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Pagan Christianity?: Exploring the Roots of Our Church Practices: Viola, Frank, Barna, George: 9781414364551: Amazon.com: Books

Pagan Christianity?: Exploring the Roots of Our Church Practices: Viola, Frank, Barna, George: 9781414364551: Amazon.com: Books

Pagan Christianity?: Exploring the Roots of Our Church Practices Paperback – February 1, 2012
by Frank Viola (Author), George Barna (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars    1,692 ratings


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Have you ever wondered why we Christians do what we do for church every Sunday morning? Why do we “dress up” for church? Why does the pastor preach a sermon each week? Why do we have pews, steeples, and choirs? This ground-breaking book, now in affordable softcover, makes an unsettling proposal: most of what Christians do in present-day churches is rooted, not in the New Testament, but in pagan culture and rituals developed long after the death of the apostles. Coauthors Frank Viola and George Barna support their thesis with compelling historical evidence and extensive footnotes that document the origins of modern Christian church practices. In the process, the authors uncover the problems that emerge when the church functions more like a business organization than the living organism it was created to be. As you reconsider Christ's revolutionary plan for his church―to be the head of a fully functioning body in which all believers play an active role―you'll be challenged to decide whether you can ever do church the same way again.
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From the Publisher
 
Howard Snyder Robert Banks Greg Boyd
 
Editorial Reviews
Review
This evocative title put Viola's expertise in church history on the grid. Viola teamed up with research heavy-weight George Barna to create a formidable, devastating, prophetically written tour de force on ecclesiology. From the jolting opening to the challenging ending, this is a bittersweet, compelling, and dramatic progression of historical and challenging content. Love it or lump it, you can't read it and remain settled. This book sparked a revolution that set the stage for Viola's other groundbreaking works, establishing him as a voice that couldn't be ignored. Pagan Christianity is a milestone of raw passion and energy.

Christian Book Reviews
From the Back Cover
Are we really doing church "by the Book"?

Why does the pastor preach a sermon at every service?
 
Why do church services seem so similar week after week?
 
Why does the congregation sit passively in pews?
 
Not sure? This book makes an unsettling proposal: Most of what present-day Christians do in church each Sunday is rooted, not in the New Testament, but in pagan culture and rituals developed long after the death of the apostles. 
 
Authors Frank Viola and George Barna support their thesis with compelling historical evidence and extensive footnotes that document the origins of our modern Christian church practices.

In the process, the authors uncover the problems that emerge when the church functions more like a business organization than the living organism it was created to be.
 
As you reconsider Christ's revolutionary plan for His church―to be the head of a fully functioning body in which all believers play an active role―you'll be challenged to decide whether you can ever do church the same way again.
 
Read more
Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ 1414364555
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Tyndale Momentum; Revised, Updated ed. edition (February 1, 2012)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
Customer Reviews: 4.5 out of 5 stars    1,692 ratings
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About the authors
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George Barna
'Follow' George Barna on Twitter at @George_Barna

'Like' George Barna on Facebook at www.facebook.com/georgebarnapollster

Barna is currently a professor at Arizona Christian University and Director of Research at the Cultural Research Center based at the university. His focus at ACU is worldview assessment and development, influential faith, and cultural transformation.

George also serves as the Senior Research Fellow for the Center for Biblical Worldview at the Family Research Council, Washington, D.C. He is engaged in conducting research and providing strategic input for FRC in various areas.

Barna has been the founder and leader of The Barna Group (1984-2009), Metaformation (2009 – present), and the American Culture and Faith Institute (2012-2018). Through those entities he has conducted groundbreaking research on worldview, cultural transformation, ministry applications, spiritual development, and politics. In addition to providing research and strategy for several hundred parachurch ministries, thousands of Christian churches, the U.S. military, and numerous non-profit and for-profit organizations, he has conducted polls and provided strategy input for four presidential candidates.

Barna has written or co-authored more than 50 books, mostly addressing cultural and religious trends, leadership, spiritual development, church dynamics, and cultural transformation. They include New York Times bestsellers and several award-winning books. His works have been translated into more than a dozen foreign languages.

His work is frequently cited as an authoritative source by the media and he has been named by various media as one of the nation’s most influential Christian leaders.

Barna is a frequent speaker at ministry conferences around the world, sharing insights from his various research projects. In addition to his current role at Arizona Christian University, he previously taught at several universities and seminaries. Barna was also the teaching pastor of a large, multi-ethnic church; pastor of a house church; an elder in four churches; and has helped to start several churches.

After graduating summa cum laude from Boston College, Barna earned two Master’s degrees from Rutgers University and received a doctorate from Dallas Baptist University.

George and his wife Nancy attended high school, college, and grad school together before marrying in 1978. They have three adopted daughters and three grandchildren, and currently live on the central California coast and in Phoenix, AZ. He enjoys reading novels, performing and listening to music, viewing fine art, rooting for the Yankees, experiencing the ocean, and playing with his grandchildren and dogs.

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Frank Viola
FRANK VIOLA author is a speaker, blogger, and bestselling author. Viola helps serious followers of Jesus know their Lord more deeply so they can experience real transformation and make a lasting impact. His blog - frankviola.org - is regularly ranked in the top 5 of all Christian blogs on the Web and his podcast - Christ is All - has ranked #1 in Canada and #2 in the USA on iTunes.

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Top reviews from the United States
Labarum
1.0 out of 5 stars Typically American
Reviewed in the United States on July 17, 2008
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The phenomenon of restorationism (a church body asserting its intentions to recreate the New Testament Church) is not a new one to American Evangelicalism. Generally initiated by those who have little or no understanding of the culture, history, and religious practices of those they wish to emulate, the temptation of a do-it-yourself ecclesiology (with the New Testament as their alleged guide) is irresistible for those feeling alienated by existing church practices.

The telltale signature of restorationist movements is to proclaim existing ecclesial structures to be hopelessly out of step with true Christianity. After all, if the Church needs to be restored, then one would assume something had gone terribly wrong else the entire project of restoration would be a colossal waste of time. Unlike reform movements, whose primary motivation is to pressure the existing Church to renew itself from within, the strategy for restorationists is to wipe the slate clean and imagine the Church could be restarted anew. The inevitable result is the affirmation of their own personal beliefs and practices covered by the authority of eisegetic interpretations of Scriptural passages devoid of any context apart from their own.

The latest installment of this characteristically American enterprise is now enshrined in Frank Viola and George Barna's Pagan Christianity?. Seeking to justify their own peculiarly postmodern American manifestation of what they believe to be "New Testament Christianity", they combine their own prejudices with such a staggering display of historical ignorance, that any informed reader is left shaking their heads at their garbled understanding of the Church's past. In their attacks on anything that smells of structure or authority, one can detect a sense of glee as they engage in their ill-informed attempts at iconoclasm.

Of course, the church that "emerges" from their deconstruction is remarkably like the sort of thing that would be hatched in the mind of a postmodern American with a disdain for hierarchy, tradition, and anything that might have been considered to be of enduring value prior to their own personal conversion. Their "analysis" is a mishmash of outdated secondary sources, out-of-context quotations, unsupported hypotheses, and personal prejudices amalgamated into an "any stick will do" style attack on historical Christianity. Even worse, on those occasions where legitimate experts on the field are cited (i.e., Dom Gregory Dix, Paul F. Bradshaw, Alexander Schmeman) their views are taken so out of context as to have them seemingly ally with the authors when in fact their views are quite the opposite.

