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Tomáš HalÃk provides a poignant reflection on Christianity’s
crisis of faith while offering a vision of the self-reflection,
love, and growth necessary for the church to overcome and build a
deeper and more mature faith. In a world transformed by
secularization and globalization, torn by stark political and
social distrust, and ravaged by war and pandemic, Christians are
facing a crisis of faith. In The Afternoon of Christianity, Tomáš
HalÃk reflects on past and present challenges confronting
Christian faith, drawing together strands from the Bible, historic
Christian theology, philosophy, psychology, and classic literature.
In the process, he reveals the current crisis as a crossroads: one
road leads toward division and irrelevance, while the other
provides the opportunity to develop a deeper, more credible, and
mature form of church, theology, and spirituality—an afternoon
epoch of Christianity. The fruitfulness of the reform and the
future vibrancy of the Church depends on a reconnection with the
deep spiritual and existential dimension of faith. HalÃk argues
that Christianity must transcend itself, giving up isolation and
self-centeredness in favor of loving dialogue with people of
different cultures, languages, and religions. The search for God in
all things frees Christian life from self-absorption and leads
toward universal fraternity, one of Pope Francis’s key themes.
This renewal of faith can help the human family move beyond a clash
of civilizations to a culture of communication, sharing, and
respect for diversity.
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Europeana (Paperback)
Patrik Ou redn ik; Translated by Gerald Turner
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R328
Discovery Miles 3 280
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Tracing the Great War through the Millennium Bug, 1999 through
1900, Dadaism through Scientology through Sierra Leonean bicycle
riding and back, award-winning Czech author Patrik Ourednik
explores the horror and absurdity of the twentieth century in an
explosive deconstruction of historical memory.Europeana: A Brief
History of the Twentieth Century opens on the beaches of Normandy
in 1944, comparing the heights of different forces’ soldiers and
considering how tall, long, or good at fertilizing fields the
men’s bodies will be. Probing the depths of humanity and
inhumanity, this is an account of history as it has never been
told: “engaging, even frightening.†At once recreating and
uncreating the twentieth century, Ourednik explores the connections
across the decades between the disparate figures, events, and
politics we thought we knew. Patrik Ourednik’s Europeana merits
the author’s reputation as a giant of post-1989 Czech literature.
Now translated into 33 languages, the book is a masterwork of
cubism, a polymorphic monologue of statistics and movements and
fine print and discoveries that evokes the deadpan absurdity of
Kafka and the gallows humor of Hašek. Ourednik has created a
mesmerizing, maddening account of the past, and his interrogation
of “truth†and objectivity resonates now more than ever.
In this masterfully written book, Tomas Halik calls upon Christians
to touch the wounds of the world and to rediscover their own faith
by loving and healing their neighbors. One of the most important
voices in contemporary Catholicism, Tomas Halik argues that
Christians can discover the clearest vision of God not by turning
away from suffering but by confronting it. Halik calls upon us to
follow the apostle Thomas's example: to see the pain, suffering,
and poverty of our world and to touch those wounds with faith and
action. It is those expressions of love and service, Halik reveals,
that restore our hope and the courage to live, allowing true
holiness to manifest itself. Only face-to-face with a wounded
Christ can we lay down our armor and masks, revealing our own
wounds and allowing healing to begin. Weaving together deep
theological and philosophical reflections with surprising,
trenchant, and even humorous commentary on the times in which we
live, Halik offers a new prescription for those lost in moments of
doubt, abandonment, or suffering. Rather than demanding impossible,
flawless faith, we can look through our doubt to see, touch, and
confront the wounds in the hearts of our neighbors and-through that
wounded humanity, which the Son of God took upon himself-see God.
