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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Christian worship
The SPCK Lectionary provides a clearly laid-out presentation of the
Common Worship calendar and lectionary, with BCP readings on the
same page. Sundays and major festivals are covered, as well as
weekday services. An essential purchase for any church using the
Common Worship or Book of Common Prayer services.
Winner - Edward Stanford Travel Memoir of the Year 2019.
Shortlisted - Rathbones Folio Prize, RSL Ondaatje Prize, and
Somerset Maugham Award 2019. In 2013 Guy Stagg made a pilgrimage
from Canterbury to Jerusalem. Though a non-believer, he began the
journey after suffering several years of mental illness, hoping the
ritual would heal him. For ten months he hiked alone on ancient
paths, crossing ten countries and more than 5,500 kilometres. The
Crossway is an account of this extraordinary adventure. Having left
home on New Year's Day, Stagg climbed over the Alps in midwinter,
spent Easter in Rome with a new pope, joined mass protests in
Istanbul and survived a terrorist attack in Lebanon. Travelling
without support, he had to rely each night on the generosity of
strangers, staying with monks and nuns, priests and families. As a
result, he gained a unique insight into the lives of contemporary
believers and learnt the fascinating stories of the soldiers and
saints, missionaries and martyrs who had followed these paths
before him. The Crossway is a book full of wonders, mixing travel
and memoir, history and current affairs. At once intimate and epic,
it charts the author's struggle to walk towards recovery, and asks
whether religion can still have meaning for those without faith. A
BBC Radio 4 'Book of the Week' in 2018.
'There are no unsacred places,' the poet Wendell Berry has written.
'There are only sacred places and desecrated places.' What might it
mean to behold the world with such depth and feeling that it is no
longer possible to imagine it as something separate from ourselves,
or to live without regard for its well-being? To understand the
work of seeing things as an utterly involving moral and spiritual
act? Such questions have long occupied the center of contemplative
spiritual traditions. In The Blue Sapphire of the Mind, Douglas E.
Christie proposes a distinctively contemplative approach to
ecological thought and practice that can help restore our sense of
the earth as a sacred place. Drawing on the insights of the early
Christian monastics as well as the ecological writings of Henry
David Thoreau, Aldo Leopold, Annie Dillard, and many others,
Christie argues that, at the most basic level, it is the quality of
our attention to the natural world that must change if we are to
learn how to live in a sustainable relationship with other living
organisms and with one another. He notes that in this uniquely
challenging historical moment, there is a deep and pervasive hunger
for a less fragmented and more integrated way of apprehending and
inhabiting the living world-and for a way of responding to the
ecological crisis that expresses our deepest moral and spiritual
values. Christie explores how the wisdom of ancient and modern
contemplative traditions can inspire both an honest reckoning with
the destructive patterns of thought and behavior that have
contributed so much to our current crisis, and a greater sense of
care and responsibility for all living beings. These traditions can
help us cultivate the simple, spacious awareness of the enduring
beauty and wholeness of the natural world that will be necessary if
we are to live with greater purpose and meaning, and with less
harm, to our planet.
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Reflect
(Hardcover)
Stephanie Mathews
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R581
R525
Discovery Miles 5 250
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This book takes the bible and asks the questions that the church
does not want you to ask. This book has taken some of the major
events in the bible, and analyzes them for authenticity. This book
will not only invalidate many of the claims the bible makes, it
will also show how the bible often contradicts itself.
Contradictions from the creation of the universe, to the
resurrection of Jesus. While the church claims the bible is the
word of god, this book will show that the bible is merely a
collection of myths and legends, and often borrowed from other
mythologies.
First published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
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