Senin, 09 Februari 2015

The Grace of Incorruption: The Selected Essays of Donald Sheehan on Orthodox Faith and Poetics,

The Grace of Incorruption: The Selected Essays of Donald Sheehan on Orthodox Faith and Poetics, by Donald Sheehan

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The Grace of Incorruption: The Selected Essays of Donald Sheehan on Orthodox Faith and Poetics, by Donald Sheehan

The Grace of Incorruption: The Selected Essays of Donald Sheehan on Orthodox Faith and Poetics, by Donald Sheehan



The Grace of Incorruption: The Selected Essays of Donald Sheehan on Orthodox Faith and Poetics, by Donald Sheehan

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Professor of literature, scholar, teacher of poets and poetry, convert to the Eastern Orthodox Church, man of prayer, Donald Sheehan wrote these wide-ranging essays with a common commitment to understanding the ways in which the ruining oppositions of our experience can be held within the disciplines of lyric art—held “until God Himself can be seen in the ruins . . . and overwhelmingly and gratefully loved.” That is what Sheehan means by “the grace of incorruption.” Part One weaves together themes from Sheehan’s life and pilgrimages; the spiritual art of Orthodox Saints Gregory of Nyssa, Isaac and Ephraim of Syria, Sergius of Radonezh, Herman of Alaska; the literary art of Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, Frost, Salinger, and contemporary poets Jane Kenyon, Sydney Lea, and Nicholas Samaras; the philosophy of René Girard—examining the nature of penitence, prayer, personhood, freedom, depression, and the right relationship to the earth. Part Two delves into the poetics of Psalms, especially LXX 118: a “poetics of resurrection,” a poetics that came to govern the lifework of an extraordinary man, blessed with faith, learning, and humility.

The Grace of Incorruption: The Selected Essays of Donald Sheehan on Orthodox Faith and Poetics, by Donald Sheehan

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #176688 in Books
  • Brand: Sheehan, Donald/ Sheehan, Xenia (EDT)/ Merrill, Christopher (FRW)
  • Published on: 2015-03-28
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.81" h x .76" w x 6.46" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 290 pages
The Grace of Incorruption: The Selected Essays of Donald Sheehan on Orthodox Faith and Poetics, by Donald Sheehan

Review Forgive the personalism of this comment, but I am dead certain that my response to this volume will chime with those of others whose work is held up to the light in The Grace of Incorruption. On beholding Donald Sheehan's elucidation of our efforts, in one beautiful sentence after another, we must share the uncanny sense of never having understood our own hearts -- not until we saw them reflected in the great heart (and mind) of this nonpareil commentator. Don Sheehan did not merely understand poetry; it was part and parcel of his own great soul. -- Sydney Lea, Vermont Poet LaureateIn this beautiful book, Dostoyevsky, Orthodox liturgy, and Holy Fathers ancient and modern converse with Shakespeare, Frost, Salinger, Jane Kenyon and Rene Girard, with insight into memory, violence, depression, stillness, self-emptying love, personhood, and "the anthropology of the Cross." Don Sheehan was not only a fine interpreter of poetry, but a poet himself, working in the medium of prose. His spirit of loving attentiveness -- never lacking in form -- characterized his approach to art, to other people, and to God.  -- Fr. Matthew Baker (of Blessed Memory!)The overabundant sparseness of Don Sheehan's life grabbed my heart. From St. Ephraim and Shakespeare to Frost and Holy Scripture, this book illumines his truly ascetic struggle. Like the word of God, it is "sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart" (Heb. 4.12). If you are willing to take the time, he will strip back every distraction to reveal the "drama of intimacy" we sadly so often distractedly miss. -- Archpriest Thomas MooreThis was a very difficult book for me to read, as--now and again--my own tears blinded me to the page, and my own sobbing shook the papers in my hands.  That is to say that Donald Sheehan's journey--through both brokenness and beauty--to a deep and healing calm is at once personal and universal.  With a poet's visionary prose, a scholar's acuity, and a pilgrim's devotion, Donald Sheehan offers his reader access to the profound, compelling stillness at the heart of all things.  He proves an exceedingly good guide along the way. -- Scott Cairns, author of Slow Pilgrim: Collected PoemsWhat stands out in Don Sheehan's writing is his effort to maintain a solid narrative bridge that allows readers to travel back and forth between the temporal and spiritual worlds. His expertise as a philologist is most evident as he traces the evolution of the 118th Psalm from its Hebrew origins to its Septuagint Greek translation--and even further, arguing that the Psalm's uniqueness is its ability to absorb the nuances of every language, retaining its "poetics of resurrection." His claims are thoughtfully felt and articulated. -- Gregg Heitschmidt (see full review at orthodoxartsjournal.org)From start to finish, this beautiful book is a spiritual “powerhouse,” a grace-filled stream, a gift of joy – from the tender, perceptive heart and mind of the author, the lay poet-theologian Donald Sheehan (1940 – 2010), into our own hearts and minds!  And it's a double labor of love: first, Don's very careful crafting of the articles, writing as a true wordsmith; and second, the superb editing work done by his beloved wife, Xenia, after his repose in the LORD.  I use their first names, because I knew Don personally (though not real well), and Xenia is now part of our community at St. Tikhon's. Throughout the book the author interweaves brief accounts of particularly moving personal spiritual experiences, such as when he visited St. Herman's Spruce Island, and when he venerated the incorrupt relics of St. Sergius of Radonezh at his Holy Trinity Monastery in Russia.  Glimpses into Don's last years fighting the depression that came with suffering from Lyme Disease are poignantly revealed through entries from his diary, and his final days and funeral are vividly described by his young goddaughter's mother.  Acute pain, acute joy, moments of darkness, and moments of radiant, triumphant light all suffuse this truly remarkable book by a truly remarkable man – mystic, poet, teacher, translator, sage, and ardent lover of Christ.  He is one who has already deeply touched the lives of many through his own unforgettable life.  Now he lives on in a very real way in this book – through which, I'm sure, he will touch the lives of many more, by the grace of our LORD Jesus Christ. —Dr. David Ford, Professor of Church History, St. Tikhon's Orthodox Theological Seminary Forgive the personalism of this comment, but I am dead certain that my response to this volume will chime with those of others whose work is held up to the light in The Grace of Incorruption. On beholding Donald Sheehan's elucidation of our efforts, in one beautiful sentence after another, we must share the uncanny sense of never having understood our own hearts -- not until we saw them reflected in the great heart (and mind) of this nonpareil commentator. Don Sheehan did not merely understand poetry; it was part and parcel of his own great soul. —Sydney Lea, Vermont Poet Laureate  It's always a delight to find quality modern Orthodox books popping up on publishers' lists and I jumped at the chance to request a review copy of this.  