Steinhardt is famously associated with the Monastery of Rohia , where he lived as a monk after his release. His writing style is unique, blending deep theological insights with references to world literature, philosophy, and his own Jewish-intellectual background .
: Steinhardt argues that giving from your "abundance" is simple human logic. The divine logic, however, is to give when you are empty. If you lack faith, give faith to others; if you lack hope, offer hope to a neighbor. In the act of providing these for someone else, you will find you have acquired them for yourself . Nicolae Steinhardt-Daruind vei dobandi
: The book is deeply influenced by his time in the Jilava prison. He saw the prison not just as a place of suffering, but as a "monastery" where he found the ultimate freedom through baptism and the discovery of unconditional love for others. Steinhardt's Intellectual Legacy Steinhardt is famously associated with the Monastery of
"Do not give from your surplus, nor from your little; give from your lack, from what you do not have." — The divine logic, however, is to give when you are empty
: For Steinhardt, the Christian life is one of spiritual nobility. He often cited the "gentlemanly" nature of Christ, emphasizing that a believer should be brave, refined, and entirely free from the "petty" fears of the world.
The title ("By Giving, You Shall Receive") is the spiritual "testament" of Nicolae Steinhardt, a Romanian Jewish intellectual who converted to Orthodox Christianity while imprisoned by the communist regime.