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This unique book is an essential resource for interdisciplinary
research and scholarship on the phenomenon of feeling called to a
life path or vocation at the interface of science and religion.
According to Gallup polls, more than 40 percent of Americans report
having had a profound religious experience or awakening that
changed the direction of their life. What are the potential mental,
spiritual, and even physical benefits of following the calling to
take a particular path in life? This standout book addresses the
full range of calling experiences, from the "A-ha!" moments of
special insight, to pondering what one is meant to do in life, to
intense spiritual experiences like Saint Paul on the road to
Damascus. Drawing upon the collective knowledge and insight of
expert authors from Australia, China, Eastern Europe, Italy, the
UK, and the United States, the work provides a comprehensive
examination of the topic of callings suitable for collegiate
students, professors, and professional scholars interested in
topics at the interface of science and religion. It will also
benefit general readers seeking the expertise of psychologists,
neuroscientists, and theologians from various backgrounds and
worldviews who explain why it is important to "do what you were
meant to do." Offers religious, spiritual, scientific, and secular
avenues of understanding experiences of calling Creates an opening
for a new dialogue between psychology and spirituality Provides
readers with sound, practical advice on how to find one's own
calling or ideal direction in life in the modern world Includes
contributions by well-known scholars and scientists such as Dr.
Martin Seligman, who discovered learned helplessness and founded
positive psychology; Dr. Andrew Newberg, who pioneered the
neuroscience of spiritual experiences; and Dr. Ralph Hood, a
renowned expert on mystical experiences
Renowned subject experts Michele A. Paludi and J. Harold Ellens
lead readers through a detailed exploration of the feminist
methods, issues, and theoretical frameworks that have made women
central, not marginal, to religions around the world. At a
conference in 2013, Gloria Steinem noted that religion is the
"biggest problem" facing feminism today. In this insightful volume,
a team of researchers, psychologists, and religious leaders led by
editors Michele A. Paludi and J. Harold Ellens supply their
expertise and informed opinions to examine the problems, spur
understanding, and pose solutions to the conflicts between religion
and women's rights, thereby advocating a global interest in justice
and love for women. Examples of subjects addressed include the
pro-life/pro-choice debate, feminism in new age thought, and the
complex intersections of religion and feminism combined with
gender, race, and ethnicity. The contributed work in this unique
single-volume book enables a better understanding of how various
religions view women-both traditionally and in the modern
context-and how feminist thinking has changed the roles of women in
some world religions. Readers will come away with clear ideas about
how religious cultures can honor feminist values, such as
family-friendly workplace policies, reproductive justice, and pay
equity, and will be prepared to engage in conversation and
constructive debate regarding how faith and feminism are
interrelated today. Addresses feminism in several religions,
including Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Islam, Judaism,
Sikhism, and Taoism Explores how theology speaks to women's
experiences in the family, in relationships, at work, in politics,
and in education, while also addressing atheist viewpoints and
experiences Addresses a subject that is highly relevant in
discussions focused on events in the Middle East and as the number
of women becoming leaders of or top officials in various faiths
continues to grow
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By Grace Alone (Hardcover)
J. Harold Ellens; Foreword by Virginia Ingram
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Edited by two preeminent scholars, this book provides coverage of
the policy issues related to the increasingly diverse treatments,
practices, and applications of psychedelics. Hallucinogenic
substances like LSD, mescaline, peyote, MDMA, and ayahuasca have a
reputation as harmful substances that are enjoyed only by
recreational users committing criminal acts. But leading
international researchers and scholars who contributed to this book
hold that the use of psychedelic substances for health, religious,
intellectual, and artistic purposes is a Constitutional right-and a
human right. Based on that conclusion, these scholars focus on
policy issues that regulate the use of psychedelic drugs in
medicine, religion, personal life, and higher education, arguing
that existing regulations should match current and anticipated
future uses. This volume has two parts. The first surveys research
on the use of psychedelic drugs in medicine, religion, and
truth-seeking, following these topics through history and
contemporary practice. The second section treats government
policices that regulate the psychological, physiological,
biochemical, and spiritual aspects of research and experience in
these fields. The Psychedelic Policy Quagmire: Health, Law,
Freedom, and Society challenges medical and legal policy experts,
ethicists, scientists, and scholars with the question: How can we
formulate policies that reduce the dangers of psychedelics' misuse
and at the same time maximize the emerging diverse benefits? Covers
history, law, social use, intellectual and sacramental practice,
and current medical research, bringing the debate about psychedelic
drugs up to date for the 21st century Summarizes evidence regarding
the positive therapeutic effects of psychoactive drugs to show why
regulations need to be changed Encompasses the work of the leading
international researchers in the field Includes personal
observations, vignettes, and narratives
This book describes the psychospiritual facts of life about the
pervasiveness of sexuality in all aspects of human life. The energy
developed by our libido is the dynamic source of all the forces
that shape our experience, life, motives, thought, feelings,
desires, and spiritual longings. No facet of life is untouched or
unshaped by this dynamo. Whether we are sitting in church at
worship, in a meeting for business, in a party for pleasure, we are
always aware of the gender of those who are around us and of their
level of sensuality, as it impacts us. If we are not aware of that,
some wounding has produced an impairment in us that has forced us
to repress the awareness inappropriately. This work is not a how to
manual so much as a description of the deep meaningfulness that can
be found in the spirituality of sex. It is designed to enlighten us
about ourselves, to give names to what we all feel all the time and
do not know quite how to describe. It is about savoring the
spiritual flavor of sexual play and sexual union. This is a book
for everyone, from the inquiring adolescent to the mature adult
looking for what is missing in sex and relationships. This is not a
book mainly for Christians or Jews. It is about the generic human
spirituality in every one of us, true believer and atheist alike.
It is about being human more fully and with greater
satisfaction.
Human spirituality is best defined as our irrepressible hunger
and quest for meaning in all aspects of life. Human sexuality is
best defined as our irrepressible hunger and quest for union with
other persons and the meaning of life found in the wholeness that
such union brings. Sexuality and spirituality are not two different
things. They are two names for the same thing: the irrepressible
human quest for meaning, fulfillment, union, and wholeness. They
are not two different forces, nor are they in any way at odds with
one another, as they have been made to seem in the polarizing
attitudes about sexuality and spirituality popular in human
society, thanks to the excessive and negative moralization of sex.
Here, Ellens sheds new light on the interplay of sexuality and
spirituality through the use of anecdotes, observation, and
thoughtful analysis.
This collection presents innovative research by scholars from
across the globe in celebration of Gabriele Boccaccini's sixtieth
birthday and to honor his contribution to the study of early
Judaism and Christianity. In harmony with Boccaccini's
determination to promote the study of Second Temple Judaism in its
own right, this volume includes studies on various issues raised in
early Jewish apocalyptic literature (e.g., 1 Enoch, 2 Baruch, 4
Ezra), the Dead Sea Scrolls, and other early Jewish texts, from
Tobit to Ben Sira to Philo and beyond. The volume also provides
several investigations on early Christianity in intimate
conversation with its Jewish sources, consistent with Boccaccini's
efforts to transcend confessional and disciplinary divisions by
situating the origins of Christianity firmly within Second Temple
Judaism. Finally, the volume includes essays that look at
Jewish-Christian relations in the centuries following the Second
Temple period, a harvest of Boccaccini's labor to rethink the
relationship between Judaism and Christianity in light of their
shared yet contested heritage.
This two-volume work in biblical studies is a commemorative
presentation to Simon John DeVries, noted Old Testament Scholar.
Volume one offers a series of essays on issues in Hebrew bible
studies. The topics addressed include the nature of Yahweh as God
of Israel, a reexamination of the Exodus tradition, the Priestly
code and practices, prophets and revelation, biblical poetry,
issues in biblical linguistics, dramatic narrative in Hebrew Bible
tradition and Yahweh's deliverance as redemption in Israel. Volume
two encompasses the worldviews of the Bible for Jews and
Christians, the Holiness of God, Psalms in LXX, similarities in
ancient Near Eastern narrative and Hebrew Bible, the Bible in the
cultural settings of ancient Rome, Middle Ages, Oriental
theologies, and contemporary cultural imperatives, and the function
of biblical metaphors.
What is the Bible's stance on such controversial issues as
homosexuality and polygamy? What does it have to say about sexual
behaviors that some would deem perverted or criminal? Is sex always
wrong if it is not used to create life? Ellens answers these and
other questions in a book that argues that our understanding of
what the Bible has to say about sex is frequently misguided. He
corrects our impressions with a look at the Scriptures themselves,
considers what they might have meant to people in the past, and
reflects on how we understand, or misunderstand, them today.
Focusing on early interpretations and contemporary misconceptions,
Ellens guides readers through what the Bible actually says, showing
how these messages have been interpreted in different contexts, and
suggesting new ways of reading and translating them for use in our
own lives. Readers hoping to reach a better understanding of the
Bible's views on sexual practices and sexuality in general will
find their questions answered here. What does the story of Adam and
Eve reveal about sex and sexuality? What does the Old Testament say
about sex and how might we interpret that in our own lives today?
How does the New Testament say we should behave in our sexuality
and our lives? What lessons can we learn from a closer examination
of the Bible and its teachings on human love, marriage, and
sexuality? These are among the many questions Ellens answers in an
effort to help us all come to a better understanding of the gift of
sexuality and its attendant behaviors in our lives. In
non-judgmental prose, he elucidates the Bible and our understanding
of its teaching on these and related issues.
