Episode 84 is a discussion of a new monasticism movement known as the Northumbria Community. The community uses the examples of the spiritual history and heritage of the Northumbria region of northeast England and applies their theology and practice in a simple and profound way to living everyday life.
The website for the Northumbria Community can be found here
The website for the Simple Way in Philadelphia can be found here
In this minisode, the lyrics are read of a poem written by the English poet John Dryden in 1687 to commemorate Saint Cecilia’s Day (November 22). It is a wonderful description of the joy of God’s creation. It was adapted half a century later by Georg Frederic Handel and put to music.
In this minisode, an exposition on Christ’s role, as seen in Psalm 2, is read. It is the work of Hippolytus, a theologian of the late 2nd and early 3rd centuries.
A sampling of the writings of Hippolytus can be found at the Early Christian Writings site here
In this minisode is recited the Midday Prayer from the cycle of prayers known as the Daily Office of the Northumbria Community. The Northumbria Community is a lay monastic centered in the Northumbria region of the England and Scotland. The community has followers around the world in what is described as a “dispersed community.” Its followers do not live in monasteries but rather in everyday circumstances. What binds them together is the daily cycle of prayers as well as the rules of living life with purposeful availability to God and others as well as intentional vulnerability.
A link to the homepage of the Northumbria Community can be found here.
Download and Player Links are below:
Connecting today's believers in Christ with the treasures of our past