2023/06/08

The Most Important Point: Zen Teachings of Edward Espe Brown

The Most Important Point: Zen Teachings of Edward Espe Brown - Kindle edition by Brown, Edward, Parker, Danny, Parker, Danny. Religion & Spirituality Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.


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Edward Espe Brown

The Most Important Point: Zen Teachings of Edward Espe Brown 
Kindle Edition
by Edward Brown (Author), Danny Parker (Author, Editor) 

 Format: Kindle Edition
4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 43 ratings
4.5 on Goodreads
43 ratings

From master baker, cook, and Zen priest Edward Espe Brown comes a collection of timeless essays on Zen, food, and life itself. Brown was among the Westerners ordained as priest by Shunryu Suzuki Roshi before his passing in 1971. Suzuki hoped that Zen might be transformed into a vibrant new form in the West--and in The Most Important Point, Brown fulfills his teacher’s wish with 60 essays that are distinctly American yet preserve the roots of traditional Japanese Zen.

Drawing from his time in the kitchen and on the cushion, Brown explores a range of topics, from basic sitting practice to making the “perfect” biscuit and much more. “In the words of my teacher,” reflects Brown, “the most important point is to find out what is the most important point.” Flavored with wise insights and irreverent humor, The Most Important Point brings together a treasury of teachings to inspire your own discovery.

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225 pages
April 2, 2019

About the Author

Edward Espe Brown began cooking and practicing Zen in 1965. He was the first head resident cook at Tassajara Zen Mountain Center from 1967 to 1970. He later worked at the celebrated Greens Restaurant in San Francisco, serving as busboy, waiter, floor manager, wine buyer, cashier, host, and manager. Ordained a priest by Shunryu Suzuki Roshi, he has taught meditation retreats and vegetarian cooking classes throughout North America and Europe. He is the author of several bestselling cookbooks, including The Tassajara Bread Book, and the editor of Not Always So, a book of lectures by Shunryu Suzuki Roshi. 

He is the subject of the critically acclaimed 2007 documentary film How to Cook Your Life. He resides in Fairfax, California. 
--This text refers to the paperback edition.


Editorial Reviews


“[An] affecting collection...The diversity of topics and brevity of each piece make this a good resource for daily meditations. Practicing Buddhists as well as general readers looking for suggestions for leading a more mindful life will find plenty of inspiration here.” ―Publishers Weekly

“These talks really capture the modesty and down-to-earth reality of Dogen and Suzuki Roshi’s, and now Ed Brown’s, Zen. I was deeply touched by them. One recipe after another for true practice, if you are ready to cook and be cooked. Enjoy!” ―Jon Kabat-Zinn, founder of MBSR and author of Falling Awake

“This is a book that will nourish all aspects of one's life. Smart, sharp, deep, like a good meal, the wisdom that Ed Espe Brown offers us is a treasure for all time. And it makes Zen digestible, even delicious!” ―Roshi Joan Halifax, abbot of Upaya Zen Center and author of Standing at the Edge

“Suzuki Roshi once said, ‘The most important point is to find out what is the most important point.’ After a lifetime of practice inspired by his teacher, Suzuki Roshi, Ed Brown has discovered that the most important point is love and acceptance. No one expresses this most important point better than Ed. His simple, soulful, honest talks will melt your heart.” ―Norman Fischer, poet, Zen priest, and author of Experience: Thinking, Writing, Language, and Religion

“Ed and Danny, two master chefs, have prepared a simple and elegant literary feast―with Tassajara magic for its background flavor. Humor and well-chosen poems add juice to dish after dish. The Most Important Point does not shy away from relating raw personal experiences with warmth and compassion. I have no doubt that many readers will find this book, as I have found it page after page, irresistible.” ―Brother David Steindl-Rast, Benedictine monk, author of Gratefulness, the Heart of Prayer: An Approach to Life in Fullness and May Cause Happiness: A Gratitude Journal, and cofounder of gratefulness.org

“Like the best teaching in any spiritual tradition, The Most Important Point speaks to you just where you are. If you’re new to Zen, this book is for you. If you’ve been practicing a long time, this book is also for you. It is filled with the wisdom of a lifetime.” ―Ruth Ozeki, author of A Tale for the Time Being and The Face

“No matter what you think you know about Zen, Ed Brown may know more. He certainly prepares his wisdom like a meal: pungent, saturated with taste, leaving very little to discard. He makes it look easy. I couldn’t put this book down. It made me feel like a beginner all over again . . . after 45 years.” ―Hosho Peter Coyote, author and Zen priest

“Brilliant, humorous, and heartwarming.” ―Vanja Palmers, Zen teacher, founder of Felsentor Meditation Center--This text refers to the paperback edition.

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#711 in Zen Buddhism (Kindle Store)
#1,215 in Zen Philosophy (Books)Customer Reviews:
4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 43 ratings


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Shinshu Roberts

5.0 out of 5 stars This Book Speaks to the HeartReviewed in the United States on April 16, 2019
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Edward Brown taps deeply into the heart of our life and Zen practice as a antidote to self doubt. Along the way this encouraging book gives us unique and insightful observations about impermanence and other well-trod Zen topics. I found these insights to be gems scattered along the path of Brown's Dharma. He is a true student of Shunryu Suzuki Roshi's teachings. You will be happy you read this book. Rev. Shinshu Roberts, Ocean Gate Zen Center, Capitola, CA

5 people found this helpful
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RA

5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful encouragement for these timesReviewed in the United States on March 24, 2020
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Speaks to the heart, which is sometimes painful, but I am often filled with courage and hope at the end of a chapter. This is a keeper that will often be returned to.
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JL

5.0 out of 5 stars Edward Espe Brown at his bestReviewed in the United States on April 12, 2019
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Edward’s best book.
The Most Important Point offers well edited doses of happiness, taken from years worth of Edward’s best lectures.
His ability to hold both the heartbreak and the joy comes through well in print, as does his humor. This is a treasure chest of work.

