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'Full of profound insights ... These meditations on Christ's
Passion culminate in a completely convincing understanding of the
Resurrection. Rolheiser's great gift is to make faith real. This
deserves to become a classic.' - The Tablet Daily readings from
Lent, from one of today's most influential spiritual writers. When
we think of Jesus' passion and crucifixion, we often think of his
physical suffering and death. But the Gospels themselves do not
emphasise Jesus' physical sufferings; instead, the Gospel writers
want us to understand Jesus as a faithful lover of humanity, who
undergoes moral and emotional suffering without resentment or
bitterness. Drawing from Scripture, story, theology, contemporary
culture and his own life, Fr Ronald Rolheiser - one of the most
influential spiritual writers of our day - invites us to a new
understanding of redemption, and offers profound insights into the
meaning of our own loss and suffering.
For most religious people, the words God and sex never go together.
God is conceived of as holy, pure, sexless, and as morally above
the raw desires that so powerfully beset us. Sex, on the other
hand, is conceived of as earthy and unholy, something we must
snatch, and not without guilt, from the gods. Christianity has
struggled mightily with sex; so too have most other religions. And
yet when we look at sexual desire and ask where it comes from,
there can be only one answer. It comes from God. This is a book on
desire, its experience, its origins, its meaning, and how it might
be generatively channeled. Sexuality is inside us to help lure us
back to God, but dealing with this fire inside us is a lifelong
struggle. Ron Rolheiser sheds light on this mystery and the journey
it takes us on in these tantalizing fragments that help give us
permission to feel what we feel and know that God is still smiling
on us.
Channeling the deep, mysterious desires of our hearts, Ronald
Rolheiser leads readers from restlessness to peace, showing a
contemporary path to authentic and healthy spiritual life.
In "The Holy Longing, "Ronald Rolheiser probes the question "What
is spirituality?," cutting through the misunderstanding and
confusion that can often surround this subject with his trademark
clarity. Using examples and stories relevant for today, and with
great sensitivity to modern challenges to religious faith, he
explains the essentials of spiritual life, including the importance
of community worship, the imperatives surrounding social action,
and the centrality of the Incarnation, to outline a Christian
spirituality that reflects the yearning and search for meaning at
the core of the human experience.
Essential reading for anyone seeking to understand what Christian
spirituality means and how to apply it to their own lives, "The
Holy Longing "translates the universal struggle for love and
integration of spirit into a language accessible to all, explaining
God and the Church for a world that more often than not doubts the
credibility of both.
In our frenzied culture, the possibility of living in balanced
rhythms of work and rest often feels elusive. This rings especially
true for pastors and leaders who carry the weight of nonstop
responsibility. Most know they need rest but might be surprised to
find within themselves a deep resistance to letting go and resting
in God one day a week, let alone for longer seasons of sabbatical.
The journey to a meaningful sabbath practice is slow and gradual,
and it is a journey we need to take in community. Sharing her own
story of practicing sabbath for the past twenty years, Ruth Haley
Barton offers hard-won wisdom regarding the rhythms of sabbath,
exploring both weekly sabbath keeping as well as extended periods
of sabbatical time. Embracing Rhythms of Work and Rest grounds us
in God's intentions in giving us the gift of sabbath, providing
practical steps for embedding sabbath rhythms in churches and
organizations. Each chapter concludes with "What Your Soul Wants to
Say to God," an opportunity to reflect and engage God around your
own journey with the material. Sabbath is more than a practice-it
is a way of life ordered around God's invitation to regular rhythms
of work, rest, and replenishment that will sustain us for the long
haul of life in leadership. Includes a conversation guide for small
groups and communities.
The author of "The Holy Longing explores the debilitating
obsessions that often dominate our lives and offers down-to-earth
guidance for learning to leave our fears, anxieties, and guilt
"forgotten among the lilies."
"Rarely do we taste the food we eat or the coffee we drink. Instead
we go through our days too preoccupied, too compulsive, and too
dissatisfied to really be able to be present for and celebrate our
own lives," Ronald Rolheiser writes in the introduction to this
powerful collection of essays.
"Forgotten Among the Lilies shows that there is a better way to
find contentment and joy. Only by trusting in God's grace and
providence, Rolheiser argues, can we move beyond our obsessions and
rejoice in what we have and who we are.
With his trademark blend of insight, compassion, and honesty laced
with humor, the author teaches that it is possible to experience
freedom instead of anxiety, solitude instead of loneliness, and a
generosity of spirit that returns to the giver far more than it
costs.
A daily devotional reader to guide lovers of the Word through the
forty days of Lent and Easter, rich with spiritual insight from
leading Catholic, Protestant, and Orthodox writers Explore the
meaning of Lent, its importance in spiritual formation, its
significance in the preparation for Easter, and throughout the holy
season of Christ's Resurrection. Leading North American spiritual
writers reflect on what one theologian has called the "bright
sadness" of Lent: that it is not about feeling broken and lost, but
about cleansing the palate so we can taste and live life more
fully. During Lent and Easter, we encounter the God who in all of
life is for us-for our liberation, for our healing, for our
wholeness. Even in death we can find resurrection. In God For Us
readers will find: - Daily readings with scriptures, meditations,
and prayers, beautiful edited by Greg Pennoyer and Gregory Wolfe -
One beloved spiritual writer featured each week Introduction: Fr.
Ronald Rolheiser, OMI Shrove Tuesday and the First Week of Lent:
Richard Rohr, OFM Second Week of Lent: Lauren F. Winner Third Week
of Lent: Scott Cairns Fourth Week of Lent: James Schaap Fifth Week
of Lent: Luci Shaw Holy Week and Easter: Kathleen Norris - Studies
throughout the forty days on "The Feasts and Fasts of Lent" by Beth
Bevis
In the recent past, "missionary work" often meant bringing our
familiar Gospel to faraway places and other peoples. In secular
America today, however, even our own children know little about the
Gospel. In this important contribution, Ronald Rolheiser, author of
The Holy Longing, offers original chapters on the question of
secularity, then introduces leading voices in Catholic thought to
show how Christian faith can thrive in a secular world.
A thoughtful exploration of loneliness, in the tradition of Henri
Nouwen's classic "Reaching Out." Loneliness may be more pervasive
now than at any other time in human history. Cell phones and
"instant messaging" not withstanding, our longing for meaningful
connections seems to increase in direct proportion to our
accessibility.
In "The Restless Heart," Ronald Rolheiser identifies different
types of loneliness and discusses the dangers and opportunities
they represent in our lives. Using contemporary parables from
literature, film, and his own life, he shows that loneliness can be
a tremendously creative and even valuable force when it is
recognized, accepted and used as a dynamic catalyst. With his
trademark clarity of vision, honesty, and intelligence, Rolheiser
offers a distinctively Christian approach to living an examined,
involved life and presents suggestions that will free readers to
discover greater meaning and fulfillment in their own lives.
Celebrated Catholic Press Award-winner, Fr. Ronald Rolheiser knows
how to make faith real and tangible for the contemporary reader."
The Shattered Lantern" invites us to rediscover that while not all
seems well, or just, faith truly can make sense of it all.
Rolheiser points readers to the proximity of God in the seeming
insignificance of life. He sheds new light on issues such as
marriage and family life and the presence of God, loneliness and
sexuality, language and prayer, and most of all, the
all-encompassing, unconditional love of God.
In this wide-ranging text, Ronald Rolheiser gives information and
practical advice on how to build a spi rituality for today and for
the next century. He also explai ns what Christian spirituality is
and why we struggle with it.
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