Today most people feel less interested in religion and more
interested in spirituality. If you ask what they mean, they will
tell you that organized religion tends to turn them off, but,
nonetheless, they feel a hunger in the heart that they cannot seem
to fill. They do not mean that they would rather have disorganized
religion; they mean that institutional religion does not seem to
satisfy their spirits and feel there must be something more, some
better way of experiencing whatever that is for which they are
hungry. Much new experimentation is going on as a result. Some of
it is a search for the meaning to fill the soul and satisfy the
spirit; much of it is a search for meaning on the spiritual level
itself. Spirituality reaches always toward the question about the
meaning of God, the meaning of relationships with others, the
meaning of intimacy, and the meaning of soul gratifying insights
into truth. Here, Ellens carefully and sensitively explores the
full range of our spiritual natures and the variety of spiritual
experiences of which we are capable, describing the way our souls
and psyches work in our hunger and thirst for meaning. He explains
in an enlightening and unconventional way why and how every human
desires to reflect upon, learn, and share a heartfelt experience of
God and of others. Readers will find in this book a description of
the meaning of the biblical stories about spiritual experiences in
addition to descriptions of the kinds of spiritual experiences that
ordinary people are having, how they are achieving them, and the
ways in which they are filling their lives with meaning that goes
beyond the horizons of material life. The author paints this
picture in such a way as to let us in on what biblically based
authentic spirituality and spiritual experience really is, and why
it may or may not necessarily have anything to do with traditional
institutionalized religion. He carefully and vividly explains the
notion of spirituality as it is illustrated in the Bible and
discusses spiritual experiences such as prayer, epiphany, visions,
and other experiences. He considers whether spirituality is mainly
a connection with God, with others, or with both. Readers hoping to
get a better sense of what it means to be spiritual will have many
of their questions answered in these pages.
The esteemed editor who brought us the acclaimed four-volume set
The Destructive Power of Religion, turns his attention here to a
similarly powerful, yet positive side of religion: how our concept
of God can fuel healthy body and mind. This book contends that all
health--mental and physical--is shaped, for good or ill, by our
spiritual, theological, and psychological notions about the nature
of God, and by the way we form an outlook on life as a result of
these notions. Across history, a large percentage of people have
believed that God is a threat, an attitude Ellens describes as
"sick gods created through pathological beliefs," or "sick gods
that make sick people." But Ellens grounds his brighter perspective
in this text on God as a source of unconditional grace and
goodwill, then illuminates the effect this perspective has on
people who have incorporated it into their minds and lives. Ellens
shows that people with firm faith in God's "radical grace" are
psychologically strong and healthy. His offering of psychology
interfacing with theology is reminiscent of Carl Rogers' teaching
on unconditional positive regard and its ability to heal suffering
persons. All readers, he explains, can benefit by this
understanding that can inspire spiritual and psychological healing
whether for ourselves, family, friends, or clients in counseling or
therapy.
Bruce Manning Metzger, New Testament professor emeritus at
Princeton Theological Seminary, died in February 2007 at the age of
93. This volume in his honour was already in preparation, and has
become of necessity a memorial volume rather than the Festschrift
that was intended. Metzger has been called the greatest American
New Testament critic and biblical translator of the twentieth
century. Among his writings most commonly cited are his classic
studies The Text of the New Testament, its Transmission, Corruption
and Restoration (1964) and The Early Versions of the New Testament,
their Origin, Transmission, and Limitations (1977). He was also
Chair of the Committee of Translators for the New Revised Standard
Version of the Bible (published 1990). The first of these two
wide-ranging and often innovative volumes created in his honour,
subtitled Interpretation of the Text for the Community, falls into
two parts: The Nature of the Bible: Manuscripts, Texts, and
Translation (e.g. an ancient papyrus biblical fragment, biblical
exegesis in the third world), and Understanding the Bible:
Hermeneutics (e.g. biblical interpretation in Paul in its cultural
context). The second volume, on Implementation of the Text in the
Community, has as its two parts, The Church and the Bible: Pulpit
and Parish (e.g. pastoral care and the Bible) and The Academy,
Science, Culture, Society, and the Bible (e.g. psychological method
and the historical Jesus, Jungian and Freudian perspectives on
gender in the Gospel of John).