6 people found this helpful
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Zork

2.0 out of 5 stars About Edward Espe Brown by Edward Espe BrownReviewed in the United States on March 10, 2020
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A lot of person content, with some poetry and recipes. Some reminiscences about Suzuki, Katagiri, Tassajara, etc.
HIgh point about Zen was his adaptation of morning zazen to incorporate sleeping late and sipping coffee during the sit.
Overall, boring. Recommended only for those interested in Edward Espe Brown.

One person found this helpful
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Enthusiastic Enthusiast

5.0 out of 5 stars Delicious Nuggets of WisdomReviewed in the United States on January 7, 2021

So good (should get 11 stars, but 5 = max).
Excellent lessons, in digestible chapters with culinary tips to simmer love and share, with noble intent. Also, good techniques to temper the pressures and frustrations of orchestrating a meal for your family, whatever that means to you.
The Chapter called, "In Search of the Perfect Biscuit" should be required reading for perfectionists and anyone clinging to memories of the good olde daze.

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Belinda
5.0 out of 5 stars Perfect!Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 29, 2021
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Kat
5.0 out of 5 stars Love anything written by Edward Brown.Reviewed in Canada on July 11, 2019
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Fantastic read as always by this author - Edward Brown.
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
J
April 11, 2019
I loved this book!
The Most Important Point contains 30 years of Edward's best lectures. I couldn't put it down and had to stop myself so that I could savor it longer.
Edward can equally hold the heartbreak and humor in life, and by example encourages us all to be our best by being ourselves.
This is one to read again and again, in the same spirit as “Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind” and “Not Always So”.

2 likes

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Alicia Randolph-Lucchesi
Author 
3 books

January 10, 2021
What a beautiful book to read, especially during the new year or challenging times.

I’ve followed his teachings for years, starting with The Tassajara Complete Cookbook. When I went down the Zen Buddhism rabbit hole recently, he was there again. So, I added this book to my wish list and received it as a Christmas present. I’ve made notes in the book and a journal; this is a book you reference over and over again.

It’s refreshing to hear the struggles of “being zen” in our Western world... the struggles of a white guy in California, doing the best he can, studying a foreign culture, studying with some of the best teachers. His humility is endearing—it makes it easy to fall deeper in love with Zen Buddhism.

Our western culture is in dire need of many of the influences and philosophies of Eastern cultures. Whether this is your preferred practice or not, this sect of Buddhism offers basic tools for survival in our chaotic, collapsing western culture. He makes the information and concepts palatable and easy to digest (pun intended). I think he bridges the gap between eastern and western philosophies, and gives practical ways to follow a more peaceful, grateful, mindful life.

I look forward to reading more in his collection of teachings!

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Eric Hannemann
17 reviews
1 follower

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November 21, 2022
I’ve come back to this book a couple of times over the last few years. These teachings have touched me in ways that I always knew intellectually, but never really felt on the practical level of daily living.

From learning to offer only what you have to offer, dismissing the opinions of what others have about you, slow down and experience each present moment, and not struggling with gravitating toward pleasant things and deny unpleasant experiences; I’ve come to find a place inside me that outwardly expresses a sense of peace in how I meet the world.

“The Most Important Point” by Edward Espe Brown, will do that to you. You’ll discover the most important point.

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Ruby Thomas
14 reviews

October 3, 2019
"This joy is not dependent on any particular object. It's not dependent on you controlling things, not having anger, not having sadness. These are all gifts that you could receive and be with and appreciate - gifts you could enjoy. This elicits sukha, or ease, because you don't have to manipulate and control and chase after something you enjoy. It's already here. It's your own capacity to connect and be with and receive the gifts of each moment."

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Marci
184 reviews
5 followers

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September 8, 2022
I think Ed Espe Brown might have been my first introduction to Buddhism in general. I remember reading the philosophical bits in the Tassajara Bread Book as a young teen and understanding that they were telling me something very important.

All of which is to say that I bought this book expecting it to be comfortable, and maybe not challenging. And, while I will admit it was pretty comfortable, it was also at times appropriately challenging.

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Jason Dobbie
1 review

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March 6, 2023
Loved this book! It found me at the perfect time in my life! I am also a chef so the cooking aspects of the book were a pleasant surprise. I am very grateful to have read this book and it has helped me with my own meditation practice in many ways ❤️.
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Arno Ilic
50 reviews

May 31, 2022
It is a must-read for everyone, especially those that take their life far too seriously. It is a book for all that look for spiritual meaning in all the wrong places. Ed will set you straight.
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

Buddhist Christianity: A Passionate Openness: Thompson, Ross: 9781846943362: Amazon.com: Books

Buddhist Christianity: A Passionate Openness: Thompson, Ross: 9781846943362: Amazon.com: Books


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Buddhist Christianity: A Passionate Openness Paperback – August 16, 2010
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It is possible to be a Christian Buddhist in the context of a universal belief that sits fairly lightly on both traditions. Ross Thompson takes especially seriously the aspects of each faith that seem incompatible with the other, no God and no soul in Buddhism, for example, and the need for grace and the historical atonement on the cross in Christianity. Buddhist Christianity can be no bland blend of the tamer aspects of both faiths, but must result from a wrestling of the seeming incompatibles, allowing each faith to shake the other to its very foundations. The author traces his personal journey through which his need for both faiths became painfully apparent. He explores the Buddha and Jesus through their teachings and the varied communities that flow from them, investigating their different understandings of suffering and wrong, self and liberation, meditation and prayer, cosmology and God or not? He concludes with a bold commitment to both faiths.
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oliver

5.0 out of 5 stars I loved itReviewed in the United States on June 5, 2014
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Being a Christian who has always been intrigued with The Buddhist philosophies and principles. I bought this book, read it, contemplated it, and am pleased that I did. I now believe that if Siddhartha ever came back into our world, it was as Christ, to teach an easier path.

