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Hubert van Zeller (1905–1984)

Author of Holiness for Housewives: And Other Working Women

91 Works 1,839 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: via Ave Maria Press

Works by Hubert van Zeller

The Inner Search (1977) 112 copies, 1 review
Approach to Prayer (1979) 59 copies
We Die Standing Up (1973) 46 copies
Leave Your Life Alone (1972) 45 copies
The Current of Spirituality (1970) 41 copies
Approach to Calvary (2021) — Author — 38 copies, 1 review
We live with our eyes open (2023) 36 copies
A book of private prayer (1973) 31 copies
The Gospel Priesthood (2003) 30 copies
Approach to monasticism (2011) 28 copies
Considerations (1973) 27 copies
Spirituality Recharted (1985) 26 copies
Letters to a Soul (1975) 25 copies
Suffering in Other Words (1964) 25 copies
The Mystery of Suffering (2015) 24 copies
Famine of the Spirit (1949) 23 copies
Moments of Light (1963) 22 copies
Prayer in Other Words (2012) 21 copies
Glimpses (1982) 20 copies
The choice of God (1973) 20 copies
The Benedictine Idea (1959) 19 copies
The Psalms in Other Words (1964) 19 copies
Prayer and the Will of God (1978) 18 copies
Cracks in the Cloister (2019) 18 copies
Death in Other Words (2011) 17 copies
Daniel: man of desires (1951) 16 copies
To be in Christ (1979) 16 copies
Isaias: man of ideas (2021) 15 copies
Jeremias: Man of Tears (1941) 13 copies
Ezechiel, man of signs (1944) 12 copies
The Gospel in Other Words (1963) 9 copies
Approach to Spirituality (1974) 8 copies
And So to God (1992) 7 copies
Willingly to School (1952) 6 copies
Approach to the Crucified (1961) 6 copies
Patterns for Prayer (1983) 5 copies
Isaias 4 copies
A book of beginnings (1975) 4 copies
First person singular (1970) 3 copies
Trodden Road 1 copy
Lord God 1 copy
Holiness 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1905
Date of death
1984
Gender
male
Short biography
Dom Hubert van Zeller was a monk of Downside Abbey, England in the mid-twentieth century. He was a prolific writer on spirituality and Scripture.
Nationality
Egypt
Birthplace
Egypt
Associated Place (for map)
Egypt

Members

Reviews

14 reviews
Holiness for Housewives could really be called "Holiness for Busy People", because it is essentially about how to pray when you don't feel like you have time. Mothers with small children fall into that category, but so do all kinds of other people, male and female. If you've ever wondered how to follow St. Paul's advice to pray always when you have a full-time job, grad school, and an elderly parent to care for, this book is full of good advice for how to do just that. Highly recommended for show more any busy Catholic, house-wife or not. show less
This is a great book that opens one's understanding to what true repentance (penance) looks like. It does this by showing us healthy and godly repentance (based on the Bible) and unfolding its real purpose. It demonstrates a salutary approach that avoids setbacks that can come from wrong understanding, or methods, or exercises that are too harsh. The book is not a theological book. However, it does give insight into the role of our flesh and our spirit in the battle for show more sanctification/salvation - and the directional role that our will has in guiding us to new heights. The book's overarching view is that we should embrace penance as does the serious Christian engage the life of prayer. One caveat however: spiritual dullness often makes for reading spiritual material less fruitful, if not dull. Praying to the Lord for an awakened mind and an open heart can remedy this along with reading the book a second time (many times indifference is turned into joyful satisfaction when applying these remedies). show less
5716. The Outspoken Ones Twelve Prophets of Israel and Juda, by Dom Hubert Van Zeller (read 5 Nov 2020) This book was published in, apparently, 1955, though approved by Catholic authorities in 1936 and 1937. It discusses the 12 minor prophets of the Old Testament: Hosea (in the book called Osee), Joel, Amos, Obadiah (in the book called Abdias) Jonah (in the book called Jonas), Micah (in the book called Micheas), Nahum, Habakkuk (in the book called Habacuc), Zephaniah (in the book called show more Sophonias), Haggai (in the book called Aggeus), Zechariah (in the book called Zacharias) and Malachi (in the book called Malachiac). There is a chapter on each prophet, ranging from 28 pages on Jonah to 5 pages on Obadiah. Naturally I found the discussions of varying interest. Probably the most interesting to me was the discussion on Jonah--the best known of the 12 minor prophets. In the Wikipedia article on the author appears this sentence: "When discussing people's fear of death with Ronald Knox: "One clings, and I can't think why. You would have thought anyone would prefer heaven to fruit juice." show less

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Statistics

Works
91
Members
1,839
Popularity
#13,998
Rating
3.2
Reviews
5
ISBNs
81

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