I had read a few articles by and about Donald Sheehan which had piqued my interest and I knew this was a book I needed as well as wanted to read. This collection of essays covers his writings on how his Orthodox faith has permeated every aspect of his life, including his career as an educator, as a professor of literature and as a man who loved poetry, a career which is reflected in his often lyrical prose. He describes his early life, living in a family affected by the violence and alcohol-fuelled aggression of his father, and how it was only after his father's death and a visit to the grave accompanied by his own family, that he was able to fully make his peace with his father and receive the wholly unexpected gift of the constant Jesus prayer. The prayer, "Lord Jesus Christ, son of God, have mercy on me a sinner", was his constant companion, leading him to a conversation with a Benedictine monk and thence to Orthodoxy. The rest of the book leaves the reader in absolutely no doubt that he found his heart's true home within that Orthodox faith. An enormous range of topics are covered in these essays: from the obvious aspects of  Orthodoxy found in Dostoevsky's "The Brothers Karamazov", St Isaac the Syrian's depiction of the Chalcedonian use of the term "hypostasis", depression and asceticism to  the elements of Orthodoxy found in  Shakespeare, Salinger and modern poetry too. The relationship between Orthodox Christians and the natural world, the loving respect for animals which characterizes so many of the great Saints and the bodily incorruptibility of some reposed souls are mentioned, and the second half of the book discusses Psalmody, especially Psalm 118, in great and enlightening depth. I would not describe the book an easy read; it requires the reader to concentrate hard, to think, to ponder deeply and above all to pray. For the reader keen to delve deep into the riches of the Orthodox tradition in the multi-faceted aspects of its glory, this will be a treasure, a source of joy, and a blessing to read. —Elizabeth, The Garden Window In this beautiful book, Dostoyevsky, Orthodox liturgy, and Holy Fathers ancient and modern converse with Shakespeare, Frost, Salinger, Jane Kenyon and Rene Girard, with insight into memory, violence, depression, stillness, self-emptying love, personhood, and "the anthropology of the Cross." Don Sheehan was not only a fine interpreter of poetry, but a poet himself, working in the medium of prose. His spirit of loving attentiveness -- never lacking in form -- characterized his approach to art, to other people, and to God. —Fr. Matthew Baker (of Blessed Memory!)Recently, Xenia Sheehan very kindly had Paraclete Press send me a review copy of The Grace of Incorruption: The Selected Essays of Donald Sheehan on Orthodox Faith & Poetics. What I wanted to focus on here, however, is a very specific aspect of Sheehan’s perceptive mediation of a dialogue between Winter’s Tale and J.D. Salinger’s Franny & Zooey. He describes the plot of WT in some detail, focusing intently on Paulina’s revelation of the living Hermione to her husband, Leontes, who has believed her dead for 16 years. Sheehan notes that this revelation is a response to, but also, by cultivating a spirit of stillness through beauty, further productive of Leontes’s repentance for his destructive jealousy. He then suggests that the image of ‘the Fat Lady’ that their older brother Seymour has inculcated in Franny and Zooey has taught Franny a similar wisdom born of beauty and stillness: This wisdom is above all iconic, for it reveals to the beholder--both to Franny and to Leontes--the way of beauty and stillness. In both Salinger and Shakespeare, this way opens through death: the [feigned] death of Hermione and the [actual] death of Seymour. For in both, death becomes the way in which both Hermione and Seymour can become iconic, and in so doing, they can become for Leontes and Franny the transforming experience of the boundary, that place between the worlds that simultaneously separates and reconciles. As Father Vasileios puts it: ‘To die, to be buried, to depart’ so as ‘to give another the ability to love life’ (Beauty, 9). Here is the light of beauty and stillness that shines in late Shakespeare and Salinger. [2] —Aaron Taylor, Logismoi The overabundant sparseness of Don Sheehan's life grabbed my heart. From St. Ephraim and Shakespeare to Frost and Holy Scripture, this book illumines his truly ascetic struggle. Like the word of God, it is "sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart" (Heb. 4.12). If you are willing to take the time, he will strip back every distraction to reveal the "drama of intimacy" we sadly so often distractedly miss. —Archpriest Thomas MooreDonald Sheehan, whom I knew in the last years of his life, truly lived and breathed liturgical poetry. He awoke long before dawn and prayed the psalter for hours each day, developing a rare an profound linguistic and spiritual understanding of it. Ultimately, he wrote his own translation, The Psalms of David, which was published in 2014. His last book, The Grace of Incorruption, has now also been published. We are pleased to post this review written by professor of English Gregg W. Heitschmidt: Donald Sheehan did not live to see his last work published. That publication we owe to his wife, who carefully edited both his collection of essays in Part I, and the in-process chapters in Part II, ably showing her husband’s meticulous mind—one carefully engaged in the process of living, both physically and spiritually. An obvious intellectual, scholar, and poet, these roles all inform his written work. What stands out