Bishoy Dawood
Many of us tend to look at prayer life as a mental thing: we praise, we thank, we confess to, and we confide in God – with words. And yet, while we think or pronounce our prayers, our bodies, too, are at work expressing and shaping our souls. In the Coptic tradition, liturgical postures and gestures involve the whole person, proclaiming and realizing the union of body and soul. It is in just this unity that God creates and saves the human person.
Filed under Featured Essays, Theology, Uncategorized · Tagged with Agpeya, asceticism, Body, body-soul unity, Coptic Christianity, corporeal prayer, dualism, Egypt, Freud, liturgy, Matta El-Meskeen, Matthew the Poor, mental prayer, monasticism, prostration, soul, tropology, typology