3 people found this helpful


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Cynthia Nichols

5.0 out of 5 stars Clear, potent, terrific writingReviewed in the United States on April 6, 2013
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For anyone who finds vital meaning in both Christianity and Buddhism, anyone interested in intelligent ways to reconcile their differences while foregrounding their real affinities, this is a great read. Not for fundamentalists--Thompson's understanding of Christianity is more from the mystical and nonliteral traditions.

5 people found this helpful


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warlock

5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in the United States on January 1, 2018
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this book got me back on my first path--bhuddism

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Hayo B.E.D. Krombach
1.0 out of 5 stars Title and content are different and do not match.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 18, 2020
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I received a book today with the title 'Buddhist Christianity: A Passionate Openness', by Ross Thompson. This title I had ordered. However, inside the cover is another book with the title 'Cromwell was Framed: Ireland 1649'. It is a different book, which I hadn't ordered from you.

Please provide me with a new book where the text matches the title: Buddhist Christianity.... I request this new item without incurring further costs or having to return the useless one I got today.

I am sure there are more of these misprinted copies.

I hope Amazon can agree to this.

Best,

Hayo B.E.D. Krombach
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Ray V
3.0 out of 5 stars Informative and Thought-provokingReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 7, 2012
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This is a personal account of the author's spiritual pilgrimage. I liked his thoughts about the basic identity of the spiritual heart of both faiths. I found parts of it tedious, mainly because I am not very interested in deep philosophical theology either of the Buddhist or of the Christian variety. However, I found myself warming to the more emotional and instinctive parts, and also learning a bit more about Buddhism.

2 people found this helpfulReport

Ray
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting perspectiveReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 3, 2013
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This is a very interesting book, especially being written by a CofE clergyman. It is such a complex subject, that it is always good to have perceptions challenged, and to look at the issues from a different viewpoint, so I found it very valuable, even if I did find that there are a number of non sequiturs in parts of the book. It is also very readable, so I would recommend it to anyone who is even mildly interested in the subject

3 people found this helpfulReport

Damian Dudkiewicz
4.0 out of 5 stars Four StarsReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 23, 2016
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Great book
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Mysticism, Christian and Buddhist by Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki - Ebook | Scribd

Mysticism, Christian and Buddhist by Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki - Ebook | Scribd


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Mysticism, Christian and Buddhist


By Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki
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In the first four essays in this collection, D. T. Suzuki reads Meister Eckhart with the eye of a master, pointing out where his understanding deeply coincides with that of Zen Buddhism. Next, he takes on a subject Christians often find difficult, the question of transmigration or reincarnation. Suzuki then compares the dimensionality of the crucifixion with that of enlightenment. In the later essays, Suzuki moves on to the Pure Land tradition of Buddhism, and in particular to the works of Rennyo (1415-1499) and the poetry of Asahara Saichi (1850-1932), for which he provides a rare translation.
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Perennial Wisdom for the Spiritually Independent: Sacred TeachingsAnnotated & Explained (SkyLight Illuminations) - Richard Rohr | 9781594735158 | Amazon.com.au | Books

Perennial Wisdom for the Spiritually Independent: Sacred TeachingsAnnotated & Explained (SkyLight Illuminations) - Richard Rohr | 9781594735158 | Amazon.com.au | Books


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Perennial Wisdom for the Spiritually Independent: Sacred TeachingsAnnotated & Explained (SkyLight Illuminations) Paperback – Illustrated, 1 September 2013
by Richard Rohr (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars 105 ratings
Part of: SkyLight Illuminations (52 books)



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The spiritual teachings of many faith traditions can help you step beyond the limits of any one tradition to the reality that can't be named.

The fastest growing spiritual movement in the United States today is that of the religiously unaffiliated. These spiritual seekers make up 20 percent of the adult American population; they are the spiritual equivalent of political independents. Refusing to limit themselves to one religion or another, these seekers without borders are open to wisdom wherever it can be found.

This is a "bible" for this vast and growing social movement. It weaves sacred texts and teachings from the world s major religions Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and more into a coherent exploration of the five core questions at the heart of every religion s search:

Who am I? Where did I come from? Where am I going? How shall I live? Why?

It couples these sacred teachings with modern commentary designed to help readers use these texts in their daily lives. It also provides the basics of spiritual mentor Eknath Easwaran s Passage Meditation to help you internalize the texts that articulate your deepest insights and values.
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ISBN-10

1594735158
ISBN-13

978-1594735158
Edition

1st
Publisher

Jewish Lights Publishing
Publication date

1 September 2013
Part of series

SkyLight Illuminations










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Review


"Even the spiritually independent can use a wise pastor, and Rami Shapiro steps into this role admirably, with his inimitable combination of wit, irony, honesty and luminous mystical understanding. The perfect guide for navigating the deep seas of perennial wisdom!"
Cynthia Bourgeault, author, The Wisdom Way of Knowing, The Meaning of Mary Magdalene, The Wisdom Jesus and The Holy Trinity and the Law of Three



"Do not read this book, unless, that is, you want insight into life's biggest questions.... This book is the fruit of the author's own search for meaning and will bear fruit for any reader who approaches it, and life, with sacred sincerity."
Tom Stella, author, Finding God Beyond Religion: A Guide for Skeptics, Agnostics & Unorthodox Believers Inside & Outside the Church

"Marvelous ... it will change your life. Sufis say that once the Blush of the Beloved graces you, there is no going back to being a green apple."
Imam Jamal Rahman, author, The Spiritual Gems of Islam: Insights & Practices from the Qur'an, Hadith, Rumi & Muslim Teaching Stories to Enlighten the Heart & Mind

"Wise ... I want all my friends to read and savor this book!"
Gordon Peerman, Episcopal priest and psychotherapist; author, Blessed Relief: What Christians Can Learn from Buddhists about Suffering

A deep mine filled with jewels of wisdom, each and every one radiant with light. When seen with our hearts, these jewels blaze the light of truth into the darkness of our limited understanding. A wonder-full offering.
Krishna Das, internationally known chant artist--Editorial Reviews



We never liked the terms "spiritual but not religious" (SBNRs) or "nones" for people who describe themselves as not being affiliated with a religion. The negativity built into those terms make them inappropriate in this age of pluralism and multifaith activity. When we talked to Rami Shapiro, one of the most creative, eclectic, and witty spiritual teachers of our time, we were pleased to hear him refer to the spiritual seekers who now comprise 20 percent of the American population as "spiritually independent" individuals.

This term brings to mind political independents, people who find good ideas and policies in different political parties but choose not to join one in particular. They are less interested in where ideas come from than in how they contribute to creating the world they want to see. Similarly, Shapiro describes the spiritually independent as "people who share the same existential questions as almost every other human being but do not confine their search for answers to any one religion." After years of study and writing on all the world's religions, this teacher has identified five core questions which can serve as a starting point for these "seekers without borders" and others to explore the wisdom of the ages:

1. Who am I?
2. Where did I come from?
3. Where am I going?
4. How shall I live?
5. Why?

We are grateful to SkyLight Paths for publishing this timely paperback book in its Illuminations Series and for encouraging our recent E-Course "The Way of the Spiritually Independent with Rabbi Rami." It a perfect resource for our times when there are more materials available for those on a spiritual journey than ever before and people are turning to a wide variety of sources for wisdom and inspiration. Shapiro shares sacred texts and passages which fall under the umbrella of "perennial wisdom." Here you will find material from such diverse sources as Talmud scholars, the Desert Fathers, Lao Tzu, Meister Eckhart, Kabir, Ramakrishna, Howard Thurman, and many others. On facing pages, Shapiro adds his own commentaries for each text, relating it to traditional teachings and modern applications.

Shapiro has found Eknath Easwaran's "Passage Meditation" to be a practical and profound way of making these texts and teachings your own by memorizing, repeating, and contemplating them. Here are a few of the central points of perennial wisdom, according to Shapiro:

The Oneness of God
The multiplicity of Creation
Everything as a manifestation of the Source
God as the Whole and the Part
The wonder and beauty of your True Self
The universe as your Body
The mystery of the Ancient One and the mysteries of humans
Interdependence
The charge to live courageously; practice peace, compassion, and justice; and be fearless in the face of death.--(By Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat Spirituality and Practice 2013-10-23)
About the Author


Rami Shapiro, a renowned teacher of spirituality across faith traditions, is an award-winning storyteller, poet and essayist. He is author of The Sacred Art of Lovingkindness: Preparing to Practice, Recovery The Sacred Art: The Twelve Steps as Spiritual Practice and The Divine Feminine in Biblical Wisdom Literature: Selections Annotated & Explained (all SkyLight Paths), among other books.

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Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Jewish Lights Publishing; 1st edition (1 September 2013)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1594735158

The World Wisdom Bible: A New Testament for a Global Spirituality - Shapiro, Rabbi Rami | 9781594736360 | Amazon.com.au | Books

The World Wisdom Bible: A New Testament for a Global Spirituality - Shapiro, Rabbi Rami | 9781594736360 | Amazon.com.au | Books

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The World Wisdom Bible: A New Testament for a Global Spirituality Paperback – 21 February 2017
by Rabbi Rami Shapiro (Editor)
4.4 out of 5 stars 65 ratings


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A groundbreaking spiritual conversation that invites you to step beyond the limits of any one faith into a global spirituality. The World Wisdom Bible is a global spiritual conversation about the nature of life and how best to live it. Drawing on ancient and timeless texts from Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, Confucianism, and Taoism, this compendium of sacred texts juxtaposes seemingly divergent teachings to create a spiritual collage of wisdom that crosses religious boundaries, and invites the reader to step beyond the limits of any one faith into a global spirituality. Organized by themes-The Absolute, Justice, Wisdom, Compassion, Spiritual Practice, Ethical Living, and more-The World Wisdom Bible is more than an anthology of diverse teachings; it is a new scripture for those who describe themselves as spiritual independents, spiritual but not religious, and nones. Where conventional Bibles and scriptures speak to believers of one religion or another, The World Wisdom Bible speaks to seekers of every faith and none.
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1594736367
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978-1594736360
Edition

New
Publisher

Turner
Publication date

21 February 2017
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"In this beautiful book, Rabbi Rami invites us to step outside of ourselves to taste the truth as understood by the great religious traditions."--Rabbi Ellen Bernstein, author of Splendor of Creation, and founder of Shomrei Adamah, Keepers of the Earth

"This book is a treasure. Whatever your spiritual path, The World Wisdom Bible will give you a deeper knowing of the Truth that weaves through all existence."--Rabbi Stephen Booth-Nadav, Director, Wisdom House Denver: A Center for Multifaith Engagement and Spiritual Inquiry

