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"Lost" Dialogue of Gregory the Great

The Life of St. Scholastica

"Lost" Dialogue of Gregory the Great

The Life of St. Scholastica

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Paperback / softback

£15.99

Publisher: Liturgical Press
ISBN: 9798400800535
Number of Pages: 132
Published: 01/08/2024
Width: 12.7 cm
Height: 20.3 cm
Imagine the enduring legacy and ancient hagiographical method used to recover the missing life and voice of St. Scholastica of Nursia.
 
In The "Lost" Dialogue of Gregory the Great, Carmel Posa, SGS, applies a “disciplined imagination” and the ancient hagiographical method to recover the missing life and voice of St. Scholastica of Nursia. Drawing on a wide range of scholarship, including Gregory the Great’s four famous dialogues, biblical models, and the Rule of Benedict, Posa follows a technique similarly used by Saint Gregory himself to create an engaging and credible account of Scholastica’s life.
 
In The "Lost" Dialogue of Gregory the Great, Posa’s use of the hagiographical method as a “disciplined imagination” serves as a tool for the repositioning of women’s lives in history. By presenting a “lost life” of Scholastica into the hagiographic record of Christianity, she gifts the Church for today with the story of a beloved saint that will not only inspire readers but encourage them to ponder more searchingly the sources of the wisdom contained in Benedict’s remarkable Rule. Carmel’s careful methodology also offers readers an image of Scholastica that has a spiritual standing apart from her famous and holy brother. She retrieves the enduring legacy of Scholastica from the margins and places her into the center of monastic history, in particular and church history, in general. Oblates, Benedictines, and those interested in monastic spirituality will also be challenged to reconsider those women whose voices have been erased, devalued, or ignored over the centuries and inspired to “listen carefully” to the whispered words and wisdom of women as we mark our journey together into a future full of hope, with Christ and his Gospel for our guide.
Contents
Foreword   xi
Introduction   1
Prologue   23
     Chapter 1
The Birth of Scholastica and Benedict   27
     Chapter 2
Scholastica and Sophia   30
     Chapter 3
The First Dream of Scholastica and the Prophecy of Sophia   38
     Chapter 4
Mission to the Village of Nursia   42
     Chapter 5
The Miracle of Bread 44
     Chapter 6
Benedict’s Departure from Rome and the Death of Euproprius   49 
      Chapter 7
Scholastica’s Way of Life in Nursia   51
     Chapter 8
Story of the Young Man, Justus   58
     Chapter 9
Scholastica Departs Nursia   62
     Chapter 10
The Wounded Goth   64
     Chapter 11
Scholastica Visits Her Brother Benedict   71
     Chapter 12
Scholastica Allays the Fears of a Village   79
     Chapter 13
Scholastica Pleads for the Life of Prisoners   83
     Chapter 14
Establishing a Home in Cassino   88
     Chapter 15
Benedict’s Troubles and His Move to Monte Cassino   90
     Chapter 16
The Meetings of Scholastica and Benedict at Monte Cassino   92
     Chapter 17
A Lesson in Obedience   93 
     Chapter 18
The Final Meeting—Holy Conversation   97
     Chapter 19
Death of Scholastica   100
     Chapter 20
Burial of Scholastica and Benedict  103
Postscript   105
Acknowledgments   107
Bibliography   109

Carmel Posa, SGS, Michael Casey, OCSO

Carmel Posa, SGS, is a member of the Good Samaritan Sisters of the Order of St. Benedict. She held the position of senior lecturer at Notre Dame University, Australia from 1999—2012 and was the executive director of the New Norcia Institute for Benedictine Studies at New Norcia, Western Australia, from 2012—2017. She lectures in the department of Christian thought and history at Yarra Theological Union, a member college of the University of Divinity, Melbourne and teaches monastic studies at St. John’s School of Theology and Seminary, Collegeville, Minnesota. Carmel is co-editor of the journal, Tjurunga: An Australasian Benedictine Review, and editor of A Not-So-Unexciting Life: Essays on Benedictine History and Spirituality in Honor of Michael Casey, OCSO, published by Liturgical Press.