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Paperback Dancing in the Margins: Meditations for People Who Struggle with Their Churches Book

ISBN: 0824518152

ISBN13: 9780824518158

Dancing in the Margins: Meditations for People Who Struggle with Their Churches

Dancing in the Margins describes people of different religious traditions who struggle with their churches. It includes interviews, poetry, Biblical reflections, and questions for reflection or... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

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A struggle is a struggle...

This book is written for those who are having a struggle with their churches. But it really addresses Struggle in a much broader spiritual sense. If a struggle "feels" intense, then our False Self is being challenged. The False Self is that which is ego and not the interior True Self reflecting God's will. Intense struggles create an emptiness or sense of loss. They create spaciousness for God's grace to flow in. The author has very nicely given examples of this process. "Whom are you looking for?" "We might be searching for ourselves: perhaps a hidden part of the self, a part never integrated _. Or perhaps a wonderful part longs to come to birth_. We might ask ourselves, "What part of ourselves do we want to befriend and bring forth?" Our struggle with the church may simply be the struggle that will push us forward on our spiritual journey. This book helps name that process.

Meditations for People who sturggle with their churches

I found the work to be thoughtful and provoking. The author evokes thought and brings a wealth of experience on her part. It was refreshing to read about an honnest struggel between faith and institutional loyality.

Dancing in the Margins.

It is often said that book reviews say more about the reviewer than about the book. I am saying this because I read this book and write as some one who, at a young age, has had far more of a struggle than many people experience in a life-time. This is the platform for my dance.Kathy Coffey lives in Denver, Colorado. She is a nationally renowned speaker, an award winning writer, the author of several books and editor of Living the Good News. She has a husband and four children.The book is divided into five sections: Three "Whys?" (Why Dance? Why Meditate? Why the Margins?); Pivots and Pirouettes; Great Thirsts and High Hopes; Nurture and Healing; Partners in the Dance. Through the media of the real stories of those journeying through their struggle, reflection on biblical stories and the posing of questions for reflection, the reader is encouraged along a continuing relationship with Christ through times of pain and aridity, which can be an opportunity for personal growth and a deepening relationship with, and understanding of, God.I found the personal stories, often told in quotations from the individual, intensely moving and laden with insight and integrity. There are the stories of a variety of individuals, in recognized ministry and excluded from ministry, who have left the Church or who have remained. In their stories I found parallels to my own experience and also things that were new. In all of them I found new and unique insight and new ideas for a way forward on my own journey.The author's use of the bible is refreshing and inspiring. In keeping with the tradition of the mystics she does not see the Gospels as mere history but as pregnant with rich insight and symbolism that is the source of spiritual wisdom and the Word of God for the believer today:"For some people who have been terribly hurt, waiting outlasts hope. They seem to experience only silence, paralysis. The emptiness might be compared to the childlessness of Zechariah and Elizabeth. They wait so long for a baby that when the good news of pregnancy finally comes, Zechariah reacts not with joy but with scepticism. Because of his doubt he is struck dumb for nine months ... And ... Zechariah's song is eventually born of that silence. Leaving that zone of incubation, that quiet cocoon, the first words he writes are, "His name is John," a name meaning "God is gracious." Zechariah models for us that even people who have lost hope in waiting that has dragged on too long, even people caught in the silence of their own scepticism can refocus on the jewel, the spark of divine life within." page 95Kathy Coffey is not writing for those who are engaged in arguments over dogmatic niceties and the finer points of liturgical expression, for example. This is a real book for real people in real situations that place them in situations of conflict with their Church. Many have been treated very badly. Nevertheless, those quoted do not dim
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