"The World Wisdom Bible is a testament of the internal pilgrimage of souls down the ages and around the globe. Here, we too can find our soul's yearnings mirrored, encouraged, and consoled. It is an invaluable reference for travelers, a companion for those on the way."--Sr. Jo-Ann Iannotti, OP, Art and Spirituality Director, Wisdom House Retreat and Conference Center

"The World Wisdom Bible is a treasure whose time has come. Bless you for bringing it into being."--Rev. Barbara Brown Taylor, author of Leaving Church and Holy Envy (forthcoming)

"The World Wisdom Bible touches the soul and mind of the spiritual seeker who yearns to move beyond doctrine into the grandeur of divine space."--Sister Rosemarie Greco, DW, Executive Director Wisdom House Retreat and Conference Center

The World Wisdom Bible is a multicolored tapestry woven from the vibrant threads of the world's spiritual traditions helping us to find universal meaning to guide our lives."--Ed Bastian, author of Living Fully Dying Well and InterSpiritual Meditation
About the Author


Rami Shapiro, a renowned teacher of spirituality across faith traditions, is an award-winning storyteller, poet and essayist. He is author of The Sacred Art of Lovingkindness: Preparing to Practice, Recovery--The Sacred Art: The Twelve Steps as Spiritual Practice and The Divine Feminine in Biblical Wisdom Literature: Selections Annotated & Explained (all SkyLight Paths), among other books.

Rami Shapiro is available to speak on the following topics:Writing--The Sacred Art: Beyond the Page to Spiritual Practice
Stop Playing God: 12 Steps as Spiritual Practice
Biblical Wisdom for Post-biblical Times: An Exploration of Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and Job
The Sacred Art of Lovingkindness: Cultivating Compassion in Daily Life
Hasidic Wisdom: An Exploration of Hasidic Storytelling, Theology and Contemplative Practice
Saints and Sages: Biblical Prophets, Ancient Rabbis and the Building of a Just World



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Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Turner; New edition (21 February 2017)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 218 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1594736367
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1594736360
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 15.24 x 1.27 x 22.86 cmBest Sellers Rank: 76,480 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)8 in Comparative Religion Textbooks
9 in Christian Ecumenism
144 in Comparative ReligionCustomer Reviews:
4.4 out of 5 stars 65 ratings




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Shirley Martin
5.0 out of 5 stars Wise Buy!Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 5 August 2017
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This book was exactly what I was looking for and difficult to access so delighted to find it on Amazon. Good price and arrived promptly!
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Matthew Weiss
5.0 out of 5 stars Belief and acceptance in one volumeReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 28 June 2019
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Religion is based on belief and acceptance. Rami Shapiro has gathered excerpts of ancient writings for us to ponder; not to push an agenda. I applaud his talent. He has an ability to clearly present a variety of beliefs that are thousands of years old. This variety has some common elements that he enables us to see for ourselves. Try to accept his wisdom; there is too much rejection in the world today.

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Rick Petersen
5.0 out of 5 stars Religion without dogmaReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 12 December 2017
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I have traveled the world as an airline pilot for thirty years and am so excited to have found this inspiring bible. We need to accept all major religions as guides for learning spiritual values, compassion and love for all creation. I will be purchasing several bibles for relatives and friends. I have almost finished the book and will find it a very close companion in my journey for a richer more meaningful life.

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Beavo63
5.0 out of 5 stars A Must-ReadReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 1 July 2017
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I've become familiar with the wisdom of Rabbi Shapiro from a spirituality-oriented magazine. I'm glad I purchased this book. It's extremely well put together with a great deal of potential insight for all truth seekers. There's no emphasis on any particular religion... just a presentation of the 'wisdom' underlying all the major thought systems on man's origin and meaning. Well worth the cost!

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M. Bady
5.0 out of 5 stars Interspiritual scripture in one placeReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 8 June 2018
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I’ve been looking for a devotional that draws from all the worlds wisdom traditions for a very long time. I was thrilled to find this book. If you are dedicated to one religious path - then this book may not be for you. This bible is for those who expand and include all the ways God can be expressed and conceived. Thank you Rabbi Rami

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The Heart of Christianity: Rediscovering a Life of Faith by Marcus J. Borg | Goodreads

The Heart of Christianity: Rediscovering a Life of Faith by Marcus J. Borg | Goodreads


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The Heart of Christianity: Rediscovering a Life of Faith


Marcus J. Borg

4.10
4,816 ratings316 reviews

In The Heart of Christianity, world-renowned Jesus scholar and author of the bestseller Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time argues that the essential ingredients of a Christian life—faith, being born again, the kingdom of God, the gospel of love—are as vitally important today as they have always been, even during this time of conflict and change in the church.

