group of solitary hermits living on Mount Carmel in the Holy Land became one of the most influential religious orders of medieval Christianity. Beginning with the prophetic inspiration of Elijah and the contemplative silence of the desert, the book traces the dramatic journey of the Carmelites as they were forced to leave the Holy Land, migrate to Europe, and reinvent their vocation within the dynamic spiritual world of the Middle Ages.
Drawing on biblical sources, medieval chronicles, theological writings, and modern scholarship, this study reveals how the Carmelites balanced their original call to contemplation with the practical demands of preaching, teaching, and pastoral ministry in growing European cities. Readers encounter the figures who shaped the Order's identity, the development of its Marian devotion and the Brown Scapular, the rise of Carmelite theology within the universities, and the reform movements that preserved the spirit of Mount Carmel through centuries of cultural change.
Written in a rich historical narrative style, the book illuminates the deeper spiritual meaning behind the Carmelite journey. It shows how a tradition rooted in silence and prayer could adapt to new historical realities without losing its contemplative heart. By exploring the Order's medieval foundations, the work also prepares the reader to understand the later flowering of Carmelite mysticism in figures such as Teresa of
Title
From Hermits to Mendicants: The Transformation of the Carmelite Order
Publisher
Colloquium
Published
March 2026
Weight
200g
Dimensions
14 x 21.6 x 0.9 cm
ISBN
9798233427732
ISBN-10
823342773X
Eden Code
7431713
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£13.43
Available - Usually dispatched within 3 days
Available - Usually dispatched within 3 days
