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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Christian theology
Answering the many "spiritual" questions left unaddressed by such popular historical bestsellers as A History of God and God: A Biography, renowned author Marcus Borg reveals how to embrace an authentic contemporary faith that reconciles God with science, critical thinking and religious pluralism. How to have faith--how to even think about God--without having to stifle modern rationality is one of the most vital challenges facing contemporary religion. In providing a much-needed solution to the problem of how to have a fully authentic yet fully contemporary understanding of God, Borg--author of the bestselling Meeting Jesus Again for the first Time--traces his personal journey. He leads readers from the all-powerful and authoritarian God of his (and their) childhood and traditional faith to an equally powerful but dynamic image of God that is relevant to contemporary seekers and more biblical and spiritually authentic. Borg shows how the modern crisis of faith is itself rooted in delusion--misinterpretation of biblical texts and of God's true nature--and challenges readers to a new way of thinking about God. He opens a practical discussion about how to base a relationship with the divine both immanent and transcendant, here and now, always and everywhere. Arguing that the authentic Judeo-Christian tradition is that God's being includes the whole world, Borg persuasively shows how this understanding accounts for the whole variety of human religious experience. Ultimately, he introduces readers to a way of thinking about God who is "right here" all around them, rather than distant and remote. This understanding is more intellectually and spiritually satisfying and allows readers to reclaim a stronger sense of God's presence.
The groundbreaking work in Hispanic theology, relates the story of
the Galilean Jesus to the story of a new mestizo people.
In this work, which marked the arrival of a new era of
Hispanic/Latino theology in the United States, Virgilio Elizondo
described the "Galilee principle": "What human beings reject, God
chooses as his very own". This principle is well understood by
Mexican-Americans, for whom mestizaje -- the mingling of ethnicity,
race, and culture -- is a distinctive feature of their identity. In
the person of Jesus, whose marginalized Galilean identity also
marked him as a mestizo, the Mexican-American struggle for identity
and new life becomes luminous.
Malone concludes her historical trilogy on the contributions of
Christian women through the ages in this final volume that spans
the Reformation in the 16th century to today, covering such issues
as women's religious communities, women missionaries in the New
World, and women mystics.
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