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Salute the Everlasting Day
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An imaginative dialogue between the sixth-century Byzantine poet and hymnwriter and the sixteenth-century English poet and dean of St Paul's.In Salute the Everlasting Day Chrysostom Koutloumousiano...
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28 August 2025

An imaginative dialogue between the sixth-century Byzantine poet and hymnwriter and the sixteenth-century English poet and dean of St Paul's.
In Salute the Everlasting Day Chrysostom Koutloumousianos transcends time, location and culture to bring two great minds together. Preeminent sixth century hymnographer of the Greek-speaking East, Romanos the Melodist, and the most enthralling poet and preacher of early modern England, John Donne, meet in passionate dialogue. The poets' similarities and divergences are explored, their poetic and theological brilliance demonstrated in a comparative context, and unravelled are the mysteries of human existence, along with the connection between the eschatological Kingdom and the transfiguration of the human being in this present life.
Using direct quotations from their literary corpus, as well as tailoring to the needs of a living dialogue, and elaborating on their teachings, Koutloumousianos presents the first comparative study of Romanos the Melodist and John Donne in all its sensitivity and beauty, capturing their shared vision for contemporary society.
In Salute the Everlasting Day Chrysostom Koutloumousianos transcends time, location and culture to bring two great minds together. Preeminent sixth century hymnographer of the Greek-speaking East, Romanos the Melodist, and the most enthralling poet and preacher of early modern England, John Donne, meet in passionate dialogue. The poets' similarities and divergences are explored, their poetic and theological brilliance demonstrated in a comparative context, and unravelled are the mysteries of human existence, along with the connection between the eschatological Kingdom and the transfiguration of the human being in this present life.
Using direct quotations from their literary corpus, as well as tailoring to the needs of a living dialogue, and elaborating on their teachings, Koutloumousianos presents the first comparative study of Romanos the Melodist and John Donne in all its sensitivity and beauty, capturing their shared vision for contemporary society.
Price: $95.00
Pages: 252
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Lutterworth Press
Publication Date:
28 August 2025
Trim Size: 9.02 X 5.98 in
ISBN: 9780718898281
Format: Hardcover
This unusual book juxtaposes the thought of two great poets and prophets (English and Byzantine) in the imagined context of a conversation on the meaning of time, death, and eternity. Father Chrysostom reveals his own deep understanding of their complex messages, which interact in remarkable ways. The book is creative, inspiring, and thought-provoking in its unusual approach to two separate, but entwined, Christian literary traditions
— Mary B. Cunningham
Salute the Everlasting Day recreates a conversation between Christian poets. By using the words of Romanos the Melodist, a sixth-century Byzantine deacon and John Donne, an English Protestant poet, Father Chrysostom imagines them pondering the mysteries of faith in Donne's Deanery at St Paul's London. As for Dante and Virgil in the Divine Comedy, the differences between them enrich the dialogue on faith's manifestation in the world.
— Miri Rubin, Professor of Medieval and Early Modern History, Queen Mary University of London
A fascinating, inspiring and original book - a call to follow God into 'the dark church of the heart'.
— Paul Kingsnorth, author of 'The Wake' and 'Beast'
— Mary B. Cunningham
Salute the Everlasting Day recreates a conversation between Christian poets. By using the words of Romanos the Melodist, a sixth-century Byzantine deacon and John Donne, an English Protestant poet, Father Chrysostom imagines them pondering the mysteries of faith in Donne's Deanery at St Paul's London. As for Dante and Virgil in the Divine Comedy, the differences between them enrich the dialogue on faith's manifestation in the world.
— Miri Rubin, Professor of Medieval and Early Modern History, Queen Mary University of London
A fascinating, inspiring and original book - a call to follow God into 'the dark church of the heart'.
— Paul Kingsnorth, author of 'The Wake' and 'Beast'