Readings:
Psalm 24
Isaiah 6:1-5
John 15:5-8
Preface of All Saints
[Common of an Artist, Writer, or Composer]
[Common of a Saint]
[For the Unity of the Church]
[For Artists and Writers]
PRAYER (traditional language)
Teach thy divided church, O God, so to follow the example of thy servant Isabel Florence Hapgood that we might look upon one another with a holy envy, to honor whatever is good and right in our separate traditions, and to continually seek the unity that thou desirest for all thy people. We ask this in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord,
who didst pray that his church might be one. Amen.
PRAYER (contemporary language)
Teach your divided church, O God, so to follow the example of your servant Isabel Florence Hapgood that we might look upon one another with a holy envy, to honor whatever is good and right in our separate traditions, and to continually seek the unity that you desire for all your people. We ask this in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, who prayed that his church might be one. Amen.
This commemoration appears in Lesser Feasts & Fasts 2018 with revisd lessons and collects.
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Last updated: 25 April 2020
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ISABEL FLORENCE HAPGOOD
ECUMENIST, TRANSLATOR and JOURNALIST, 1928
Isabel Florence Hapgood (November 21, 1851 - June 26, 1928) was an U.S.
writer and translator of Russian texts.
Hapgood was born in Boston, the descendant of a long-established New
England family. She studied Germanic and Slavic languages, specializing
in Orthodox liturgical texts. She was one of the major figures in the
dialogue between Western Christianity and Orthodoxy. She traveled through
Russia between 1887 and 1889, meeting Leo Tolstoy. Hapgood died in New
York.
— from Wikipedia
Own works:
* The
Epic Songs of Russia (1886)
* Russian Rambles
(1895)
* A Survey of
Russian Literature (1902)
* Little Russian and St. Petersburg Tales (Date Unknown)
Translations:
* Childhood,
Boyhood, Youth, Life
(1888), and Sevastopol
(1888) by Leo Tolstoy
*
Taras Bulba and Dead Souls by Nikolay Gogol
* Les
Misérables (1887), Notre
Dame de Paris (1888), and Toilers
of the Sea (1888) by Victor Hugo
* Recollections and Letters (1892) by Ernest Renan
* The
Revolution of France Under the Third Republic (1897) by Pierre de
Coubertin
* Foma Gordyeef (1901) and Orloff
and His Wife (1901) by Maksim Gorky
* The Brothers Karamazov (1905) by Fyodor Dostoevsky
* The Seagull (1905) by Anton Chekhov
* Service
Book of the Holy Orthodox-Catholic (Greco-Russian) Church (1922)
* The Village (1923) by Ivan Bunin
More information may be found in an article courtesy of Project
Canterbury.
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