Like other revisionists on both the left and right of the ecclesial spectrum, there is an overt removal of the New Testament Church from both the context of the Jewish practice that preceded it and the ecclesial practice that followed it. Once the Church is decontextualized, the inferred meanings of the texts of the New Testament are removed and new meanings assigned. In this sense, restorationists are best seen as sharing the deconstructionist methodology common to many postmodern revisionist thinkers.

Viola and Barna begin their argument with an assault on church buildings. Their concern is not any particular problem with architectural style or the lavishness of furnishings but over the very idea of buildings being used for the specialized purpose of Christian gatherings. While the reason given for this aversion to architectural utility is passages in the New Testament that state the early Christians met in each others homes, the hidden reason is likely that one of the authors has been involved for two decades in the "house church" movement and seems to have made an idol out of a situation that grew out of necessity, was not intended as representative of a command, and was not in fact even followed strictly at the time.

The fact is that the Book of Acts clearly state that the early Christians continued to worship in the Temple and the synagogues and largely carried on the established practices of Judaism. It is only where it came to the specifically Christian cultic practices among that they retreated to their homes - the only place available for them to freely express their faith in Christ - but there is no indication that it was ever intended as normative.

They go on in rapid fire succession to rattle off a series of complaints against church buildings with allegations of their history that have little or no historical support. Many things they claim were adopted from paganism were also present in the Biblical faith of the Jews that God commanded. It never occurs to the authors the same church they accuse of importing paganism is the one that was laying down its lives in martyrdom for its refusal to compromise with paganism.

Their claim that there were no special places of worship prior to Constantine also does not stand up to careful scrutiny. Yes, they often met in houses, but these "houses" were often the villas of wealthy members of the Church. It was common for expensive homes in the Roman era to have special rooms set aside for cultic purposes and these served as places of worship for the local Christian community. There were also theological schools in places like Alexandria and Antioch that developed (a point the authors acknowledge) and these likely also had places of worship associated with them. There have been numerous archaeological finds that have discovered pre-Constantinian Christian worship spaces that were obviously set apart for that purpose. The reason for having few specifically constructed church buildings was simply that Christianity was for much of the first few centuries a persecuted religion In times of severe persecution, the Christians often had to meet in total secrecy and places like the Catacombs in Rome and other secluded spots were employed. Once the persecution ended, such restrictions were abandoned. The authors make much of the grandeur of the basilicas built by Constantine, but fail to mention such notable places were pilgrimage sites and hardly the norm. In most of the Roman Empire, local churches would continue to be rather humble affairs.

The authors' biases are again on display as they go as far in their tirades as to claim Jesus had a negative view of the Temple. Forgetting that the construction of both Jewish temples were ordained by God, they completely distort the obvious meaning of the passage - a negative view of the Jewish authorities - and transfer the negative view to the Temple itself. Jesus referred to the Temple as His Father's House - it contained the very presence of God in the Holy of Holies - and, far from downplaying its significance, chased out the moneychangers for defiling it. The passages they do cite give Jesus' accusations against the Jewish leaders. His statements on the destruction of the Temple was not because the Temple was an evil but because they had rejected the very presence of God who stood before them.

The authors continually make the point that Jesus overthrew the existing Jewish structure and replaced it with a non-hierarchal, non-liturgical ekklesia. But the picture painted in the New Testament is entirely different. In Acts, it states the early Christians kept to the teachings of the Apostles, fellowship, the breaking of bread, and the prayers. In the context of the Judaism the early Christians practiced, there is definitely a hierarchy and liturgy implied in these words.

The "teaching of the Apostles" demonstrates that there were those in authority to teach the truths of the faith and authority implies hierarchy. This is bone out as the Apostles are sought out for all major decisions. When controversy erupted over Paul's mission to the Gentiles, the disagreement was brought before the Apostles and elders at Jerusalem who decided the issue in council. In his epistles, Paul makes a point that he too is an apostle and shares the same authority. Paul instructs Timothy to appoint elders in the churches; throughout the New Testament, the Apostles ordain others' ministries by the laying on of hands.

All of this should not be surprising - the early Christians did not live in an egalitarian society. Even before the Church, there is an implied hierarchy in the Gospels - Peter, James, and John form an inner circle among the twelve and every list of the twelve has Peter first and Judas last. Most importantly, there is a hierarchy within the triune God as the three persons relate to each other in hierarchal fashion. Thus, it is natural that Christ's body is also hierarchal and reflects an order.

The passages cited for their position have nothing to do with the structure of the Church. For example, they cite the worldly desires of some of the twelve who attempt political maneuvers and are rebuked - but the rebuke states nothing about the existence of hierarchy but only their worldly desires. It is quite clear that the authors have long ago came to their conclusions and now are "proof-texting" their answers with passages that have no real bearing on the subject.

The liturgical dimension of the early Christians can be seen in the phrases "the prayers" and "the breaking of bread". The prayers refer to the normal liturgical prayers of observant Jews but now given a Christian emphasis. These would develop over time into the Christian prayers of the divine office. The breaking of bread refers to the communion meal and was thought to reveal Christ to the believers (see the allusions to this in the story of the Road to Emmaus in Acts). The breaking of bread at a meal had long been a liturgical act at Jewish meals similar to our own praying grace. The Holy Communion was ordained by Christ as part of a liturgical meal celebrated by a people for whom the consumption of food followed liturgical rules. Considering that all Christian were at that point observant Jews (else the Council of Acts 15 would have been unnecessary), the thought they were somehow non-hierarchal or non-liturgical is merely an anachronistic application of postmodern American ideals on first century Near Eastern people.

Turning to the evolution of modern Protestant worship, Viola and Barna continue their pattern of misguided historical analysis. First, they infer the source of the Protestant worship was the medieval mass promulgated by Gregory the Great. Here they ignore that the Gregorian Mass was an amalgamation of elements from existing Roman and Franco-Germanic liturgies and these followed the basic pattern of liturgy outlined by earlier writers such as Hippolytus and Justin Martyr and going back to the Didache at the turn of the first century. The Didache itself follows a pattern taking elements of Jewish practice that date back to the Second Temple period. This is further verified by the practices within the Byzantine Churches whose liturgy developed separately but still maintained the early structure indicated by the early Christians. Even the Church of the East, stretching from Persia to China, followed a similar pattern in its own unique liturgy despite being essentially cut off from contact with the Roman Church.

The liturgical developments within Protestantism were, not surprisingly, a mixed bag - some good (the reintroduction of preaching to a key role) and some bad (the anti-sacramental nature of much of its worship) just as the developments in the medieval West had also been much of a mixed bag. Unfortunately, many of the liturgical reforms introduced by American Protestantism is far more reflective of American culture than the practice of the early Christians. Viola and Barna's project, like other restorationist attempts, always end up telling us far more about the participants than the early Church.

