Jean Leclercq (monk)

This article is about the 20th century scholar. For other people with this name, see Leclercq. For Jean Leclerc (1657-1736), see Jean Leclerc (theologian).

Dom Jean LeClercq, O.S.B. (31 January 1911, – 27 October 1993), was a French Benedictine monk, and author of a classic study on Lectio Divina and the history of inter-monastic dialogue.[1][2]

LeClercq is perhaps best known for his seminal work The Love of Learning and the Desire for God: A Study of Monastic Culture.[3]

Life

Leclercq was born in Avesnes, Pas-de-Calais, in 1911. As a young man, he entered Clervaux Abbey in Luxembourg, of which monastery he remained a monk until his death.

Notes

  1. North American Benedictine Monasteries, Bulletin 49, January 1994
  2. After Augustine: the meditative reader and the text by Brian Stock 2001 ISBN 0-8122-3602-5 page 105
  3. Leclercq, Jean; Misrahi, Catherine, trans. (1961). The Love of Learning and the Desire for God: A Study of Monastic Culture. New York: Fordham University Press. ISBN 0-8232-0407-3. [The French original was published in 1957]

Further reading


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