in his writing is his strict effort to maintain a solid narrative bride that allows readers to travel back and forth between the temporal and spiritual world. Initially grounding the reader in the spatial world, Sheehan recounts his trip to Tennessee, where at the gravesite, he reads a letter and asks for forgiveness from his abusive father. The following morning he is spiritually awakened to the mysterious beginning, and mental repetition of, the Jesus Prayer, a powerful entreaty through which, by investigating its origins, he eventually discovers his new and true home in the Orthodox Church… In the second half of the book, Sheehan’s expertise as a scholar-poet, but mostly as a philologist, is most evident. Methodically, and with a hermeneutic exactitude, he traces the evolution of the 118th Psalm’s uniqueness is its ability to absorb the nuances of every language, retaining its “poetics of resurrection” no matter the tongue. Sheehan’s claims are powerful and thoughtfully felt and articulated. Unlike the chapters in Part I, these require assiduous attention. Whereas his in the first half of his work—especially poignant are his chapters about the power of repentance and despair, empathy and hope—his Orthodox poetics is philosophically challenging, quite often requiring the reader to wrestle with abstruse concepts and resolve difficult paradoxes that he long ago mastered. May the memory of Donald, Donatos as I briefly knew him, be eternal, and may the beauty he so earnestly sought be magnified in his soul. Glory to God for all things. —Gregg W. Heitschmidt, Orthodox Arts Journal This was a very difficult book for me to read, as--now and again--my own tears blinded me to the page, and my own sobbing shook the papers in my hands.  That is to say that Donald Sheehan's journey--through both brokenness and beauty--to a deep and healing calm is at once personal and universal.  With a poet's visionary prose, a scholar's acuity, and a pilgrim's devotion, Donald Sheehan offers his reader access to the profound, compelling stillness at the heart of all things.  He proves an exceedingly good guide along the way. —Scott Cairns, author of Slow Pilgrim: Collected PoemsI highly recommend this book for those who regularly pray the psalter or who wish to enter into praying the psalter; for the casual reader, it may prove slow slogging. This is not negative criticism, but a truthful encouragement: pray the Psalms! Yet, had I not previously done so – regularly prayed the Psalms – I would not have appreciated this work in the same depth or light. It’s deep. Which brings me ‘round to the title of this reflection, particularly alchemical oratory: In making our approach to the subject of psalmic poetics, three points are important at the outset. First, psalmic poetics are aural and oral – in the ear and mouth – sung (chanted), not silently read. Second, psalmic poetics are communal, holding meaning for the entire Israelite community. Third, psalmic poetics are actions of blessedness, actions that secure whole communities from demonic human violence …” (p.120). That is to say, if I may, that the daily recitation of the Psalms, like the Jesus Prayer, is a way to stillness – as in, “Be still and know that I am God” (Ps.45). —Fr. Joseph Huneycutt, PatheosRead More  This remarkable new publication, put out five years after the author's death, came into this reviewer's hands during Orthodox Christian Holy Passover (Easter) season. Indeed the collection of essays gathered in it has a common underlying theme: the overcoming of death in laying down our lives for others as the means to incorruption and resurrection life. Nowhere else have I yet met, within Orthodox literature in North America, this wonderful kind of poetic prose and this mystical "from the inside out" way of moving seamlessly between what might be considered "secular" and what might be considered "religious" aspects of life. Within one essay this seamless thread may include a personal experience, an event, a passage of literature or poetry, and a plunge into the deep waters of ancient spiritual writers. Moreover these details may re-appear unexpectedly in other essays, in a fresh way, without the least ripple of disturbance, as if they were a necessary part of the flow of the whole collection, as well as of each essay. Since this book is written by an accomplished teacher of literature, almost as poetic prose (especially part one), it is most engaging and effortless to read. Yet it keeps calling this reviewer back to re-read with more attention and to discover more depth and richness on the theme of the essays. The author seems to me to have experienced the Orthodox faith as an illumination and connection with the whole of existence, from which any subject, experience, or challenge which we might encounter in our human journey in this world and beyond, presents us with a bottomless well of Beauty, Wisdom, Love and Redemption upholding all. I owe a debt to the author, who seems, despite his death in 2010, more present than departed this life, through his life story and these writings. Also I commend his devoted wife, Xenia and others who felt that the labour was worth it to share with others her husband's life and his writings, in this very unique format. Personally, this book came as an unexpected gift to me.---Fr. Anthony Estabrooks, The Canadian Journal of Orthodox Christianity, Volume X, Number 2, Summer 2015  

From the Author As I chanted, the fifth verse struck me like a blow: "Weeping shall endure for the night, but joy cometh in the morning." Although my eyes were brimming with tears, I felt a great joy fill my soul, and I was once more overcome by God's purpose--by us being placed there, then, to witness Don's beautiful death, and by the reading of that line moments after I had stopped weeping.  -- From Lydia Carr's Epilogue to The Grace of Incorruption   The Grace of Incorruption is a tribute to my husband's discovery, early in life, of a grace that transfigures and redeems the disaster of evil. From the doctor, "his great arms and torso coming down to me, his face silent in concentrated stillness bending over me, his hands intimate and strong and exact and delicate . . . undoing the death my hapless friend had almost dealt me"; to the nine-year-old whose daring--"something that still takes my breath away"-- leads him to sit down beside his drunken and raging father to point out a picture in a magazine; to an Army officer's gift of his love of poetry to a troubled teenage soldier-in-training who would much later affirm that "the ruining oppositions of actual experience are held within the musical disciplines of lyric art"; to the Orthodox Prayer of the Heart that descends on him, "perfectly and gently, without the slightest air of even the least compulsion"--"the prayer simply filled all of me," he says, for most of a year following his visit of forgiveness to his father's grave, departing only after leading him to the Orthodox Church; to the sweet gathering of friends around him at his own parting, where "joy and sorrow mingled into something painfully beautiful, and the love in the room was tangible"--the corruptions Don Sheehan encountered in life were touched by Grace and made whole. In this book of his selected essays I have gathered much of what he wrote after the Prayer came to him in 1983 and radically changed both his life and mine. In doing this, I hoped to share with others the great beauty of this man's soul and perhaps bring some completion and fulfillment to the work he had begun. But the project has served me, too. I have gotten to know him better and value him even more; and I've been able to continue hearing his voice (so richly present in this work!) long after it was silenced by illness and death. By God's grace, I have now been given more than half a century in the company of this best friend I love, and now miss, so much. Only late in the process have I become able to articulate the theme that weaves this work together and makes it more of a synaxis than merely a selection. In everything Don writes about--his pilgrimages, his faith, Psalms, poetics, Shakespeare, Salinger, Dostoevsky, modern poets he loved, the Saints and holy Fathers of the Church, personhood, violence, depression, and always love--he tenderly, thoughtfully, and with his usual quiet intelligence, leads us to an encounter with the saving presence of that "supreme grace of genuine relation," especially between the human and the divine, that lifts all things out of corruption and "confers something of grace on the natural world in actions of sovereign ascetic love." Everywhere in this book, we see "the psychic agony of corruption" yielding before and opening the way to the experience of incorruption, which is the experience of joy. This theme is summed up in the last, brief, unfinished, chapter of his handwritten manuscript entitled "The Incarnation of Love in Psalm 118." Here he inserted (more deliberately than I first understood) a long letter he'd read at his twin brother's funeral. In it he tells his brother, "you were my leader, my 'point man,' the one who blazed the trail . . . When Nora called to tell me you'd died, I cried out and yelled in pain, fell to the floor and began to weep and weep. And all my illness of two or more years coalesced into this moment of your death: coalesced and focused, the way a knife is solid and sharp: and somehow clearer. And the days since that moment have made the clarity somehow (but how?) more bearable, more capable of being healed." He goes on in the two following, and final, paragraphs, to speak of Psalm 118's fourth stanza and its ascetic, "Athonite tone" as witnessing to "the movement of love's incarnation." He says, "the movement from lying prostrate on the earth to running the way of God's commandments is the active incarnation of love, by means of God's enlargement of the heart":     My soul lies prostrate on the earth,     Quicken me according to thy word . . .    My soul has fainted from depression,    Strengthen me with thy words . . .        I have run the way of thy commandments    When thou didst enlarge my heart. --(Ps 118:25, 28, 32; Psalms of David, trans. Donald Sheehan) And the book ends: "My experience of visiting Mount Athos was an experience of my heart being made larger." What he is saying here is what he has been saying throughout the book: In St. Isaac's words, "the man who lives in love reaps the fruit of life from God, and while yet in this world, he even now breathes the air of the resurrection" (Homily 46). But this path is always the way of Christ's Cross, the ascetic way, the Athonite way, which is the very way of our personhood. For the Cross, Don says, enables our personhood; indeed, it is our very personhood. Again he quotes St. Isaac: "the more our participation in its sufferings, the greater the perception we gain through the cross" (Homily 74).Fr. Thomas Moore has named Don a "discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart" who reveals to us in this book "the 'drama of intimacy' we sadly so often distractedly miss."