Yet it is not just the most formal elements of Christian worship that the authors wish to abandon - even so basic and obvious a part of the service as the sermon is found wanting. Here the authors blame it on rhetoricians and philosophers - an assertion so absurd that it would be funny were it not the fact that the naive will take this drivel seriously. Yes, philosophers and rhetoricians often spoke at length about topics - but so did rabbis and those in authority in any endeavor. The Apostles would preach in the synagogues or in public squares where they could communicate the Good News. They also would speak at length in specifically Christian gatherings where they could teach the truths of the faith to the Church. The authors credit Augustine and Chrysostom with making pulpit oratory part of the faith - and they certainly were wonderful preachers - but fail to mention the many great sermons (available in any collection of the ante-Nicene Church Fathers) of those who preceded them. They fail to accept that God can make use of the gifts He has bestowed that are offered to His service in love. Yes, the original twelve were largely a rather unsavory group but God had no problem making use of the obvious gifts of Paul and Luke who were clearly of a far different social strata.

As low as their opinions are of sermons, the authors think even worse of those who give them - particularly the authority attached to them. They ridiculously claim that there were no "official offices" with slots to fill, yet among the first things they did was choose a successor to replace the position of Judas in the twelve and even gave criteria for their nomination. The emergence of the office of bishop was, contrary to their claims, quite natural. As local church's reached points of self-sufficiency, they no longer needed to rely upon the evangelists or the church that had sponsored them. We see first the Church in Jerusalem having such leadership under James the Just and then both Antioch and Smyrna following under Ignatius and Polycarp. As more churches became established, the practice of episcopal leadership spread.

As mentioned earlier, the early Church had all their leadership ordained by the Apostles. We see this most clearly in Acts and in the letters of Paul. The imposition of hands was a long established practice within most cultures of the time in conferring leadership and this certainly was not lost on the early Christians. Unfortunately, this does not tickle the ears of today's trendy egalitarians and they need go to great lengths to try to make square pegs fit in round holes.

After some rather immature tirades against clerical garb and music ministries, the authors then turn their attention to the sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper. Their obvious biases show by claiming the early Church practiced believers' baptism. There is in fact no evidence of this - baptism was a long standing ritual practice in Judaism (John the Baptist did not invent it) and there were no such restrictions. There are passages in the New Testament where converts' entire families were baptized (presumably including small children) and Paul makes a connection between baptism and circumcision. The sacrament was the entry into the New Covenant with Christ and was open to believers and their children.

Since the early Church was growing primarily through conversion, it is natural that most early baptisms would be of adults. But you simply never hear of the children of early Christians baptized after some peculiarly American version of "being saved." They all claim to be Christians from their childhood. The only period where there was hesitation was due to some believing wrongly that there were great obstacles to salvation if they fell from the faith after being baptized and hence delayed it until close to death but this practice would be condemned.

The Lord's Supper/Communion/Eucharist was an outgrowth of Jesus' liturgical act on the night of His betrayal. The authors make much of the separation of the bread and cup from a full meal as menttioned in I Corinthians but fail to mention that Paul condemns them for their practices and replies with instructions that describe only the bread and cup. They consider the possibility that the separation was done to end abuses but then conclude it was incipient paganism. Their evidence for this: nothing. They just assume a twisted reading of the facts that concludes Christians who were willingly dying for Christ couldn't wait to be pagans. It is almost shocking to read the sheer arrogance of these two pseudohistorians who obviously not encountered the writings of the patristic Church firsthand but rely upon the inaccuracies of anti-Christian writers like Will Durant.

The reasons for later developments are quite clear if one uses the original sources and a little common sense. First of all, only the bread and cup are essential. Nothing else is mentioned in any account of the Last Supper. Then there is the implied connection with between the bread and cup and the Passover lamb. They also came to realize the connection in Hebrews as the central ritual of the priestly order of Melchizadek (a type of Christ who offered up a meal of bread and wine). The Church saw this was no mere dinner but that their sacrifice of bread and wine was being united to Christ's sacrifice on the Cross and that he was "revealed in the breaking of bread".

Of course all of this formal understanding and deep thinking about God's Holy Word is a bad idea and the authors proceed to list their complaints against every center of theological training in Church history from the great theological schools in Alexandria and Antioch to the monasteries to the medieval universities to their Protestant counterparts to the seminaries to the little Bible College down the road. Apparently, the Church would have been better off without them even though they preserved the Scriptures and kept alive the remains of Christian culture during times of great social upheaval.

Oddly enough, after giving us chapter upon chapter of some of the most horrid proof-texting ever put to print, the authors then complain about proof-texting! They also at the end introduce the idea that house churches are not always a good idea and some instruction is needed to lead them. But wait - doesn't such assistance imply something like the sort of stuff given in seminaries and doesn't the idea that some people are needed to train others institute a de facto hierarchy? Oh, and in case you are wondering where all this wonderful training is brought down to a practical level and who will be the trainers - you can get it in one of the authors' other books. One immediately is reminded of what Orwell wrote in Animal Farm: "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others."

It will be interesting to see what the future holds for the house church movement. Now that so much of the patristic Church is assigned to pagan beliefs, I suspect that the formulations of faith hashed out beginning at Nicea will be called into question. One can expect to see the house churches wrestling with the same heresies the patristic Church faced as new leaders decide the early Church actually believed something else entirely. The refashioning of old heresies in new wineskins is yet another characteristic of restorationist movements.

The sort of nonsense we see in Pagan Christianity is nothing new. Hosts of restorationist movements in the past have mounted similar endeavors - each from their own uninformed perspective. While they all had their unique complaints, all had in common the elevation of American ideals to the level of divine command. For them as well as for Viola and Barna, even this error pales in comparison to their belief that their efforts are unique, revolutionary and important. How typically American!
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Clark Wade
5.0 out of 5 stars AN ECCLESIASTICAL BOMB-SHELL!
Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2008
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There were two events in the Middle Ages that sparked major reform in the church. The first was the nailing of Martin Luther's Ninety-five Thesis (or topics for debate) on the door of Castle Church at Wittenberg in 1517. The second was the publishing of the New Testament in English by William Tyndale in 1525 (for which he was executed as a heretic). In my opinion, "Pagan Christianity" is a "church-quake" of equal magnitude.

The fact that a major publisher like Tyndale would publish this book is astonishing. Most of Frank's earlier works have been published "in the underground" through his own publishing house, "Present Testimony Ministry." As such, he has had a wide following in the house-church movement, but little known outside. That's about to change. In the preface to "Pagan Christianity," Tyndale offers their explanation on why they would publish such a controversial book stating it was out of their "desire to see the church operate according to biblical principles and be a full expression of God's grace and truth." So the church doesn't operate according to biblical principles, and is not a full expression of God's grace and truth?" Shocking! But that's the main point of "Pagan Christianity" and its plea to return to the beginning. The fact that Tyndale supports this endeavor, and is willing to put their reputation on the line, seems to add potent legitimacy to the most controversial book written since Luther and Tyndale raised such a ruckus 600 years ago.

