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Spiritual Direction from Dante

Yearning for Paradise

9781505123838
512 pages
St. Benedict Press LLC
Overview

In Spiritual Direction from Dante: Yearning for Paradise, the Oratorian Father Paul Pearson provides a detailed but accessible spiritual commentary on the last volume of Dante's masterpiece, Divine Comedy. Fr. Pearson takes readers step-by-step through the text, explaining the spiritual lessons Dante intends his readers to learn. These lessons are particularly important, both in Dante's day and in our own, due to the watered-down image of heavenly bliss the world offers us. Dante's Paradiso corrects this misunderstanding, showing the faithful a paradise that is more real and more fulfilling than anything we have experienced here on earth or even dreamt of.

Father Pearson's text is an indispensable companion to the poem for both the scholar and the neophyte. It brings Dante's poem and its lessons into our modern context so that readers will discover:

  • our true individuality is not obliterated in heaven, but is allowed to continue, and is fostered and highlighted.
  • even as we struggle now, we are never alone – everyone in heaven is interested and involved in our salvation.
  • the human unity we strive for here (often unsuccessfully) is a shining fact there, with each person rejoicing in every other person's joys and working together for the salvation of those still striving for heaven. There we are finally understood fully and appreciated.
  • all our human desires are fulfilled in heaven, not abandoned.

Fr. Pearson, having already guided readers through the realms of hell and purgatory in this 3-part series, now brings before our eyes the saints and angels, the Virgin Mary, and the Blessed Trinity! But Spiritual Direction from Dante: Yearning for Heaven is more than a guide to the last book of Dante's Divine Comedy. It is an introduction and an invitation to eternal happiness, an invitation that is just as compelling as it was 700 years ago when Dante wrote it.

Author Bio
"I was converted to the faith during university. My new faith led me to want to learn more about the history of Catholicism and the background to the Reformation. Studying the great thinkers of the Middle Ages seemed an appropriate place to start. While completing my work at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies in Toronto, I began teaching Thomistic theology and philosophy at Saint Philip's Seminary, the seminary run by the Fathers of the Oratory in Toronto. I have been teaching at the seminary since its foundation in 1984, entered the Oratory in 1985, was ordained to the priesthood in 1989, and began serving as Dean of the Seminary in 1990. In 1990, in response to requests from seminarians, I began to offer seminars in Dante's Inferno. The seminary and spiritual direction are my main works, and these volumes bring those two aspects together."