About the Author Donald Sheehan received a Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He began his teaching career at the University of Chicago in 1967 and concluded it at Dartmouth, from which he retired in 2004. From 1978 to 2005 he served as Executive Director of The Frost Place in Franconia, NH, where he created internationally acclaimed writing programs and inspired many contemporary poets. Received into the Orthodox Church in 1984, he was ordained a subdeacon and turned much of his attention to praying, teaching, and writing about Psalms, until his repose on May 26, 2010.


The Grace of Incorruption: The Selected Essays of Donald Sheehan on Orthodox Faith and Poetics, by Donald Sheehan

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Much to Reflect on for all Christians in this Lovely Book By Janet Perry This is a lovely collection of posthumous essays by poet and scholar Donald Sheehan, looking at the many years of his life after his conversion to Russian Orthodoxy in 1984.The book is divided into two parts. The first, shorter, part contains essays that explore both Orthodoxy and many of its most inspirational thinkers, but juxtaposes them with deeply thought and beautifully conveyed reflections on all kinds of other literature from Shakespeare to Salinger.THe second part of the book is a much longer, and unfinished analysis and reflection of the longest Psalm, 118. This psalm is very complex in structure and offers insight into so many aspects of God, following Him, and on our lives. While the unfinished state of this section and the complex subject make it more challenging to read, thev effort will bear much fruit.I kept thinking as I read the book that, as a Roma Catholic, the Eastern churches have much to teach us about walking a godly path, about praying the psalms, and about encountering Christ in our lives. Many of the important saints Sheehan speaks of are common to the two traditions. The Psalms are shared by Jews and all CHristians. Yet these ideas don't seem to be considered much in the Western tradition.In reading this book I certainly found much wisdom and insight. It certainly deepened my faith. I recommend it highly.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Excellent book that looks at the Psalms as spiritual poetry By JWebs5103 Outstanding book. I especially liked the way he looked at Psalm 118 in such depth. Western Christian tradition treats the Bible like it is a textbook, full of bullet-point lists of rules.. Donald Sheehan brings out the incredible depth of the Psalms by treating them as poetry that moves us and transports us into a Spiritual manner of being to see the universe as it truly is: both matter and spirit. I loved the insights he brought from both his Orthodox and Literary backgrounds. St. Pophyrios said, "Whoever wants to become a Christian must first become a poet." This books helps point the way.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Four Stars By Bruce Riddle A very deep read linking Orthodox Christian traditions and theology with literature and life..

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