And while Luther paid lip-service extolling the priesthood of all believers, he did very little "practically" to blur the distinctions between the clerical class and the laity. The same church hierarchy that Luther railed against simply changed its suit. The Catholic priest who officiated over all things spiritual morphed into the Protestant pastor*, who did the same. Ouch!

Consider these words from Paul regarding God's purposes for the Church:

And this is the purpose: that through the church the complicated, many-sided wisdom of God in all its infinite variety and innumerable aspects might now be made public to the angelic rulers and authorities in the heavenly sphere. Eph 3:8-10 (Amp)

Please read those words, carefully, again. Perhaps a third time. Now look at the average "church service". As "Pagan Christianity" points out, the order of the protestant ritual is the same, week after week and year after year. The denomination doesn't matter. High church or low church, all follow the same predictable pattern. Here's what Luther gave us 600 years ago, and what we are still following today:

Singing
Prayer
Sermon
Admonition to the people
Lord's Supper
Singing
Post-Communion prayer
Benediction

"Innumerable aspects?" "Infinite variety?" "Many-sided?" This is not the Chuch of Jesus Christ as described in the heart of God. This is "McChurch." The order of service is the same, and tastes the same, always, no matter where it's served up (and we Protestants think we have something over our Catholic brethren and their "rituals"). "Anointed" preaching? Perhaps. "Charismatic" preacher? Probably. But if it's all coming out of a single funnel, this is not classic Christianity. As Paul writes: "But if the whole were all a single organ (mouth), where would the body be?" I Cor. 12:19. If Paul was asking that question then, imagine what he would be asking now. If His body can't be found, could it be because His headship over His Church has been replaced by human agencies and traditions?

An earlier writer, Elton Trueblood, wrote "prophetically" of the church's return to the primal genesis of the early church. He stated that Luther's reformation has some unfinished business. And just as Tyndale gave the scriptures to the common person, a second reformation will be ignited when the church is given back to the people with the abolition of the laity:

"Our opportunity for a big step lies in opening the ministry to the ordinary Christian in much the same manner that our ancestors opened Bible reading to the ordinary Christian. To do this means...the inauguration of a new Reformation while in another it means the logical completion of the earlier Reformation in which the implications of the position taken were neither fully understood nor loyally followed.

"The more we study the early Church the more we realize that it was a society of ministers. About the only similarity between the Church at Corinth and a contemporary congregation...is that both are marked, to a great degree by the presence of sinners. After that the similarity ends, for we think it is normal for one man to do all the preaching, while the others are audience, whereas in Corinth, many did the preaching, "When you come together," reported their most famous visitor, "EACH ONE a hymn, a lesson, a revelation, a tongue, or an interpretation" (I Cor. 14:26). The ministry of original Christianity was one of its most revolutionary aspects. In contrast to all previous models, the new fellowship emerged as a dynamic force without priest or rabbi or medicine man."

One of the reviewers, if I understand him correctly, implies that the church is "progressive" in nature and questions whether or not we need, or should, return to the New Testament pattern. I suppose by "progressive" he infers that it has "evolved" into its current structure of three songs and a sermon with a "professional" class of Christians performing and an "audience" class of spectators. First of all, we need to be asking ourselves if what we are doing now is an improvement over what happened then. If we are to judge by the fruit of our endeavors with that of theirs, we are forced to concede that we have fallen far from something of sublime power and genius.

Secondly, this idea of the Church progressing into something "new and improved" can't be found in scripture. Contrarily, Paul states prophetically that soon after his departure, ravenous wolves would come in and destroy the flock. Acts 20:29 "Pagan Christianity" really is the historical account of this destruction and the church's departure from the Apostolic blueprint. We can scarcely take any credit for remembering what they taught us and adhering to the traditions they passed on to us. I Cor. 1:11.

Thirdly, the letters to the churches reveal a constant theme regarding church meetings, which is the MUTUAL CONTRIBUTION of ALL members under the HEADSHIP OF JESUS CHRIST. No priestly or pastoral caste system can be found or magically extracted from the New Testament accounts. No sermons, no pews, no passive priesthood:

God has arranged the LIMBS and ORGANS in the body, EACH PARTICULAR ONE just as He wished and saw fit and with the best adaptation. But if the whole were all a single organ, where would the body be? I Cor. 12:17-19.

And He has put all things under His feet and has appointed Him the universal and supreme Head of the church, a HEADSHIP EXERCISED THROUGHOUT(each member), which is His body, the fullness of Him Who fills ALL IN ALL--for in that body lives the full measure of Him Who makes everything complete and Who fills EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE WITH HIMSELF. Eph 1:22-23

In Him EACH SEPARATE PIECE of building, properly fitting into its neighbor GROWS TOGETHER into a temple, consecrated to the Lord. YOU ARE ALL part of this building in which God Himself lives by His Spirit. Eph. 2:22

YOU ALL belong to one body, of which there is one Spirit, just as YOU ALL experienced one calling to one hope. There is one...Father of us all, who is the One OVER ALL, the One working THROUGH ALL, and the One living IN ALL. Eph. 4:4

His intention was the perfecting and the full equipping of (all) the saints, that THEY should do the work of ministering toward building up of Christ's body...Eph. 4:12

For because of Him, the WHOLE BODY, the Church in ALL ITS VARIOUS PARTS closely jointed and firmly knit together...when EACH PART is working properly in all its functions, grow to full maturity, building itself up in love. Eph 4:16.

Let the word spoken by Christ have its home in your hearts...as you TEACH AND ADMONISH AND TRAIN ONE ANOTHER in all insight and intelligence and wisdom in spiritual things. Col. 3:16

But to EACH ONE is given the manifestation of the Holy Spirit...for the good and profit OF ALL. I Cor.12:7

Now you collectively are Christ's body and individually you are members of it, EACH PART severally and distinct--EACH with his own place and function. I Cor. 12:27

If the whole church assembles...(and) ALL prophesy--giving inspired testimony and interpreting the divine will and purpose--and an unbeliever or untaught outsider comes in...he will worship God, declaring that God is among you in very truth. I Cor. 14:23

What then is the right course? When you meet together, EACH ONE has a hymn, a teaching, a disclosure of special knowledge or information, an utterance in a strange tongue or its interpretation. But let everything be constructive and edifying and for the good of all. I Cor. 14:26

I want to bring you some spiritual strength, and that means that I will be strengthened by you, EACH OF US helped by THE OTHER'S faith. Roman 1:12

Open your hearts to ONE ANOTHER as Christ opened His heart to you, and God will be glorified. Rom. 15:7

ALL OF US have no veils on our faces, but reflect like mirrors the glory of the Lord. II Cor. 3:18

You should be most careful that there should not be in any of you that wickedness of heart...but help EACH OTHER to stand firm in the faith everyday, while it is still called "today." Heb. 3:14

And let us not hold aloof from our church meetings, as some do, but let us do all we can to help ONE ANOTHER'S faith. Heb. 10:25

These scriptures, and many others, support what Frank and George have written regarding what went wrong, and the institutional scandal that replaced the "one anothers" of the New Testament with a religous, top-heavy heiarchial** structure of "professional" Christians. Dirty laundry? You bet! But it's time to clean up our act! Christ is returning for a church without spot or wrinkle. Could those be "age" spots? Christ is not returning for an "old" church. He is returning for a church that has renewed the glorious dew of her youth. This is a church that has not only renewed her first love for her Lord but for "each other" as well.

