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A stained-glass window in a chapel at the Church and Shrine of St. Julian in Norwich, England, shows Julian of Norwich kneeling in contemplation of the cross in this file photo from February 2017.
Statue of Julian of Norwich by David Holgate, west front, Norwich Cathedral (photo: Poliphilo / Wikimedia Commons/CC0) K.V. Turley Blogs February 17, 2021 ...
In Julian of Norwich: A Contemplative Biography (Paraclete Press), Amy Frykholm doesn’t ignore the tension between the saint we love and the odd character who worries us. Indeed, she makes this ...
I visited St. Julian’s Church, named after Julian of Norwich, a hermit who lived there in the 14th century and who wrote “The Revelations of Divine Love,” widely recognized as the first book ...
Reading Julian of Norwich through an Augustinian lens allows us to position her within extant rhetorical tradition while showing ways she revised that tradition. Engaging the Augustinian rhetoric of ...
The tour will also consider her possible connections to Norwich Cathedral and even ponder the intriguing question of whether Julian had a cat! At the conclusion of the tour, there is an optional walk ...
“I t is God’s will that we see him and search for him; it is his will that we wait for him and trust him.” In times of stress and fear—and goodness, it is hard to hear the world’s mood music as ...
Statue of Julian of Norwich, Norwich Cathedral, by David Holgate FSDC. (Wikicommons) “But all will be well, and all will be well, and every kind of thing will be well.” ...
Julian was an anchorite or recluse of the 14th century who lived for years in a cell attached to Norwich’s St. Julian’s church (hence her masculine name).
Julian used “the imagery of a mother’s love to describe the affectionate care which God shows for his children,” the Pope said.
Margaret Healy-Varley, Wounds Shall Be Worships: Anselm in Julian of Norwich's Revelation of Love, The Journal of English and Germanic Philology, Vol. 115, No. 2 (April 2016), pp. 186-212 ...