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Praying the Hours (Cloister Books) [Paperback]

Suzanne Guthrie (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 25, 2000 1561011770 978-1561011773
In Praying the Hours Suzanne Guthrie offers us a contemporary way to practice the ancient tradition of hallowing time throughout the day by marking the hours with prayer and thanksgiving. With humor and wisdom she draws on her experience as a wife, mother, Episcopal priest, and teacher of children, showing us through her own life how these devotions can fold into the times of a hectic day. By praying the hours all the activities of our days — our eating, sleeping, working, cleaning, playing, and reading — become part of the sanctification of time and place.

In part one Guthrie focuses on the importance of stability of place in the life of prayer. “Every time I move,” she observes, “I have to learn to pray all over again,” and she describes how she has learned to make a new home a house of prayer. In part two Guthrie takes us through the hours of prayer in the monastic day and explores how praying at fixed hours through the day can draw us closer to God.

Praying the Hours is one of our series of Cowley Cloister Books: smaller format, gift edition books designed for meditative and devotional reading.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

In this fine collection of meditations, Guthrie demonstrates how it is possible to sanctify the activities of sleeping, waking, reading, working, and gardening... Guthrie notes, ‘Every time I have ever moved, I have had to learn to pray all over again.’ We all know the feeling. Whether writing about the accumulation of dust in her house in Poughkeepsie, their backyard garden, or worship services at the Holy Cross Monastery,...the author captures the devotional aspect of praising God in all that she does. (Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat Cultural Information Service )

When Suzanne Guthrie moves into a new house, she is forced to reposition her prayer life in the new space and rediscover in her new routines the steady rhythm of God’s time that has governed her life. She brings us along with her as she does this in her new book, which is both a series of reflections on change and persistence in the life of faith and a guide to prayer as an activity that belongs in daily life... Woven into this appealing book are meditations on the traditional monastic hours of prayer, which Guthrie uses as an internal clock to call her to prayer throughout the day... Her message is simple and effective: all of life is suffused with the glory of God. (Deacon Kenneth Arnold The Episcopal New Yorker )

About the Author

SUZANNE GUTHRIE is an Episcopal priest at Holy Cross Episcopal Church in Kingston, New York, where she uses theatre, dance, and movement to teach Bible and worship to children. She is also a workshop and retreat leader, and the author of Grace's Window: Entering the Seasons of Prayer.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 131 pages
  • Publisher: Cowley Publications (January 25, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1561011770
  • ISBN-13: 978-1561011773
  • Product Dimensions: 7.1 x 5 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.3 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #723,650 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Canticle of Praise in This Land of Exile, May 7, 2001
This review is from: Praying the Hours (Cloister Books) (Paperback)
When he promulgated the reformed Liturgy of the Hours for the Roman Catholic Church in 1970, Pope Paul VI began his Apostolic Constitution with the words: "The canticle of praise that is sung through all ages in the courts of heaven was brought into this land of exile by our High Priest, Jesus Christ, and has been carried on by the Church with constant fidelity over many centuries in a rich variety of forms."

As a Roman Catholic who has long been a student of the liturgy and who is published in this field, I wish to take strong exception to the previous reviewer (apparently a fellow Bostonian!) who somehow did not see Jesus Christ present in the reflections of Suzanne Guthrie and who thought Guthrie's world just a little too nice.

On the contrary, throughout this marvelous little book, Guthrie confronts the minor "not-so-nice" elements of everyday ordinary life and the sometimes major "not-so-nice" aspects of life in a parish community. She confronts these daily experiences with prayer, or rather, she shows how the recurring call of the Prayer of the Hours to remember the all-pervasive presence of God can sanctify all the moments of the day, transfiguring simple joys with the light of God's presence, transforming moments of conflict into opportunities for reconciliation. In fact, Guthrie's meditation on the Little Hour of None - and her encounter with one of the parish's difficult persons - compelled me - as one canonically bound to only one of the Midday Hours - to RE-INSTATE None as a permanent part of my daily prayer!

So helpful was this book to me, that I purchased it as a gift for three priest-friends, two of my Roman Catholic brethren who are parish priests and an Episcopal woman who is priest-chaplain at a university in the city. Their response was immediate and positive: a renewal for them of their commitment to the Hours based on Guthrie's inspiring presentation.

De gustibus non disputandum . . . everyone's taste varies and no one author can hope to please all readers. But to say that this book is "all about Suzanne Guthrie and not about Jesus Christ" is more than nasty or harsh - it is simply untrue. Rather, Guthrie shares her experience of striving to find Christ in all the people and projects, contacts and conflicts that fill the hours of her day - and shows us how the Prayer of the Hours helps her to do this - as it has helped centuries of Christians. Her reflections have breathed new life into my own commitment to this hallowed form of prayer, which - in accordance with Pope Paul's insight and contrary to the previous reviewer's opinion - is not just Guthrie's prayer or my prayer but Christ's ongoing prayer offered in and through the members of his Mystical Body, the Church.

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simple and mundane made extraordinary, July 29, 2001
By 
Sophia (the Pacific Northwest) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Praying the Hours (Cloister Books) (Paperback)
This book has ample opportunity to fall flat, with its descriptions of such routine, daily activities as the lunch hour, waking up, cleaning and moving. That it doesn't is a tribute to Episcopal priest Suzanne Guthrie's wonderful way of infusing even the dullest and most tedious activity with grace. First covering the idea of stability and praying in place with the example of her latest move; and then discussing praying the monastic Hours, this book is beautifully-written and very refreshing.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Praying the Hours, May 11, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Praying the Hours (Cloister Books) (Paperback)
To say that I thoroughly enjoyed "Praying the Hours", by Suzanne Guthrie, would be an understatement. Guthrie's beautifully written experiences have not only brought me hours of reading enjoyment, but more importantly, have shown me how I can include Christ in every aspect of my day. From cover to cover Guthrie enlightens us, through her personal experiences, in ways that we can bring ourselves closer to Christ. She shows us that activities such as sleeping, eating, reading, working, or playing, can become opportunities to glorify God. I have a feeling that the unnamed reviewer from Boston, who couldn't find Christ in this book, is one of the "thistles around the fig tree" described in the Hour of None.
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