Mathew 19:6 states that whatever God brings together, let no man tear apart. In its infancy, the church was wedded to specific Apostolic teaching regarding spiritual and practical ways she was to conduct herself when meeting together. "Pagan Christianity" exposes the chasm that subverted these teachings and seeks to bridge the gap between what was, what can be, and by the grace of Christ, will be again.

Buy and read this book first and then consider:
Normal Christian Church Life, The
Rethinking the Wineskin: The Practice of the New Testament Church
The Company of the Committed
The Incendiary Fellowship
Unfinished Business: Returning the Ministry to the People of God

Note to Tyndale: Thank you for following the sacrifical example of your namesake in publishing this book. You've done a great service to the church and to those who love the truth, no matter the cost. One suggestion: When "Pagan Christianity" comes out in paperback, please make the footnotes bigger? We "older" bespeckled readers would really appreciate that.

*Note to Pastors: I love you guys. And your love for our Lord is unquestionable. But imagine if all of your efforts were multiplied exponentially. Imagine if in a church of, say, 500, there was not a single "super-star" minister, but 500 ministers, each ministering Christ to one another. That is the paradigm of the New Testament. And ready or not, here SHE comes!

**Interestingly, Eph.4:10 states that the gifts of Christ are given to various persons so "that the whole universe from LOWEST TO HIGHEST might know His presence." Here all ideas of "heiarchy" are turned upside down.
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J McMurdo
3.0 out of 5 stars Good points, but the wheels come off in Chapters 4 and 5
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 6, 2013
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The three stars are not because it's a dull book! It is required reading for anyone who needs to ask `how should we do church?' Reading the book for me was like being on a rollercoaster. One minute I am shouting a firm AMEN! The next I am shaking my head in disgust because there is some serious bad teaching. Then I am saying, 'Yes... and... so what?'

There are some extremely important facts in this church which need to be disseminated widely. And yet I frequently felt that the authors* spoiled their message by going too far with their conclusions, creating an unfair straw man representing many churches or interpreting the Bible incorrectly. To me, this book is written by a man* with an agenda rather than someone who I can trust to come up with the whole truth.

Do not give this book to an immature Christian. Most of the book is what I would regard as Romans 15 territory. I need to say:
- You are not guilty because you dress smartly to church
- You are free to go to an East-facing church with an altar if that is where you need to be
- Your haven't sinned because you tithe to a church that owns a building and employs a pastor
- Don't look down on your brother because he goes to Bible College and likes listening to sermons.

In the wrong hands, this book can make one person self-righteous, falsely guilty, or it can even cause someone to withdraw from church completely - one family I know did just this because of Frank Viola's teaching. They later regretted this and joined an elder-led church.

Let's start with what I like about it.

I `get it'! A revolution in our church life needs to take place. The old wineskins are strangling what remains of the Christian church. To the extent that (as the authors* put it) this is a `conversation starter', it is a graet book. And it's a conversation we urgently need to have. I totally, totally agree that:

1. We are wasting far too much money on buildings
2. One-man leadership is unscriptural
3. Too many people are in paid ministry
4. Discipleship begins in the home
5. Church leaders need to spend time in the real world and have vocational skills
6. Many of the most revered men in history - `church fathers' - were false teachers, guilty of paganising, Romanising and Philosophising and intellectualising our faith into something very different form the simple faith our earliest brethren had.
7. We have for years been making believers into dumb, passive spectators, consumers of entertainment even, and we have failed to make them into true disciples.

The chapter on education was one chapter in which I profoundly agreed with the authors*. To quote one sentence, 'Plato and Aristotle are the fathers of modern Christian education'. It would be an eye-opener to many within the church to see how deeply immersed our faith is in Greek Philosophy and I believe a strong case is made. There's also a useful section questioning the role of the Sunday School and the Youth Pastor.

Now comes the health warning. There are some issues on which I profoundly disagree with the authors.

I was bracing myself for their attack on the sermon. And yet what they said did not really impress me.

Quote from Page 88:

'...apostolic preaching recorded in Acts possessed the following features:
- It was sporadic
- it was delivered on special occasions in order to deal with specific problems
- it was extemporaneous and without rhetorical structure.'

Wrong, wrong, wrong!

Firstly, we need to distinguish preaching (announcing the gospel to unbelievers) from teaching (primarily directed at Christians). This is a common error - the Greek words translated thus are consistent here. The chapter indicates that the authors* are actually referring to teaching.

In what way is teaching daily in the temple courts and 'filling Jerusalem with their teaching' and concentrating on the ministry of the word (see Acts 2:42,46, 4:2,18, 5:28, 6:2) sporadic and on special occasions? Is this characteristic of Paul, who taught the Ephesians 'the whole counsel of God' (Acts 20:27)?

Are you seriously accusing Paul, who wrote the incredibly tightly argued Romans, Galatians, Ephesians etc. of not having rhetorical structure??? Bear in mind here that these letters were dictated and not written. And look at how he deals with the crowds and the Roman officials in Acts 21-26. Paul was surely one of the most brilliant speakers of his day. And how could Appollos refute the Jews in public debate without the use of rhetorical structure? (See Acts 18:28).

Whilst I agree that teaching in the early church was more interactive than in the modern church (and I would welcome a return to this), it is simply wrong to suppose that teaching was an 'every member' function. It was reserved for 'faithful men' (1Timothy 2:2) who were suitable qualified. To open up teaching to anyone was to give a platform for false teachers, who were to be silenced (2Timothy 2:16-18, Titus 1:9-10, 2:15, 3:10).

Teaching is not a free-for-all.

My other big gripe with the book is the weak teaching on eldership.

Quote from page 123-124:

'Elders... were recognised by virtue of their seniority and spiritual service to the church. According to the New Testament, recognition of certain gifted members is something that is instinctive and organic. Every believer has the discernment to recognize those within his or her church to carry out various ministries.'

No! No! No!!

If that's the case, then why does Paul warn the elders in Ephesus for three years night and day with tears to be on their guard against false teachers (Acts 20:31)? Why does he bother sending Titus to Crete to examine the character of men before they can be appointed as elders?

The reason is this. It is often the pushiest characters, the cleverest schemers, the most plausible talkers who end up getting positions of prominence in the church. And they can easily fool the majority and end up ruining churches. Elders are appointed and recognised publicly. They need to be above reproach and be tested. Non-elders are commanded to respect and honour them. The process of appointing them is neither 'instinctive' nor 'organic' (whatever the latter term means).

Two other points. Paid ministry is perfectly acceptable scripturally (1Cor 9, Gal 6, 1Tim 5, Luke 8 and 10). And short quotes, 'proof texts' are used frequently by Jesus and the apostles throughout the New Testament. Again, the authors* make some good points here, but carry their arguments far too far.