Borg wants to show us, as today's thinking Christians, how to discover a life of faith by reconceptualizing familiar beliefs. Being born again, for example, has nothing to do with fundamentalism, but is a call to radical personal transformation. Talking about the kingdom of God does not mean that you are fighting against secularism, but that you have committed your life to the divine values of justice and love. And living the true Christian way is essentially about opening one's heart—to God, and to others. Above all else, Borg believes with passion and conviction that living the Christian life still makes sense.
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GenresReligionTheologySpiritualityNonfictionChristianityChristianFaith
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234 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2003
Original title
The Heart of Christianity: Rediscovering a Life of Faith



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Format
234 pages, Paperback

Published
July 21, 2015 by HarperOne

Language
English




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About the author


Marcus J. Borg56 books324 followers

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Borg was born into a Lutheran family of Swedish and Norwegian descent, the youngest of four children. He grew up in the 1940s in North Dakota and attended Concordia College, Moorhead, a small liberal arts school in Moorhead, Minnesota. While at Moorhead he was a columnist for the school paper and held forth as a conservative. After a close reading of the Book of Amos and its overt message of social equality he immediately began writing with an increasingly liberal stance and was eventually invited to discontinue writing his articles due to his new-found liberalism. He did graduate work at Union Theological Seminary and obtained masters and DPhil degrees at Oxford under G. B. Caird. Anglican bishop N.T. Wright had studied under the same professor and many years later Borg and Wright were to share in co-authoring The Meaning of Jesus: Two Visions, an amicable study in contrast. Following a period of religious questioning in his mid-thirties, and numinous experiences similar to those described by Rudolf Otto, Borg became active in the Episcopal Church, in which his wife, the Reverend Canon Marianne Wells-Borg, serves as a priest and directs a spiritual development program at the Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, Portland, Oregon. On May 31, 2009, Borg was installed as the first canon theologian at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral.

Marcus J. Borg is Canon Theologian at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral in Portland, OR. Internationally known in both academic and church circles as a biblical and Jesus scholar, he was Hundere Chair of Religion and Culture in the Philosophy Department at Oregon State University until his retirement in 2007.

Described by The New York Times as "a leading figure in his generation of Jesus scholars," he has appeared on NBC's "Today Show" and “Dateline,” PBS's "Newshour," ABC’s “Evening News” and “Prime Time” with Peter Jennings, NPR’s “Fresh Air” with Terry Gross, and several National Geographic programs. A Fellow of the Jesus Seminar, he has been national chair of the Historical Jesus Section of the Society of Biblical Literature and co-chair of its International New Testament Program Committee, and is past president of the Anglican Association of Biblical Scholars. His work has been translated into eleven languages: German, Dutch, Korean, Japanese, Chinese, Indonesian, Italian, Spanish, Portugese, Russian, and French. His doctor's degree is from Oxford University, and he has lectured widely overseas (England, Scotland, Austria, Germany, Belgium, Hungary, Israel and South Africa) and in North America, including the Chautauqua and Smithsonian Institutions.
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Ratings & Reviews

My Review

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4.10


Caroline
503 reviews564 followers

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June 22, 2019
This is a wonderful book for anyone wanting to explore what is termed 'progressive Christianity'....a coming together of Christian values and beliefs, and 21st century ideas. Borg, who died in 2015, was a New Testament scholar and theologian. He also held the post of Professor of Religion and Culture at Oregon State University - and this book very much reflects this. He makes it clear that he respects the gamut of world religions. They are all just different ways of trying to find a path to that ground of our being that we choose to call God, Allah, Yahweh or whatever. We are nevertheless all products of our cultures - and we therefore usually choose to worship within our own traditions - they are often the ones that feel most comfortable.

So many things that he has written about in this book have tallied with my own experiences in recent months, and he has really helped me make sense of my journey into Christianity (and for me it was such a very alien concept to begin with!) I needed help, and people like Borg have been invaluable....perhaps Borg more than anyone else.

Even though I don't agree with all his ideas, he has proved to be an invaluable guide and mentor. I particularly like his generous spirit and inclusiveness.

I will end with a few notes I took, which give a flavour of his ideas...


Faith as VISIO

This means faith as a way of seeing 'what is'.

1. We can see reality as hostile. In this scenario God is the one who is going to punish us, unless we offer the right sacrifices, behave the right way and believe the right things. If we see reality this way we will respond to life defensively.

2. We can see reality as indifferent. This viewpoint presumes that "what is" is indifferent to human purposes and ends. This is the most popular modern secular viewpoint.

3. We can see "what is" and view it as life-giving and nourishing. It has bought everything that is into existence. It sustains our lives. It is filled with wonder and beauty, even if sometimes a terrible beauty. To use a traditional theological term, this is seeing reality as gracious. This viewpoint leads to radical trust. It liberates us from anxiety and self-preoccupation. It leads to the 'self-forgetfulness' of faith. It leads to the kind of life we see in Jesus and the saints. Or in the words of Paul, it leads to a life marked by freedom, joy, peace and love.

The Easter story

Jesus is a figure of the present as well as the past. He continued to be experienced by his first followers after his death. He continues to be experienced today. Jesus lives. Jesus is Lord. He has been raised to God's right hand, where he is one with God. For some Christians the historical factuality of the Easter stories matters greatly, but I am 'indifferent' to things like...
- Was the tomb really empty?
- Was his corpse transformed?
- Did he really appear to his disciples in a visible way?

The above may all be metaphors. I don't believe that the Bible is literally true. I believe it is really true.

God

The question "Is God real?" is really the question "Is there more?" (More than just the material world.) My own answer is an emphatic "Yes".

Reasons for believing in God

1. The collective witness and wisdom of the world's religions.

2. People throughout history and across cultures have had experiences that overwhelmingly illustrate to them that these are experiences of the sacred. The experiential base of religion is very strong and for me it is the most persuasive ground.

3. Postmodern science - especially physics.

The above isn't proof as such, but they call into question the adequacy of the modern world view.

God is seen in two ways in history...............

1. Supernatural theism

God is person-like
God is in heaven, beyond the universe
He occasionally intervenes in the world, especially in response to prayer.

Emphasis on the transcendence of God

God is seen as a particular existing being.

2. Pantheism

God is an encompassing spirit of everything.

We live in God, move in God, we have our being in God.

He is right here, all around us, but he is also MORE than right here.

God is both transcendent and immanent.