Bruce Manning Metzger, New Testament professor emeritus at
Princeton Theological Seminary, died in February 2007 at the age of
93. This volume in his honour was already in preparation, and has
become of necessity a memorial volume rather than the Festschrift
that was intended. Metzger has been called the greatest American
New Testament critic and biblical translator of the twentieth
century. Among his writings most commonly cited are his classic
studies The Text of the New Testament, its Transmission, Corruption
and Restoration (1964) and The Early Versions of the New Testament,
their Origin, Transmission, and Limitations (1977). He was also
Chair of the Committee of Translators for the New Revised Standard
Version of the Bible (published 1990). The first of these two
wide-ranging and often innovative volumes created in his honour,
subtitled Interpretation of the Text for the Community, falls into
two parts: The Nature of the Bible: Manuscripts, Texts, and
Translation (e.g. an ancient papyrus biblical fragment, biblical
exegesis in the third world), and Understanding the Bible:
Hermeneutics (e.g. biblical interpretation in Paul in its cultural
context). The second volume, on Implementation of the Text in the
Community, has as its two parts, The Church and the Bible: Pulpit
and Parish (e.g. pastoral care and the Bible) and The Academy,
Science, Culture, Society, and the Bible (e.g. psychological method
and the historical Jesus, Jungian and Freudian perspectives on
gender in the Gospel of John).
Whether they fly airplanes into the World Trade Center or Pentagon;
blow up ships, ports, and federal buildings, kill doctors and
nurses at abortion clinics, exterminate contemporary Palestinians,
or kill Israeli soldiers with suicide bombs, destructive
religionists are all shaped by the same unconscious apocalyptic
metaphors, and by the divine example and imperative to violence. In
this condensed edition of a multivolume set covering how Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam all incorporate core metaphors that can
spur violence, experts explain religious notions that fuel
terrorism and other horrific actions. The contributors warn that
until destructive metaphors are removed from the Western psyche, an
end to religious violence will not be possible. Hailed in reviews
as unsettling but thought-provoking, compelling, and critical
coverage, the set from which these chapters were drawn has a core
theme that demonstrates the three major religions share the ancient
notion that history and the human soul are caught in a cosmic
conflict between good and evil, or God and devil, which cannot be
resolved without violence, a cataclysmic final solution such as the
extermination of nations, the execution of humans, or even the
death of God's own son. As Archbishop Desmond Tutu wrote, This is a
groundbreaking work with tremendous insight.
For centuries scholars have been developing ways of studying the
bible, through exegesis, historical critique, literary critique,
form criticism, and narrative analysis. During the last half
century new theoretical approaches have come to the fore.
Psychological Hermeneutics takes as its starting point the text
itself, and its context - the dynamics of the human document
created, the person(s) who authored the text, the original audience
for which it was intended, the subsequent audiences to which it
spoke, and the factors that were at play behind, in, and in front
of the text. The contributions to this volume examine the growth of
Psychological Hermeneutics as a discipline within biblical studies.
The book is structured in two parts. The first assesses the
approach taken by Wayne G. Rollins, one of the pioneers of this
field. The second provides applications of Rollins' approach. The
result is a book which presents a state-of-the-art survey of the
discipline and development of Psychological Hermeneutics over the
last thirty years.
J. Harold Ellens here explores the intriguing question of why, in
John's Gospel, Jesus called himself the 'Son of Man', virtually the
only title he gave himself in the Fourth Gospel, and a title
virtually no one else ever used for him. In Second Temple Judaism
there were several traditions about the Son of Man. In Ezekiel the
term 'son of man' means 'mere mortal'. In Daniel, on the other
hand, the Son of Man is a heavenly figure with authority to destroy
evil and establish God's reign on earth. In 1 Enoch, the Son of Man
is a human being appointed by God as an eschatological judge. In
Matthew, Mark, and Luke the Son of Man is a man who builds the
kingdom of God on earth. Jesus also depicts himself as the
Suffering Servant, who will die at the hands of the Jerusalem
authorities and be exalted by God to heavenly status as the final
Judge. In this monograph the focus is on the Son of Man in the
Gospel of John. There is nothing of the Ezekiel tradition in John,
but Daniel's heavenly Son of Man is evident in the mind of this
Gospel's author, who envisages him as divine, of heavenly origin.
Indeed, in John the Son of Man is the divine Logos, God's
revelation of himself. As against the Enochic and Synoptic Son of
Man, the Johannine Son of Man is not a human being who is exalted
to heaven and who will come again as the final Judge. He is a
divine figure who descends to earth to remove evil now, by
forgiving sins and by establishing God's universal reign.
For centuries scholars have been developing ways of studying the
bible, through exegesis, historical critique, literary critique,
form criticism, and narrative analysis. During the last half
century new theoretical approaches have come to the fore.
Psychological Hermeneutics takes as its starting point the text
itself, and its context - the dynamics of the human document
created, the person(s) who authored the text, the original audience
for which it was intended, the subsequent audiences to which it
spoke, and the factors that were at play behind, in, and in front
of the text. The contributions to this volume examine the growth of
Psychological Hermeneutics as a discipline within biblical studies.
The book is structured in two parts. The first assesses the
approach taken by Wayne G. Rollins, one of the pioneers of this
field. The second provides applications of Rollins' approach. The
result is a book which presents a state-of-the-art survey of the
discipline and development of Psychological Hermeneutics over the
last thirty years.
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