Most of my Christian life has been spent in less formal churches, led by unpaid elders, or leaders of some description. And it hasn't always been pretty. One of the main problems has been the lack of church discipline, poor knowledge of scripture and sloppiness when it comes to who is allowed to teach and lead. On occasion, plausible leaders have ended up falling into serious sin because nobody bothered testing their character as the Bible says we should. The authors seem to advocate the very type of church I would now run a mile from rather than take my family to.

By all means get the book and see what you think. I believe there are far better books that cover similar ground however. I for one would recommend Steve Malz's book  How the Church Lost the Way: And How it Can Find it Again  as well as David Pawson's  Word and Spirit Together: Uniting Charismatics and Evangelicals  and  The Normal Christian Birth . Also look out for his excellent talk on 'De-Greecing the Church' by doing a google search or purchasing the CDs from his website. All of these materials cover the better parts of 'Pagan Christianity' in a more complete and balanced way.

*There are the names of two authors on the front cover. But whenever the author refers to himself, he says `I (Frank)'. I'm left wondering how much of it George Barna actually wrote. A mischievous part of me asks, 'Does Frank take over his `organic church' meetings in the same way?'
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958473284373
5.0 out of 5 stars 5 stars and heres why
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 6, 2013
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Many say they are angry at this book. Personally i beleive it to be well researched and sincerely written. It probably saved me from a lot of misery because i had doubts to the way things were going on at church and didnt have the knowledge to question it as it was tradition and who was i to question tradition ?

This book is power to the unsuspecting dumbed down sheeple in christianity, and please forgive me for that phrase but i was there before myself. This is how passionate i am about this book. Clergy / laity is not really biblical in a sense that they are the mediator between you and God but many try to fit that position. This is a clergy nightmare book but i believe it should be taught in church instead of wanting to brush it under the carpet as some would have done.

Many pastors will try and tell you this is a bad book, i say its one of thee most relevant books in the modern age for any chrisitan.

This is the longest review ive ever written, i dont usually review, it was worth it.
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Stephen Russell
1.0 out of 5 stars PAGAN CHRISTIANITY - Throws the baby out with the bathwater
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 17, 2012
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Having just finished reading this book my response is that although I agree in principle with many of the authors observations and criticisms of institutional religion, I felt strongly that the author failed to give a convincing alternative.. Even the so-called house fellowships make the same mistakes as the more organised churches. This book raises more questions that it does in providing constructive answers and therefore can be easily misunderstood. My view is that just because a modern church practice is not backed up by a specific verse of scripture, doesn't necessarily make it wrong. Equally, those house churches that try and model a biblical pattern of church life often end up falling into the same trap as the churches that they have left. One final point..Why does the author charge us to buy his book..after all, no one sold books in the NT and made a commission on each sale..Therefore modern publishing should be disregarded as unbiblical!
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Malcolm Lisle
4.0 out of 5 stars The history of common Christian practices
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 22, 2022
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Thought provoking analysis of where the church went wrong in history and where many things came from. To understand the full meaning you really need to read some other Frank Viola books.
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RAM
3.0 out of 5 stars In my opinion the authors do a great job in stating what the original church format and ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 6, 2016
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In my opinion the authors do a great job in stating what the original church format and practices were. They also do a commendable job doing likewise with the modern mainstream churches, which bear little if any resemblance to the original church. We could argue all day about how we have gone from then until now and the relevancy of each change as some have done, even as far as producing a book in an attempt to counter this one. The fact is there has been a massive departure from the early church set up by Paul and other Apostles, which in my view is not justified spiritually or scripturally. I found that the authors have represented very well my own observations about how the early church practised their faith and how I see modern Christianity in light of this. I am not too taken up with the details of how each departure from the true faith came about, etc., as overall I do not consider this relevant, as any departure for whatever reason is wrong. The Apostle Jude exhorts us to 'earnestly contend for the faith which was ONCE delivered to the saints,' ie, believers, and Paul warned us that if any man or even an angel from heaven brought another gospel than the one he and his fellow apostles brought, they should be accursed. Strong warnings to get back to the very roots of the faith for all else is vain.

So far so good for Viola and Barna. Five stars would have beckoned, but dear o' dear they nose dive after this. They ascribe most of the changes in Christian structure and practices to the influences of paganism, which may largely be true. They even titles their book 'Pagan Christianity,' yet they themselves have clearly come under the embrace of the greatest and most abominable pagan 'belief' in Christianity in promoting in this same tome the false doctrine of the 'triune god!' This is extremely ironic that those who have produced such an in-depth study of pagan structure and practices in Christianity as we know it, have seriously failed to identify the greatest example of paganism in the Christian 'belief' spectrum. i.e. the trinity concept, This is very difficult to grasp and seriously diminishes the value of this book. I have been kind in granting it three stars on account of my earlier observations. The authors describe (rightly) those from Protestant faiths as 'reformed Catholics,' but they are no better than this themselves as evidenced by their keen support for a false, triune god.
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박정미 달라이라마, [한 원자 속의 우주]

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박정미

달라이라마, <한 원자 속의 우주
>

달라이 라마를 알아야겠다고 결심하게 된 것은 물론 그와 데이비드 봄과의 관계 때문이다.
달라이라마는 1979년 영국여행을 하면서 데이비드봄을 처음 만나게 되었는데, 보는 즉시 친밀감을 느꼈다고 한다. 두 분의 우정은 1992년 봄의 죽음에 이르기까지 평생에 걸쳐 지속되었다.
누구나 알다시피 달라이라마는 1959년 스물넷의 나이에 인도 다람살라에 티벳 망명정부를 세운 이후 전 세계 석학들과 교유관계를 가지며 불교와 과학의 대화에 적극 참여했다.
이 책은 그 대화의 산물이라고 볼 수 있다. 어린시절부터 최고의 스승으로부터 훈련받은 티벳의 영적, 종교적 전통의 계승자가 최첨단 현대과학의 성과를 받아들여 자신의 사상체계에 통합시켜나간 기록이다.
달라이라마의 과학에 대한 관심은 단지 개인적 지적호기심 차원만의 것은 아니다. 그는 “내가 망명하기 전에도, 티베트의 정치적 비극의 원인들 중 하나가 현대화에 대해 문을 여는데 실패한 것이라고 우리는 알고 있었다.”고 말했다.

이 책을 통해 나는 현대과학과 불교철학이 궤를 같이 함을 새롭게 인식하게 됐다. 특히 불교철학중 ‘공(空)’사상에 대한 기존의 편벽된 이해를 딛고 신선한 관념을 얻을 수 있게 되었다.

하이젠베르크의 불확정성원리에서부터 비롯된 ‘관찰자의 역할’이라는 주제는 양자역학의 기본문제들 중 하나이다. 전자의 운동량과 위치를 동시에 정확하게 파악할 수 없다는 이 원리는 관찰자가 전자의 운동량 알기를 선택하느냐, 위치 알기를 선택하느냐에 따라 측정값이 달라진다고 해석된다(물론 반론도 있다). 즉, 관찰자가 관찰되는 실재성의 참여자 위상을 갖게 된다. 이는 ‘이중슬릿실험’ 등 물리학계의 단골메뉴로 재론되는 주제이기도 하다.

