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Description: Much like the book of Revelation, Joel L. Watts'
Praying in God's Theater aims to pull readers into a deeper
spirituality to confront the daily struggles of Christian life.
Drawing from the rich well of Christian mystics and theologians
from across the ecumenical experience, Watts uses the Apocalypse to
build a series of prayers and devotions aimed at increasing what he
identifies as the contemplative unity and the certain unity between
the individual and Christ. He urges a radical vision of the prayer
and the sacrament of the Eucharist. Each chapter of Revelation is
considered, explored, and finally used as a basis to draft prayers.
Added to this is an application commentary that explores ancient
liturgical practices similar to the scenes in Revelation while
looking at Revelation in a mystical manner. Watts offers Revelation
as an early liturgy, using this proposition as a catalyst for
building prayers and a vision of life based on the Eucharist as the
emblem of how we are to approach God. What emerges is a profound
view on how we envision Scripture, prayer, and the book of
Revelation.
There's a stereotype of a young, zealous Christian who feels called
to the ministry as a pastor, goes to seminary, and then loses his
faith as he studies the writings of all those intellectuals and
theologians. The stereotype may not be accurate, but there are
those who fit this description, not to mention many who leave home
for college as passionate Christians and come home unbelievers.
More importantly, that stereotype represents a fear-the fear that
too much education or contact with those whose beliefs differ from
those of a particular community will cause someone to lose their
faith. But there's another group, much larger, but not heard nearly
as frequently. This group consists of people who have gone from the
position of fear that creates the stereotype to a position of
faith, a faith that is no longer afraid of that outer darkness that
looms outside the walls of their religious community. Indeed, they
may not perceive any looming darkness at all. From Fear to Faith,
edited by Travis Milam and Joel L. Watts, gives voice to that too
often unheard group. It is a collection of essays from those who
have lived in fear, have faced the looming dark, collided with
their share of brick walls, but have come out with a new-found
faith and undismayed trust. The journeys of faith presented in this
book reveal a group deeply insightful and grounded minds, rich in
thriving spirituality, joy, and hope. Where there was once
trepidation in asking the tough questions of human existence, of
the divine relationship with creation, there is now a certain hope
found when these authors have struggled to overcome canyons of
fear, leaving behind a life of black and white certitude, to live
in a beautiful world of gray. They have learned that having
questions and even doubts does not reflect a lack of faith. Rather,
hiding in fear from the serious questions indicates a lack of faith
in the one who said, "Don't be afraid." Come join in this journey
from fear to faith.
What if the story of Jesus was meant not just to be told but
retold, molded, and shaped into something new, something present by
the Evangelist to face each new crisis? The Evangelists were not
recording a historical report, but writing to effect a change in
their community. Mark was faced with the imminent destruction of
his tiny community-a community leaderless without Paul and Peter
and who witnessed the destruction of the Temple; now, another
messianic figure was claiming the worship rightly due to Jesus. The
author of the Gospel of Mark takes his stylus in hand and begins to
rewrite the story of Jesus-to unwrite the present, rewrite the
past, to change the future. Joel L. Watts moves the Gospel of Mark
to just after the destruction of the Temple, sets it within Roman
educational models, and begins to read the ancient work afresh.
Watts builds upon the historical criticisms of the past, but brings
out a new way of reading the ancient stories of Jesus, and attempts
to establish the literary sources of the Evangelist.
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