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HOLY WISDOM is now an established classic of mystical theology. It is compiled from a fuller work written in the penal times of the seventeenth century by Dom Augustine Baker, O.S.B., a monk of the English Benedictine Congregation.

The author was born in Abergavenny, and educated as a Protestant at Christ's Hospital and at Oxford, where he took up the study of the law. Later, becoming a Catholic after some strange spiritual experience, he gave up his work and went to Italy to become a Benedictine monk. For many years he travelled between England and the Continent, giving to the houses of his Order the benefit of his legal knowledge, and also of his spiritual treatises. In his sixty-third year he was sent on his last mission to England. At that time, in 1638, a summons to the English mission was a summons to martyrdom; but Father Baker's struggle was not only against persecution, but also against bad health. Three years after his arrival in England he was on the point of being apprehended when he was struck by a contagious fever which scared away his pursuers. He died in concealment, not technically a martyr, but undoubtedly the victim of religious persecution.

The edition of his works from which this present reprint is taken was compiled by Dom Norbert Sweeny in 1876.

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CCEL
This document is from the Christian Classics Ethereal Library
at Calvin College. Last updated on April 26, 2001.
Contacting the CCEL.
Calvin seal: My heart I offer you O Lord, promptly and sincerely