Critical Monks

Critical Monks
Author: Thomas Wallnig
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 378
Release: 2019-01-07
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9004393137

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In Critical Monks Wallnig offers a new, contextualized interpretation of German Benedictine scholarship around 1700.

Critical Monks

Critical Monks
Author: Thomas Wallnig
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN: 9789004355460

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In Critical Monks Wallnig offers a new, contextualized interpretation of German Benedictine scholarship around 1700.

Business Secrets of the Trappist Monks

Business Secrets of the Trappist Monks
Author: August Turak
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 201
Release: 2013-07-09
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0231535228

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August Turak is a successful entrepreneur, corporate executive, and award-winning author who attributes much of his success to living and working alongside the Trappist monks of Mepkin Abbey for seventeen years. As a frequent monastic guest, he learned firsthand from the monks as they grew an incredibly successful portfolio of businesses. Service and selflessness are at the heart of the 1,500-year-old monastic tradition's remarkable business success. It is an ancient though immensely relevant economic model that preserves what is positive and productive about capitalism while transcending its ethical limitations and internal contradictions. Combining vivid case studies from his thirty-year business career with intimate portraits of the monks at work, Turak shows how Trappist principles can be successfully applied to a variety of secular business settings and to our personal lives as well. He demonstrates that monks and people like Warren Buffett are wildly successful not despite their high principles but because of them. Turak also introduces other "transformational organizations" that share the crucial monastic business strategies so critical for success.

Myanmar

Myanmar
Author: N Ganesan
Publisher: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2007
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9812304347

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Covers issues of historical influence and political considerations that have shaped the dominant thinking within the state and the military. Examines the three major ethnic groups in the country - Karen, Kachin, and Shan. Deals with how the various ethnic groups are trying to cope with decades of conflict and reconstruct their communities.

Reading Matthew with Monks

Reading Matthew with Monks
Author: Derek A. Olsen
Publisher: Liturgical Press
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2015-04-13
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0814683428

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In Reading Matthew with Monks, Derek Olsen seeks to evaluate whether early medieval monastic biblical interpreters can serve as effective conversation partners for modern readers who are committed to broadening their reading of Scripture. Olsen puts the interpretations of four modern Scripture commentaries in conversation with Ælfric of Eynsham’s medieval monastic interpretations of four texts from the Gospel of Matthew. In so doing, he clarifies early medieval interpretive contexts and assesses their usefulness in modern scholarship. As outsiders in modern critical debates, Ælfric and his sources may provide alternative approaches or perspectives that open interpretive possibilities where modern interpreters are locked in disagreement. Early medieval monastic interpreters can serve as excellent guides for understanding the potential for moral, spiritual, or formative meanings of a biblical text. They can help modern readers who are attempting to conform their lives to the biblical text.

Enlightened Monks

Enlightened Monks
Author: Ulrich L. Lehner
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 275
Release: 2011-03-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 0199595127

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A revisionist account of the effects of the Enlightenment process on German Benedictines which contributes to a better understanding not only of monastic culture in Central Europe, but also of Catholic religious culture in general.

Buddhist Monks and Business Matters

Buddhist Monks and Business Matters
Author: Gregory Schopen
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages: 444
Release: 2004-01-31
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780824827748

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This is the second in a series of collected essays by one of today’s most distinguished scholars of Indian Buddhism. (Publication of a third collection is planned in early 2005.) In these articles, all save one published in various places from 1994 through 2001, Gregory Schopen once again displays the erudition and originality that have contributed to a major shift in the way that Indian Buddhism is perceived, understood, and studied.

Managing Monks

Managing Monks
Author: Jonathan A. Silk
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 358
Release: 2008-10-15
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0198043813

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The paradigmatic Buddhist is the monk. It is well known that ideally Buddhist monks are expected to meditate and study -- to engage in religious practice. The institutional structure which makes this concentration on spiritual cultivation possible is the monastery. But as a bureaucratic institution, the monastery requires administrators to organize and manage its functions, to prepare quiet spots for meditation, to arrange audiences for sermons, or simply to make sure food, rooms, and bedding are provided. The valuations placed on such organizational roles were, however, a subject of considerable controversy among Indian Buddhist writers, with some considering them significantly less praiseworthy than meditative concentration or teaching and study, while others more highly appreciated their importance. Managing Monks, as the first major study of the administrative offices of Indian Buddhist monasticism and of those who hold them, explores literary sources, inscriptions and other materials in Sanskrit, Pali, Tibetan, and Chinese in order to explore this tension and paint a picture of the internal workings of the Buddhist monastic institution in India, highlighting the ambivalent and sometimes contradictory attitudes toward administrators revealed in various sources.

The Monks of Tiron

The Monks of Tiron
Author: Kathleen Thompson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2014-09-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 1316060837

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This book offers the first comprehensive history of the Order of Tiron. As a unique survey of the Tironensian experience it sheds new light on traditional assumptions of twelfth-century monastic history. Previous sketches have been shaped by the life of the founder, the Vita Bernardi, which depicts the forests of western France teeming with holy men, and that self-image of hermit preachers in the wilderness has been deeply influential in the historiography of twelfth-century reform. Drawing from the latest advances in the understanding of hagiography and institutional memory, Thompson reinterprets key sources to offer a valuable contribution to the history of monasticism. She outlines the rapid dissemination of the Tironensian approach in the first thirty years of its existence, its network of contacts with the lay elite and the impact on the Tironensians of the successes of the Cistercians and Mendicants.