It's 1979 in Communist Czechoslovakia, ten years into the crushing
period known as normalization, and Ludvik Vaculik has writer's
block. It has been nearly a decade since he wrote his powerful
novel, The Guinea Pigs, and it was in 1968 that he wrote his
anti-regime manifesto, Two Thousand Words, which the Soviet Union
used as a pretext for invading Czechoslovakia. On the advice of his
friend, the poet and surrealist painter Jiri Kolar, Vaculik begins
to keep a diary, "a book about things, people, and events." This
marks the beginning of A Czech Dreambook. Fifty-four weeks later,
what Vaculik turns out to have written is a unique mixture of
diary, dream journal, and outright fiction-an inverted roman a clef
in which the author, his family, his mistresses, and the real
leaders of the Czech underground play major roles. Undisputedly the
most debated novel among the Prague dissident community of the
1980s, it is a work that Vaculik himself described as an amalgam of
"hard-boiled documentary" and "magic fiction," while Vaclav Havel
called it "a truly profound and perceptive account. . . . A great
novel about modern life and the crisis of contemporary humanity." A
Czech Dreambook has been hailed as the most important work of Czech
literature in the past forty years. And yet it has never before
been available in English. Flawlessly translated by Gerald Turner,
Vaculik's masterpiece is a brilliant exercise in style, dry humor,
and irony-an important portrait of the lives and longings of the
dissidents and post-Communist elites.
Ivan Klima has been acclaimed by The Boston Globe as a literary gem
who is too little appreciated in the West and a Czech master at the
top of his game. In No Saints or Angels, a Washington Post Best
Book of 2001, Klima takes us into the heart of contemporary Prague,
where the Communist People's Militia of the Stalinist era marches
headlong into the drug culture of the present. Kristyna is in her
forties, the divorced mother of a rebellious fifteen-year-old
daughter, Jana. She is beginning to love a man fifteen years her
junior, but her joy is clouded by worry -- Jana has been cutting
school, and perhaps using heroin. Meanwhile Kristyna's mother has
forced on her a huge box of personal papers left by her dead
father, a tyrant whose Stalinist ideals she despised. No Saints or
Angels is a powerful book in which Mr. Klima's keen sense of
history, his deep compassion for the ordinary people caught up in
its toils, and his abiding awareness of the fragility and
resilience of human life shine through.... Like Anton Chekhov, Mr.
Klima is a writer able to show us what's extraordinary about
ordinary life. (The Washington Times). Ultimately, it's Prague,
with its centuries of glory and misery, that gives No Saints or
Angels its humane power. -- Melvin Jules Bukiet, The Washington
Post Book World A compassionate realist, [Klima] unflinchingly
presents the problems facing modern Prague and civilization in
general ... [and] fills it with mercy. -- Jennie Yabroff, San
Francisco Chronicle Stirring and valuable. -- Jules Verdone, The
Hartford Courant
This novel about the twentieth century begins when time was linear
and ends when the notion of progress becomes less well defined. "It
strikes me that Josef Brehme lived in an epoch when time still
proceeded in a straight line from the past to the future," muses
his grandson, the talented, handsome, and cynical Alex Brehme, in
his diary in late 2001. The Brehmes' story guides the reader
through revolution, war, the Holocaust, and ultimately exile and
return. A novel about what man does to man and whether God
intervenes. Translated by Gerald Turner. "remarkable"-Vaclav Havel.
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The Other City (Paperback)
Michal Ajvaz; Translated by Gerald Turner
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R372
R313
Discovery Miles 3 130
Save R59 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In this strange and lovely hymn to Prague, Michal Ajvaz
repopulates the city of Kafka with ghosts, eccentrics, talking
animals, and impossible statues, all lurking on the peripheries of
a town so familiar to tourists. The Other City is a guidebook to
this invisible, "other Prague," overlapping the workaday world: a
place where libraries can turn into jungles, secret passages yawn
beneath our feet, and waves lap at our bedspreads. Heir to the
tradition and obsessions of Jorge Luis Borges, as well as the long
and distinguished line of Czech fantasists, Ajvaz's Other City --
his first novel to be translated into English -- is the emblem of
all the worlds we are blind to, being caught in our own ways of
seeing.
