Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Hardcover God at the Edge: Searching for the Divine in Uncomfortable and Unexpected Places Book

ISBN: 0609604996

ISBN13: 9780609604991

God at the Edge: Searching for the Divine in Uncomfortable and Unexpected Places

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$7.39
Save $14.61!
List Price $22.00
Almost Gone, Only 3 Left!

Book Overview

Here is a book about adventure, raw experience, and facing inner demons. Niles Elliot Goldstein is a young rabbi who sets out to find God in tough and often scary situations: dogsledding above the Arctic Circle, taking the Silk Road into Central Asia without a visa, being chased by a grizzly bear, cruising with DEA agents through the South Bronx, and spending a night in jail in New York City's Tombs. He explores the connections between struggle and...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Well-rounded, educational, compelling -- open your eyes...

Every time I try reading a book on mysticism, spirituality or Divine presence, it takes multiple-passes and the book rarely gets completed."G-D At The Edge" is a compelling read I couldn't wait to continue. Its format is adventurous and it offers just enough history to get a non-historian like myself interested in ages past. Rabbi Goldstein's humility make him believable, and his humanity approachable.Although he doesn't address all the life circumstances where you might find yourself "at the edge", if you've ever experienced an edge in life -- hunger, fear, loss -- or felt the Divine presence in the light of a candle, then you may see that Rabbi Goldstein knows where you're coming from. All-in-all very well done -- Thank You Niles!

A Riveting Spiritual Journey

Curious about spirituality but not being a "religious" person, I was intrigued by this book's subtitle: Searching for The Divine in Uncomfortable and Unexpected Places." I was even more fascinated, however, by the author's ability to make this pilgrimage not just moving and thought-provoking, but witty and entertaining as well. I've read a number of books dealing with spiritual journeys, but this was told by someone who speaks my language. Goldstein is a real person -- not someone standing in front of congregants lecturing, not someone who has found some sort of easy-fix Holy Grail -- but someone who has fears, doubts (yes, even a rabbi has doubts sometimes) and even a dark side, and the courage to look them all squarely in the eye. The beauty here is that the author freely admits that he doesn't necessarily have all the answers, but the process of the search -- examining and interpreting the lessons of well-known and historical figures, looking deeply into our collective and individual psyches -- can itself be absolutely riveting.

A Walk on the Wild Side of Spirituality

GOD AT THE EDGE is a fascinating a powerful work--part spirituality book, part adventure memoir. Goldstein accomplishes what few other writers these days have been able to pull off: he treats the spiritual quest as a great adventure, and takes us to places and experiences (such as fear, struggle, confinement, even pain) most people never associate with God and the inner life. He also dumbs down nothing, offering intelligent and compelling insights into the lives and thoughts of various Jewish and Christian religious figures over the ages, some mainstream, some marginal. This is a must read for anyone fed up with the warm and fuzzy pablum that passes for spirituality writing today, or for anyone searching for meaning and purpose in an era of disillusionment and despair.

Goldstein Chooses and Uses Religion to Make Meaining in Life

Many will view Niles Goldstein's, "God at the Edge" as a personal narrative of man's journey to becoming a rabbi. Some may see Goldstein's work as an instructional religious text written in a personal and conversational style. Others might find "God at the Edge" an historical text about individuals who deviate from religious norms, with Goldstein as a modern day example. However, none of these distinguish "God at the Edge" for what it truly is: a text about a young man's decision to "choose" religion and his second decision to "use" religion to make meaning in his life. Goldstein's decisions come during an era when most people blindly accept, or mindlessly reject, their parents' religion; when nary a soul turns to religion for comfort and solace, let alone as a process, through which to grow and develop emotionally. Goldstein's way of looking at religion comes at a time when religion is not popular. Yet, "God at the Edge" might just change that. Within this text, Goldstein illustrates how religion can be intentionally exciting. Through a series of adventures, Goldstein puts himself in situations many would not. By going into the wild, traveling without proper documents in foreign lands, walking into the wilderness without food, he sets himself up to over and over again, confront fear -- sometimes in the face of a grizzly, sometimes in the face of a woman, sometimes in the face of his father. This determination to confront fear is perhaps best explained in Goldstein's prior work, "Forests of the Night" where he talks of Hassidic mystics and their belief that fear is necessary to approaching God. What Goldstein seems to have done is attempt to carry out what mystics touted as necessary for knowing God. The funny part about Goldstein's decision is that Goldstein is an Ivy League graduate, who travels the world, who lives a life filled with privilege and opportunity: Fear is something that Goldstein must intentionally create.As he introduces both Jewish and Christian religious figures, who, over three thousand years, dared to deviate from religious norms, he simultaneously shares turning points in his life. As he weaves his tale filled with literary and religious texts, historical figures who seriously considered religion or made religion their lives -- some who lost their lives because of their choices -- he explains how he uses religion to turn himself inside out. Goldstein's "God at the Edge" is a good read. While "moderns" apathetically reject thousand-year-old religious practices and Canonical religious texts, Goldstein, an imperfect man, who shares that he was once arrested for ripping out a toilet in a Manhattan bar, processes his life in a religious context. "God at the Edge" contrasts stereotypical ideas of religion -- children sleeping through Sunday school, young adults running from religious education, adults rolling their eyes sighing "religion is for the older generation" -- and offers an excitin

Finding god in messy places without a list of 5 or 7 steps

There are many alternate paths to god, and god is present in the darkness as well as the light. Many people find god in pretty parks, humble houses of worship, massive mountaintops, and serene meadows. Others find spirituality in foxholes, in the muck and mire, in degradation, or in prison. In the bible, Avraham Avinu smashed the idols in his father's retail idol outlet. Rabbi Goldstein did not smash an idol, he just smashed a urinal in a fit of mortal rage and anger at a Manhattan bar two weeks prior to graduating college. He was promptly arrrested, and he spent a night in the Manhattan's Tombs Prison with accused murderers and transvestite prostitutes. But didn't Joseph spend time in jail, as did Shneur Zalman? Didn't Jonah have to go down to Jaffa, down to the hold of the ship, and down into a fish to turn around? These events led to spiritual awakenings and eventual leadership. A restless Rabbi Goldstein, 33, is seeking authenticity, meaning, wholeness, and rest. He is a police chaplain and DEA advisor, and a founding rabbi of the New Shul which met at HUC-JIR in Greenwich Village/Manhattan (now meets at Judson on Wash Sq). He is also a specialist in the Fear of God, as author of "Forests in the Night. Fear of God in Early Hasidic Thought." His book is part travelogue and part spiritual search. For example, on a trip to Nepal and Katmandu, he and his father attend a weekly animal sacrifice in Dakshinkali. As a goat's head is severed, and his father hugs him, Niles is reminded of the Akedah. When discussing the fine line between the spiritual and sacrilegious, he is reminded of Nadav and Avihu and the Golem of Prague. His trip `into the wilderness' of Alaska and meeting with a hungry grizzly bear brings on thoughts of the Rambam's discourse on fear and the awareness of one's meagerness in comparison to god. He has the ability to find God while dog-sledding in the Arctic Circle, while counseling police officers in the Bronx, getting dumped by a young girlfriend in Princeton, and while on additional excursions in Asia, Alaska, Boston, Africa, and the wilds of New Hampshire. Finding god isnt easy, isn't succinct and it doesnt happen in five steps, but Goldstein shows how a prepared mind can find spirituality in some of the grossest or most fearsome places.
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured