Écrits spirituels de Charles de Foucauld : ermite au Sahara, apôtre des…
(5 User reviews)
782
Foucauld, Charles de, 1858-1916
French
"Écrits spirituels de Charles de Foucauld : ermite au Sahara, apôtre des…." by Charles de Foucauld is a collection of spiritual writings written in the early 20th century. Drawn from private letters, meditations, and retreat notes, it reveals a hermit’s contemplative life, ardent charity, and practical approach to prayer and faith across the Sahara...
and gentle outreach to Muslims. The opening of the volume begins with a preface by René Bazin, who sketches Foucauld’s path (explorer, Trappist, desert hermit) and explains the editorial approach: private texts are excerpted, not published whole, and the aim is to present usable spiritual fragments. He describes excluded pieces—especially a catechetical “Gospel for the poor of the Sahara” crafted to introduce Christian truths gradually to Muslims—and highlights the author’s purity, tender piety, humility, and courageous maxims. The first section, “Le Trappiste,” offers letters and Gospel meditations on prayer: adoration, solitary and nocturnal prayer, bold and persevering petitions, praying for enemies and sinners, guarding the soul as a “house of prayer,” and trusting God without fear. It then turns to the Nazareth period, opening a retreat in which the writer prays before the exposed Eucharist, seeks to know and do God’s will, and contemplates divine beauty reflected in creation, resolving to see and love only God through all things. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Sandra Baker
1 month agoI stumbled upon this by accident and the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. Thanks for making this available.
Joseph Walker
2 months agoI was pleasantly surprised because the emotional weight of the story is balanced perfectly with moments of levity. Absolutely essential reading.
George Rivera
1 month agoMake no mistake, the plot twists are genuinely surprising without feeling cheap or forced. I'm sending the link to all my friends.
Paul Carter
5 months agoFrom the very first page, the narrative structure is incredibly compelling and well-thought-out. I learned so much from this.
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Christopher Miller
4 months agoA fantastic discovery, the translation seems very fluid and captures the original nuance perfectly. A perfect companion for a quiet weekend.