Thomas à Kempis

 Thomas à Kempis


Thomas à Kempis, whose family name was Hammercken, was created in the Rhineland city of Kempen near Düsseldorf in Germany. The college he attended nearby Deventer in Holland was launched by Gerard Groote, founder of the Brothers of the Common Life. Thomas of Kempen, as he was known at college, was impressed with his instructors he chose to live his own life according to their ideals. He spent the remainder of his life behind the walls of the monastery.


The routine of Thomas's life stayed the same through recent years. He committed his time to prayer, research, copying manuscripts, instructing beginners, offering Mass, and hearing the confessions of all individuals that reached the monastery church. From time to time Thomas has been given a place of authority from the area of monks, but he always chosen the silence of his cell to the struggle of government. He was fine but retiring. Another monks finally recognized Thomas's ability for profound thought and ceased bothering him together with practical affairs.


Thomas wrote a variety of sermons, letters, hymns, and lifestyles of the saints. He reflected that the mysterious ritual of the times, the feeling of being absorbed in God. The most well-known of his functions by much is The Imitation of Christ, a magical instruction about the best way best to enjoy God. This little publication, free of intellectual pretensions, has had great appeal to anybody interested in probing beneath the surface of existence. "A poor peasant who serves God," Thomas wrote inside,"is far better than a proud philosopher who... ponders the paths of the stars." The publication advised the ordering of a person's priorities along spiritual lines. "Vain and short is all human relaxation. Blessed and accurate is that relaxation that's derived inwardly in the reality." Thomas advised where to search for pleasure. "The attractiveness of this great is in their own consciences, rather than at the mouths of men." Thomas died in exactly the exact same monastic obscurity where he'd dwelt, on Aug. 8, 1471.

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