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Sobornost: Experiencing Unity of Mind, Heart and Soul

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Discover how your heart can be softened and opened to the transforming reality of the Holy Trinity dwelling within you.

In Sobornost, the Russian word for "unity," Catherine leads her readers on the journey of a lifetime.

She guides us along the pathway that takes us home to God's house, into the graced intimacy of eternal belonging. Here we rediscover the final unity that flows from Divine Persons, one in love--Father, Son, and Spirit. Here Catherine holds the lost key, the forgotten path, the secret to the most profound of all worlds--to a new civilization of love.

Sobornost enters our hearts through the grace of the Trinity. This unity transcends our emotions, our ideas, our identities and opens immense horizons. It is a mystery to be understood more with the heart than with the mind. Catherine shares her own experience of it in a way that rings true and brings readers to the heart of the mystery. She writes in a simple, conversational tone, from a heart full of immense love for God and neighbor.

Around the theme of spiritual unity Catherine weaves various threads of Christian spirituality: the primacy and meaning of Baptism, Eucharist, service to others in love, and contemplation.

Attaining sobornost is vital in this technological age with its loneliness, alienation, and fragmentation.

For all who thirst for unity between creature and creator and each other.

Every nation and every individual needs to work towards sobornost to heal the fragmentation of life!

164 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1977

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About the author

Catherine de Hueck Doherty

83 books43 followers
Ekaterina Fyodorovna Kolyschkine Doherty, better known as Catherine Doherty, CM (1896-1985) was a social activist and foundress of the Madonna House Apostolate. A pioneer of social justice and a renowned national speaker, Catherine was also a prolific writer of hundreds of articles, best-selling author of dozens of books, and a dedicated wife and mother. Her cause for canonization as a saint is under consideration by the Catholic Church.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
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2,804 reviews252 followers
February 4, 2014
Another wonderful book by Catherine Doherty*!

I first encountered Doherty, founder of Madonna House in 2009 when I read Poustinia. At the time I was swept away by the world and ideas she described therein, almost as much as when a girl, the vast expanses of the Russian steppe or “степь" in the movie, Dr. Zhivago left me mesmerized.

I so wanted to gobble down all of Doherty's writings then and there. However, the very essence of what she was communicating in Poustinia—desert, silence, solitude, ‘Less’, etc.—was the antithesis of that head-on approach. Now I’m glad I waited and have returned for my second ‘helping’—so to speak—of Doherty’s special blend of Catholicism-Orthodoxy with a Russian-Canadian flavor.

In Sobornost, she takes us on a mystical tour of the subject of Christian Unity, especially dear to her as a child of the world-at large. Her birth and early childhood in czarist Russia, followed by her escape from the Soviet regime and subsequent life in Canada allow her a broader view on most things, and lend credibility in particular to this theme, sadly lacking in almost all respects from Christian practice and teaching. She shows us how possible and beautiful it is to have unity within oneself, with God, one’s neighbor, and in community.

But lest any particular ‘side’ think they can hijack her—or this book—for whatever agenda they might want to espouse, think again! Hers isn’t a unity at all costs, a unity without values, responsibilities and obligations; in fact it’s just the opposite. Sobornost is centered in the Triune God and as such can only be found at the very Heart of the Cross.

Wonderful insights on true Christian Unity.

*There is a short biography about her at the book’s end, which if her deep spirituality speaks to you as it did to me, you will very much want to read.
6 reviews
September 25, 2019
Lofty

This one's a difficult read. The concept is difficult to grasp, and the author struggles to explain it (as she says in the book. I don't mean that as a criticism). You'll be chewing on this a while.
54 reviews3 followers
November 16, 2009
This is one of the books I read as I recovered from surgery last year. Reading it provided me with a little retreat and helped to refocus myself after what had been quite a long time of trial.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews