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Description: Our known world, the world of twenty-first century
Americans, is shaped and defined by consumer choice. The premise of
consumer choice is that somewhere the perfect fit between product
and purchaser exists. In the books on changing traditions the
consumerist tone prevails--fundamentalists looking for an even more
literal interpretation of Scripture, Protestants ""going home"" to
Rome, feminists heading to the womyncentric sacred grove,
conservatives fleeing inclusive rites, Catholics embracing the
independent seeker church. But the consumerist impulse masks the
kind of prayer and discernment necessary for living in Christian
community and for following God. Twenty-first century Christians do
make choices, but the hope is that they do so because they follow
God. How then is one to answer the question of whether to stay or
leave? Through meditating on the fruits of the Spirit that Paul
addressed to the church at Galatia, a community that had several of
its members wondering whether to stay or leave, Bennett and
Nussbaum offer sage reflections about what it means to be led into
and out of Christian communions. Endorsements: ""A friend of mine
once said, 'You have an aisle seat in the Methodist Church.' He was
right. Like many I have struggled with the question if I should
stay or leave the church that formed me and that I love. So many
seem to be dissatisfied with their church these days that the
movement among churches is dizzying. Liberal Catholics become
Episcopalians. Evangelicals turn to Orthodoxy. Nazarenes find
freedom with the Methodists. But is this constant back and forth a
sign of sin or can it be faithful? Does it violate the need for a
vow of stability? Bennett and Nussbaum offer us a careful,
biblically grounded means of discerning how we might be 'free to
leave' or 'free to stay' in the context of the fruits of the
Spirit. No one should jump from one church to another without
spending significant time with these deeply considered reflections.
Hopefully, as Bennett and Nussbaum themselves point out, this will
be done in the presence of others."" --D. Stephen Long, Marquette
University ""Searingly honest and beautifully written, Bennett and
Nussbaum have given us a book, an amazingly gentle and peaceful
book, about the painfully difficult decision they made when they
became Roman Catholic. This book, I believe, is destined to be a
classic."" --Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School About the
Contributor(s): Jana Marguerite Bennett is Assistant Professor of
Religious Studies at the University of Dayton. She is the author of
Water Is Thicker than Blood: An Augustinian Theology of Marriage
and Singleness (2008). Melissa Musick Nussbaum is a regular
contributor to the liturgical journals Celebration and GIA
Quarterly. She is the author of six books and numerous articles.
Her work has appeared in Commonweal, Notre Dame Magazine, and
National Catholic Reporter. She is a contributor to Take Heart:
Catholic Writers on Hope in Our Time (2007).
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