그런데 달라이라마는 마음과 물질의 관계에서 이 ‘관찰자의 역할’이라는 주제가 불교사상에서 오랫동안 논의되어 왔다고 한다.
불교철학에는 대립되는 양극단이 있는데, 그 한 극단은 불교실재론자들의 자리다. 그들은 물질적 세계가 나눠지지 않는 입자들로 이루어졌으며, 객관적 실재성이 관찰자의 마음과 무관하다고 주장한다. 그 반대 극단에는 속칭 유심론자들이 있는데 바깥세계의 어떠한 객관적 실재성도 거부하면서 이를 관찰자 마음의 외연으로 여긴다.(나는 사실 이 유심론이 불교의 전부인 줄로만 알았다. 일체유심조라는 말을 어렸을 때부터 들어왔으니까.)

여기서 달라이라마는 티벳전통에서 가장 높은 존중을 받고 있는 견해를 소개하는데, 이에 따르면 바깥세계의 실재성이 부인되지는 않지만, 상대적인 것으로 이해된다. 물질은 실재하지만, 관찰자와 상관없이 객관적으로 감지될 수 있다는 독립적인 실재성이란 개념은 용납될 수 없다(혹은 용수의 이제설에 따라 속제의 실재론과 진제의 비실재론으로 나누어 파악한다).
즉 실재성을 인정하되 실재성의 근본적 의존성(연기설)이 세상과 인간존재의 근저에 있다는 것이다. 그리고 여기서 공(空)사상이 등장한다. “물질과 사건은 불변적인 본질이나 내재적 실재성이나 고립을 뜻하는 절대적 존재를 갖고 있지 않다는 점에서 ‘공(空)”이다.

달라이라마에 있어 ‘공(空)사상’은 빅뱅우주론과 연결되어서도 재해석된다.

빅뱅이 전체 우주의 기원인가, 아니면 우리 특정 우주계의 시작을 지칭하는 것이냐는 현대 우주론과 불교의 공통문제인데, 철학원리상 하나의 한정된 시작, 절대적 시작이 있다면 논리적으로 두가지 선택이 남아있다.
하나는 유신론(有神論)인데, 우주는 완전히 초월적이어서 원인과 결과의 법칙을 벗어난 지성적존재에 의해 창조되었다고 제안하는 것이다. 또 하나는 우주가 전혀 아무런 원인 없이 존재하게 되었다는 것이다.
불교전통(아비달마 우주론이 아닌 칼라차크라 우주론)은 이 두 선택을 거부하고 우주의 영원한 순환을 이야기한다.
이 순환우주론을 따르면 세상은 다섯 원소로 이루어져있다. 공간을 받치는 요소 및 네가지 기본요소들인 地水火風이 그것이다.

이 때 우주는 성주괴공(이루어질成, 머무를住, 무너질 壞, 비어있을 空)의 단계를 거치며 진화하는데, 이를 떠받치는 공간은 아무것도 없는 상태가 아니라 아주 섬세한 공간입자, 공(空)입자를 위한 매질로 되어있다고 한다.
이 공간요소인 공(空)입자가 우주의 사대원소(흙, 물, 불, 바람)의 진화와 붕괴의 바탕이며, 그로부터 네가지 원소들이 창조되고 다시 그 속에 흡수된다.

순환의 한 단계인 이 물질이 비어있는 공(空)의 기간에도 공(空)입자들이 존속하고, 이 입자들로부터 새 우주 속 모든 물질이 만들어진다. 형성이전의 어느 특정 우주라도 그 속 모든 물질 원소들이 공(空)입자라는 잠재성의 형태로 실재한다.
 
특정우주 속에서 진화하기에 알맞은 유정들의 업보적 특징이 무르익었을 때, 공(空)입자들은 서로 모이기 시작해서 물질로 현현하는데, 우주적 바람(風)을 시작으로 에너지(火) 그 다음에 흐르는 것(水), 단단한 것(地) 순서를 따른다는 것이다.

나는 모른다.

이 두개의 공(空)이 구체적으로 어떠한 연결성을 가지고 있는지. 다만 실재의 궁극적 차원을 해명하는 논리로서 공(空)이 우주론과 존재론의 바탕에 있다는 것을 감지할 따름이다.
또한 이 공(空)이라는 것이 우주공간의 대부분을 차지하고 있다는 ‘암흑물질론’, 물질계가 양자적 진동에서 태어났다는 소위 ‘양자수프론’, 옛 신비가들이 말하는 존재의 거푸집이라는 ‘에테르론’과 뭐가 다르고 겹치는지 알 수 없다.

다만 데이비드 봄이 다큐멘터리 <Infinite Potential>에서 말한 바를 떠올릴 뿐이다.
“밤하늘의 별들을 바라볼 때 우리는 보통 우리가 보는 대상은 저 별들이고 우주공간은 그 배경이라고 생각하지만, 밤하늘을 또 다르게도 볼 수 있습니다. 우주공간을 ‘충만한’ 공간으로 보고, 공간사이의 별들, 즉 물질은 광대한 바다의 작은 거품으로 보는 겁니다.”

아마도 데이비드 봄과 달라이라마는 함께 밤하늘을 바라보았을 것이다. 같은 인간의 무한한 호기심을 가지고 우주의 신비를 바라보며 이심전심으로 고개를 끄덕였을 거다.
달라이라마는 불교적진리성을 내세우는 법이 없다. 단지 양자이론과 신경생리학 등 현대과학의 성과가 불교전통적 사유와 어떻게 접목되는지 그 경계선상에 일어나는 문제의식과 접점에 접근하여 조심스럽게 드러낼 뿐이다.

달라이라마는 나의 지적 영적 질문에 대해 다 답해주지는 않지만 나의 모든 질문을 다 수용하여 펼쳐놓고 자신의 역량을 다해 응답해준다.
그러므로 이 책은 해답지가 아닌 문제집으로 보인다. 하지만 이런 질문을 가슴에 품을 수 있다는 것만으로도 좋은 것이다.







Spiritual in My Own Way: One Man's Gritty Search for Meaning and Peace of Mind: Bergmann, Rev. Gudjon: 9780997301267: Amazon.com: Books

Spiritual in My Own Way: One Man's Gritty Search for Meaning and Peace of Mind: Bergmann, Rev. Gudjon: 9780997301267: Amazon.com: Books







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Gudjon Bergmann
Spiritual in My Own Way: One Man's Gritty Search for Meaning and Peace of Mind Paperback – December 24, 2019
by Rev. Gudjon Bergmann (Author)

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In this honest, vulnerable, and philosophically challenging memoir, Icelandic-American author Gudjon Bergmann describes the ups and downs of his spiritual quest, how he navigated his way through a rebellious youth, the pitfalls of cultural Christianity, the many faces of New-Age spirituality, sobriety, and an obsession with yoga, until, finally, a multi-faceted integral approach led him to revive his respect for the faith traditions and become an interfaith minister. 

Bergmann’s tale equally highlights the epiphanies and stumbling blocks he experienced along the way and he never shies away from the shadow aspects of his spiritual search. This book is dedicated to spiritual seekers everywhere, many of whom have found their aspirations, experiences, and philosophical musings reflected in Bergmann's modern quest.

