- Source: Antoine de Gaudier
Antoine de Gaudier (7 January 1572 – 14 April 1622) was a French Jesuit writer on ascetic theology.
Life
Gaudier was born at Château-Thierry. About the age of twenty he entered the Society of Jesus at Tournay. Later on he was rector at Liège, professor of Holy Scripture at Pont-à-Mousson, and of moral theology at La Flèche. In these two last-named posts he was also charged with the spiritual direction of his brethren, and showed such an aptitude for this branch of the ministry that he was named master of novices and tertians. He died in Paris.
Works
In the discharge of his various functions, he found an opportunity of developing before a domestic audience the principal matter of asceticism, which he elaborated little by little into a complete treatise. The eagerness shown to possess his spiritual writings led him at last to publish them. There then appeared successively in Latin:
De Sanctissimo Christi Jesu amore opusculum (Pont-à-Mousson, 1619), translated into English by G. Tickell, S.J. (The Love of Our Lord Jesus Christ, Derby, 1864)
De verâ Christi Jesu imitatione
De Dei praesentiâ
Praxis meditandi a B.P. Ignatio traditae explicatio (Paris, 1620)
There are French translations of these four works. After the death of Father Gaudier all his spiritual works, both printed and unedited, were collected in one folio volume under the title De naturâ et statibus perfectionis (Paris, 1643), a better edition in three octavo volumes being later supplied by Father J. Martinow, S.J. (Paris, 1856–8). It contains a thirty days' retreat according to the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius, which has been separately edited several times since 1643.
References
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Antoine de Gaudier". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Antoine de Gaudier
- 1622 in literature
- 1572 in literature
- Ascetical theology
- 1572
- 1622
- Domingo Báñez
- 1622 in France
- 1620s
- 1572 in France