Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/124980
Title: The editorial projects of John of Saint Samson's complete works
Authors: Camilleri, Charló
Keywords: Mysticism -- Christianity
John of Saint Samson, 1571-1636
Phoenix (Mythical Bird)
Christian art and symbolism
Religious literature, French
Issue Date: 2024
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Laws
Citation: Camilleri, C. (2024). The editorial projects of John of Saint Samson's complete works. Carmel in the World, 63(1), 74-78.
Abstract: In his mystical discourses Jean de Saint-Samson frequently uses the image of ashes. Generally, this is the image he uses to describe our nothingness and the nothingness of creation before the Majesty of God. Nonetheless, over these ashes and dust God lavishes his immense love. For example, in the treatise Des exercises de ['amour unique, he frequently repeats in awe before this mystery, as if in a litany, variations of the following phrase: 'But tell me: why did you bum and reduce me to ashes? And while doing this you played with me in the love that you poured into me!' Then in Plusiers belles sentences tant des Peresque de Seneque, he cites Gregory the Great: 'Without humility all virtues are but ashes and dust that the wind dissipates through the air with the smallest of efforts! Vainglory is the wind which dissipates that dust from there'. Stefanotti takes this image to call Jean de Saint-Samson as the Phoenix of Rennes. The phoenix is a mythical bird which is said to rise from the ashes. In Christianity it is the symbol of the Risen Christ. The same image keeps coming to mind as I find myself reflecting on the present re-emergence of interest in Jean de Saint-Samson, not only in France but throughout the Order.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/124980
ISSN: 03947742
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacTheMT

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