It allows both the transcendence and the presence of God

God is 'what is', or ' the ultimate reality' or 'the ground of being'.

~~~~~~~

Rather than speaking of divine INTERVENTION, pantheism speaks of divine INTENTION and divine INTERACTION. God is in/with/under everything. A presence beneath and within our everyday lives.

In these circumstances, what happens to intercessory prayer - our prayers for help, for ourselves and others? Pantheism doesn't deny the efficacy of such prayer. Its framework allows for prayers to have effects, including prayers for healing. It doesn't rule out extraordinary events.

But it refuses to see efficacious prayer or extraordinary events as the result of divine intervention. If God intervenes sometimes, how does one account for the non-interventions? Especially given all the horrible things that happen. And so Pantheism rejects the language of divine interventions.

Many people don't know about the option of pantheism. Some religious thinkers talk about the end of theism, but I disagree with this. I think we should talk about the end of "supernatural theism".

Pantheism is an alternative form of theism. It is just as Biblical as supernatural theism.


We do not see Jesus's purpose as dying for the sins of the world.

His purpose was to be a healer and teacher of wisdom. His death was the consequences of the radical things he was doing. Like Gandhi or Martin Luther....

The concept that rather he died for our sins is very strange. It implies a limitation on God's power to forgive, or that he can only forgive if adequate sacrifice is made.

But in another light it is rather a metaphor for amazing grace. Radical grace.




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Mary
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May 25, 2008
This really is an amazing book. Borg offers a vision of Christianity that doesn't require us to check our intellect at the door and that rejects the Christian exclusivism that so many of us find distasteful and irrelevant today. Borg offers a way of seeing the Bible, Jesus, and Christian practices that transcends the literal-factual interpretation that most people in my demographic can't swallow. My favorite thing about this book is Borg's rejection of the question, "Did it really happen?" Was Jesus really born of a virgin? Did he really rise from the dead on the third day? Did he really heal the sick and restore sight to the blind? Borg's answer to this question is, "I have no idea if it really happened, but I know that it is profoundly true." This more-than-literal interpretation of the Bible takes it out of the realm of magical hocus-pocus and gives it tranformative relevance in our context. Borg also outlines the foundational elements and practices of a Christian life, and provides a compelling argument for a passionate pursuit of social justice as an essential component of the Christian way.

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Nate
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May 27, 2008
Interesting. I guess liberal Jesus-seminar-types do have faith after all....

I don't necessarily agree with everything, but I can see that Borg is really trying to forge a way of Christian living based on the historic faith. He is especially helpful in understanding that the biblical meaning of "belief" is not simply mental assent. It's not a checklist of right doctrines, but living faithfully, trusting God through Christ in the power of the Holy Spirit.

I do disagree with some stuff, which is why I'm not a liberal.

For example:

1) I don't think the WHOLE Bible is meant to be taken metaphorically and stripped of its literal meaning. Sure, there are hugely important metaphorical meanings, but that doesn't mean that they have to be seen as unfactual. I understand the corrective of only focusing on literalistic proof-texted facts, but I think Borg goes overboard.

2) The Resurrection absolutely HAD to happen. It's not possible for us to be Christians to day if Jesus had not risen from the dead. Don't try to skirt around this, Marcus! I don't like how he talks about modern people who "can't believe" in things like miracles and the resurrection. I'm sorry, but you can, too.

3) This whole preoccupation with the "pre-Easter Jesus" over against the "post-Easter Jesus". Sure, doctrine took on a much fuller shape in the next 3-400 years of the church's history about what the incarnation meant and what the trinity was all about, but that doesn't mean that Jesus' bones are still in some ossuary in Palestine waiting to be discovered by James Cameron! "I'm King of the World!!!". Nevermind........


Overall, even though Borg has some glaring blind spots in his theology, he still manages to forge a way of living that looks an awful lot like "Love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind, and strength; and love your neighbor as yourself". I'm still grateful for many of his insights.

It's good not to just read stuff you agree with all the time. It makes you remember there's a whole world of ideas out there.....
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Katy
77 reviews21 followers

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January 26, 2013
Four years ago I read Borg's "Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time," and the result was destructive. I loved and hated the book, not because of Borg but because I felt the Christian church had betrayed me. Borg's language about Jesus rang true--true to my thoughts and meditations, true to the reality I experienced, and true to history. But his language also complicated and even contradicted most Christian teachings I had encountered throughout my young life. "Meeting Jesus Again for the FIrst Time" freed me with new insights, but I also left its pages feeling confused and filled with rage.

The past four years have felt like exile. I had "The Heart of Christianity" on my bookshelf all these years, and despite being told it would "reconstruct" the "deconstructing" Borg did in "Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time," I couldn't pull off the read. I tried. Multiple times. But "now" was different for some reason.

This was a quietly dramatic reading event for me. The book is an affirmation of my faith. Borg's writing isn't complicated nor sophisticated, but he very directly and with clarity of purpose portrays Christianity as the religion I've always hoped it could be. I finished this book with a lighter heart, a commitment to the tradition and practices I cherish, and an excitement for the journey ahead.
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Linda
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August 9, 2011
I loved this book. Loved it. It may not appeal to people who are pretty content with their current understanding of Christianity, especially if it's very narrow or conservative understanding. But if you feel like Christianity has lost it's appeal (or that it never had much) I highly recommend this book. It made sense to me on a very deep level. My reaction to almost everything I read was "this is what I've always thought myself, but could never really express well, even to myself."

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Sam
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January 4, 2017
I can't even begin to explain how bizarre it feels to me to have willingly read and now review a book of Christian theology, but, well, here I am. I was raised Protestant, but since about the age of eighteen have considered myself a pragmatic agnostic. I still do, actually, but have been... meandering my way back to wrestling directly with my upbringing for years.

