THE IMITATION OF CHRIST
THOMAS À KEMPIS
Publisher: Available in Kindle E-Book:
ISBN-13: 978-1-78379-038-8
The Imitation of Christ is a cherished treasure of the Christian world and is the most widely read devotional work next to the Bible. Except the Bible no book has been translated into more languages than the Imitation of Christ. It was first composed in Latin ca.1418-1427. This is a handbook for spiritual life. The text is divided into four books, which provide detailed spiritual instructions: “Helpful Counsels of the Spiritual Life”, “Directives for the Interior Life”, “On Interior Consolation” and “On the Blessed Sacrament”. The approach taken in the Imitation is characterized by its emphasis on the interior life and withdrawal from the world. The book places a high level of emphasis on the devotion to the Eucharist as key element of spiritual life.
This great book was written by a Roman Catholic monk. “Written”, perhaps, is not the proper word. It would be more appropriate to say that each letter of the book is marked deep with the heart’s blood of the great soul who had renounced all for his love of Christ. That great soul whose words, living and burning, have cast the sort of spell for the last four hundred years over the hearts of myriads of women and men; whose influence today remains as strong as ever and is destined to endure for all time to come; before whose genius and spiritual effort, hundreds of crowned have bent down in reverence; and before whose matchless purity the jarring sects of Christendom, whose name is legion, have sunk their differences of centuries in common veneration to a common principle—that great soul, unusual to say, has not thought fit to put his name to a book such as this. Posterity, on the other hand, has guessed that the writer was Thomas à Kempis, a Roman Catholic monk. How far the guess is true is known only to God. But be he who he may, that he deserves the world’s adoration is a truth that may be gainsaid by none.
Thomas Haemmerlein, often referred to as Thomas à Kempis, from his native town of Kempen, near the Rhine, about forty miles north of Cologne. Haemmerlein, who was born in 1379 or 1380, was a member of the order of the Brothers of Common Life, and spent the last seventy years of his life at Mount St. Agnes, a monastery of Augustinian canons in the diocese of Utrecht. Here he died on July 26, 1471, after a humdrum life spent in copying manuscripts, reading, and composing, and in the peaceful routine of monastic piety.
PUBLISHER: CATHOLIC WAY PUBLISHING