In his two previous books translated into English, Patience with
God and Night of the Confessor, best-selling Czech author and
theologian Tomas Halik focused on the relationship between faith
and hope. Now, in I Want You to Be, Halik examines the connection
between faith and love, meditating on a statement attributed to St.
Augustine-amo, volo ut sis, "I love you: I want you to be"-and its
importance for contemporary Christian practice. Halik suggests that
because God is not an object, love for him must be expressed
through love of human beings. He calls for Christians to avoid
isolating themselves from secular modernity and recommends instead
that they embrace an active and loving engagement with nonbelievers
through acts of servitude. At the same time, Halik critiques the
drive for mere material success and suggests that love must become
more than a private virtue in contemporary society. I Want You to
Be considers the future of Western society, with its strong
division between Christian and secular traditions, and recommends
that Christians think of themselves as partners with nonbelievers.
Halik's distinctive style is to present profound insights on
religious themes in an accessible way to a lay audience. As in
previous books, this volume links spiritual and
theological/philosophical topics with a tentative diagnosis of our
times. This is theology written on one's knees; Halik is as much a
spiritual writer as a theologian. I Want You to Be will interest
both general and scholarly readers interested in questions of
secularism and Christianity in modern life.
In his two previous books translated into English, Patience with
God and Night of the Confessor, best-selling Czech author and
theologian Tomas Halik focused on the relationship between faith
and hope. Now, in I Want You to Be, Halik examines the connection
between faith and love, meditating on a statement attributed to St.
Augustine-amo, volo ut sis, "I love you: I want you to be"-and its
importance for contemporary Christian practice. Halik suggests that
because God is not an object, love for him must be expressed
through love of human beings. He calls for Christians to avoid
isolating themselves from secular modernity and recommends instead
that they embrace an active and loving engagement with nonbelievers
through acts of servitude. At the same time, Halik critiques the
drive for mere material success and suggests that love must become
more than a private virtue in contemporary society. I Want You to
Be considers the future of Western society, with its strong
division between Christian and secular traditions, and recommends
that Christians think of themselves as partners with nonbelievers.
Halik's distinctive style is to present profound insights on
religious themes in an accessible way to a lay audience. As in
previous books, this volume links spiritual and
theological/philosophical topics with a tentative diagnosis of our
times. This is theology written on one's knees; Halik is as much a
spiritual writer as a theologian. I Want You to Be will interest
both general and scholarly readers interested in questions of
secularism and Christianity in modern life.
International best-selling author and theologian Tomas Halik shares
for the first time the dramatic story of his life as a secretly
ordained priest in Communist Czechoslovakia. Inspired by
Augustine's candid presentation of his own life, Halik writes about
his spiritual journey within a framework of philosophical theology;
his work has been compared to that of C. S. Lewis, Thomas Merton,
and Henri Nouwen. Born in Prague in 1948, Halik spent his childhood
under Stalinism. He describes his conversion to Christianity during
the time of communist persecution of the church, his secret study
of theology, and secret priesthood ordination in East Germany (even
his mother was not allowed to know that her son was a priest).
Halik speaks candidly of his doubts and crises of faith as well as
of his conflicts within the church. He worked as a psychotherapist
for over a decade and, at the same time, was active in the
underground church and in the dissident movement with the legendary
Cardinal Tomasek and Vaclav Havel, who proposed Halik as his
successor to the Czech presidency. Since the fall of the regime,
Halik has served as general secretary to the Czech Conference of
Bishops and was an advisor to John Paul II and Vaclav Havel. Woven
throughout Halik's story is the turbulent history of the church and
society in the heart of Europe: the 1968 Prague Spring, the
occupation of Czechoslovakia, the self-immolation of his classmate
Jan Palach, the "flying university," the 1989 Velvet Revolution,
and the difficult transition from totalitarian communist regime to
democracy. Thomas Halik was a direct witness to many of these
events, and he provides valuable testimony about the backdrop of
political events and personal memories of the key figures of that
time. This volume is a must-read for anyone interested in Halik and
the church as it was behind the Iron Curtain, as well as in where
the church as a whole is headed today.
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