There were many reasons why I stopped identifying as Christian, but broadly speaking, 1.) I felt that evangelical Christianity had so thoroughly monopolized the term "Christian" and made it synonymous with reactionary American politics that I could not, in good conscience, affiliate with any denomination, and 2.) There are a lot of pillars of Protestant theology that felt deeply intellectually dishonest to me, even at the age of thirteen. It's actually the latter that I have struggled with the most, to the point that I did not even know how to articulate my reservations until about five years ago when I read Karen Armstrong's "The Case for God" where she began by arguing (paraphrasing), "Religion is something you DO, not something you BELIEVE."

That was a revelation. Because the core tenant of Protestant theology is that Belief is really all that matters. Up until that point, in my mind, Belief (the intellectual assent to a proposition) WAS Religion. (Side Note: Armstrong and Borg both argue that conflating Belief and Faith with "assenting to a fact" or "empirical observation" is a product of Modernism, which I need to explore, because I do not think either articulates the history well enough.) I could not get over the insistence in the Lutheran and Methodist catechisms (I was indoctrinated with both) that you had to take everything in the scripture, as Borg puts it, as "literal-factual." Setting aside that first requirement that "You Must Accept This, in All of It's Contradictions and Absurdities, as Historical and Divinely Legal" made exploring religion, finally, accessible to me.

After reading a lot of Armstrong and western philosophy broadly, I finally felt willing to take another look at Christianity. And so I asked my former youth minister for recommendations, because he was the one who was most willing to engage with and address my adolescent questions directly and fairly, who recommended Marcus Borg.

Reading Borg's "The Heart of Christianity" was moving not so much because it was novel, but because I kept thinking, "Why did no one tell me this was a viable approach to Christianity? I have always felt this." In broad strokes, Borg presents Christianity as a philosophy of living; argues that the Bible should be understood metaphorically/historically; embraces and celebrates the diversity of religions as ways of accessing the transcendental and rejects Christian exclusivity; and affirms that the nature of reality is dualistic, composed both of the material and the Divine.

Borg makes his points better than I can. The endorsement I give is that, as someone who has been frequently accused of being a "Doubting Thomas", I am beginning to feel persuaded. Which is not to say doubt is a bad thing. The opposite, actually. To quote Leslie Hazelton, "The best of us are doubters." I'm not writing that to sound arrogant -- I do not think I would make "The Best of" list of anything. Pursuing Doubt leads to new insight and deeper understanding. It appreciates that the world is imperfect but assumes it can be made better. Doubt rejects and seeks, ultimately arriving at satisfactory conclusions while reserving the right to change and grow.

I am a Doubter and always will be. Because I believe in something "More" (to use Borg's term) that informs me every moment of this unpredictable existence called Life.
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Donald Powell
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November 19, 2021
A very inspiring look at Christianity. For such a short book it has a lot of meat. The author's view of Christianity is more open, loving, thoughtful and community based than the traditional perception. This is an honest, if at times a bit intellectual, but open, kind, and logical explanation of the faith. I challenge a bit of this book in my thought but am glad to be exposed to his ideas, his perspectives and his urging me to learn, grow and think.
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Roben
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January 1, 2013
I'm so glad I read this. Our new minister told me that this book was singularly inspiring.

The following are lines from The Heart of Christianity that I reread and treasure:

Of course, the earlier paradigm uses the language of God's grace and compassion and love, but its own internal logic turns being Christian into a life of requirement and rewards, thereby compromising the notion of grace. Indeed it nullifies grace, for grace that has condition attached is no longer grace.

The point is, there is no single right way of understanding Christianity and no single right way of being Christian.

You can believe all the right things and still be relatively unchanged.

To think we are primarily the product of our own individual effort is to ignore the web of relationships and circumstances that shape our lives.

Jesus avoided cities, with the exception of Jerusalem. He spoke in small towns, villages and the countryside. The elites heard of him, and a few of them were attracted to him and even supported him, but he spoke primarily to peasants.

And repentance in the New Testament has an additional nuance of meaning. The Greek roots of the word combine to mean "go beyond the mind that you have."

Loving God means paying attention to God and to what God loves.

Religious community and tradition put us in touch with the wisdom and beauty of the past. They are communities of memory.
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Andrea
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April 4, 2008
Ive seen this guy talk a few times, and read a number of his books. A Jesus scholar, really, and this is probably the one most important book in convincing me that following a "christian" faith, apart from connection to any particular religion, is still valuable to me. I dont know how to explain my complete lack of interest in the Bible as anything more than a literary/political work yet my continued membership in an Episcopalian church and my absolute spiritual hunger for the ritual of communion, prayer, and hymns. There is still a way to find a spiritual path to better wholeness, better peace, better generosity, and if you get the church as a whole out of the way, Jesus still embodies that (as does Buddha and probably lots of others I know less about).

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Sabrina
301 reviews10 followers

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March 4, 2019
Marcus J. Borg discusses the practice of Christianity in modern everyday life, drawing from plenty of sources (including the Bible obviously) and his own life. He spends part of the book arguing for his point of view in terms of viewing the Bible within its historical context, rather than as the literal word of God, while still regarding it as a sacred text. The rest of the book provides guidance on how to use that context to practice Christianity.
He’s primarily addressing Christians who don’t take the Bible literally about how the religion can fit into their 21st-century lives. You don’t need to do logical gymnastics to have a rewarding Christina life.
The notes provide an excellent reading list for further examination of modern ways of reading the Bible and living a Christian life.


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