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Gudjon Bergmann



In his works, Icelandic-American author Gudjon Bergmann combines his passion for spirituality and religion with his deep interest in human psychology and two decades of experience as a workshop facilitator, personal coach, mindfulness teacher, and professional speaker. He has written two novels and several nonfiction books about self-development, yoga, meditation, smoking cessation, stress management, interfaith, spirituality, writing, and more. Born in Iceland in 1972, Bergmann moved to the USA in 2010 and became a U.S. citizen in 2013. He is married with two children and lives just south of weird in Texas. Today, he owns and operates Be Here Get There Coaching.

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Self-Care to World-Care: Three Examples | Gudjon Bergmann

Self-Care to World-Care: Three Examples | Gudjon Bergmann


Self-Care to World-Care: Three Examples
JANUARY 2, 2023 BY GUDJON BERGMANN

To influence the world around us, even in minor ways, the real work begins inside and emanates outwards. We don’t need to be perfect to do good deeds in the world, but we must be sincere in our efforts. 

If we are in a continual state of discord (i.e., outraged, negative, demanding, judgmental, spiteful, etc.) while we try to promote bridge-building and common ground, we are bound to fail.

To paraphrase Emerson, 

‘how people act speaks so loudly that we can’t hear what they are saying.’

 For best results, peaceful efforts should come from within, and an alignment of thought, word, and deed is preferable.

From Self-Care to World-Care

Carol Gilligan’s model for moral development shows that human beings generally move from being selfish to being able to care for others in their near environment to, in rare cases, showing genuine care for people they don’t know (here, care is defined as an action, not merely a nice thought).

When we compare her model to others in the same vein—including Piaget, Loevinger, Erikson, Steiner, Beck, Graves, Kohlberg, Peck, Fowler, Wilber, and others—moral growth corresponds with people’s ability to see the world from an ever-increasing number of perspectives and act accordingly; a classification that rhymes with compassion, defined as the sympathetic consciousness of other’s distress together with a desire to alleviate it.

Simply put, moral growth leads to increased compassion and care.

Let’s briefly look at the progression from selfish to care to world-care.

Stage One = Selfish

At stage one, a selfish person can only see the world from his or her point of view. The healthy version of selfishness produces self-care and win-win situations. In contrast, the unhealthy version produces battles and win-lose scenarios, where selfish desires are achieved at other people’s expense. Society has several names for the latter, including narcissism, vanity, egotism, and self-absorption.

Stage Two = Care

At the second stage, care, individuals become generous towards those within their circle of care, including spouses, family, friends, and near-community. A person who has begun caring for another is willing to sacrifice time, energy, and money unselfishly so that another may grow and flourish (M. Scott Peck’s definition of love). The ability to care for others epitomizes the underpinnings of civilized society. Without a tapestry of caring, civilization would collapse into a chaotic every-man-for-himself battlefield.

Stage Three = World-Care

The third stage of development, world-care, is relatively uncommon. It depends on people’s ability to show care (take action) for others they do not know. World-care can start with minor things, such as a genuine willingness to pay taxes for the greater good or reducing personal consumption to curb carbon emissions. However, as empathy grows, people at the stage of world-care will genuinely attempt to care for everyone, often at their own expense.

Expanding the Circle of Care

If individuals want to increase their aptitude for care and compassion, they need to establish self-care and expand their abilities. The most common metaphors are: learn how to swim before you attempt to rescue a drowning person, when pressure falls in an airplane cabin, put the oxygen mask on yourself first and then on your child, you have to earn money before you can give money, and demonstrate love for those who are near you before you attempt to love the entire world.

The underlying principle is always the same. Caring is an ability. How can you care for others if you cannot care for yourself? Expanding the circle of care looks something like this:

Each successive circle denotes an increased ability to care for more and more people. Let’s look at three examples of this behavior: Gandhi, Mother Teresa, and Nelson Mandela.

Gandhi: India’s Great Soul

Mohandas Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948) was a towering historical figure. He lived his philosophy of nonviolent resistance (satyagraha) to the best of his ability. His approach, which grew into a full-fledged ideology with many specific tenets, was primarily based on acts of self-control, developing peace from within, and standing firm when it came to righteous convictions, never at the expense of others but always at one’s own expense. He preached that satyagrahis should never hate the doer, only resist the action and that no human being was beyond redemption, repeatedly stating that:

“It is easy enough to be friendly to one’s friends. But to befriend the one who regards himself as your enemy is the quintessence of true religion. The other is mere business.”

Gandhi was not beyond reproach as a lawyer, activist, spiritual figure, and politician. Still, looking at his life, one can hardly doubt the sincerity of his convictions nor argue against their effectiveness.

Preparation for South Africa

His road from self-care to world-care began with a spiritual upbringing in India and a legal education in England, both of which became central to his later work. Pride was the seed that flowered into a lifetime of activism. After buying a first-class train ticket via mail, Gandhi was thrown out of his prepaid cabin and off the train merely for being an Indian. That incident so insulted his dignity that he went to work for the civil rights of the Indian community in South Africa. It was there, with inspiration from Thoreau, among others, that he developed his philosophy of nonviolent civil disobedience.

Expanding the Circle

After success in South Africa, Gandhi returned to India and expanded his circle of care to include the Indian people, who quickly bestowed on him the honorary title Mahatma, which means Great (Maha) Soul (Atman). He spent most of his adult life working towards Indian independence at a tremendous personal expense. Sacrifice was really at the heart of his philosophy; the will to suffer until the suffering became unbearable in the eyes of the oppressors.

Peace in the World

Partly thanks to his efforts, India finally gained independence in 1947, one year before his assassination. In the final year of his life, Gandhi felt a deep need to expand his circle of care to include all of the world’s inhabitants and was increasingly worried about world peace, but since his life was cut short, we will never know what kind of work he would have engaged in.

Exceptional and Flawed

Today, Gandhi is a revered historical figure, sometimes to the point of deification (especially in India), but he was simultaneously an exceptional servant of humanity and a flawed human being. He readily admitted to some of those flaws in his autobiography, while other shortcomings have been exposed in the light of modern values.

Spiritual Foundation

What we can surmise from Gandhi’s story is this. Without a modicum of self-care—including a spiritual upbringing and high-quality education—he would not have been prepared to fill his role of service and would likely have failed. Personal pride may have been the instigator of his activism, but he grew into the role and became more selfless every year. His vocation required tremendous sacrifices, especially concerning his family, as Gandhi spent much of his adult life in and out of prison. His expansion was realized step-by-step by living an intentional life focused on service.

Mother Teresa: Nun, Teacher, Mother, Saint

Mother Teresa (1910-1997), born Anjezë Gonxhe Bojaxhiu in Albania, left her home in Albania in 1928 to join the Sisters of Loreto in Ireland and become a missionary. That led her to India in 1929, where she taught at St. Teresa’s School until she experienced “the call within the call” in 1946 when she had been helping the poor while living among them during a retreat. The work for which she is known worldwide began in 1948, and was formally granted permission from the Vatican in 1950 when she founded the Missionaries of Charity. She, along with the sisters in her order, took vows of chastity, poverty, obedience, and wholehearted free service to the poorest of the poor.

Working With the Poor

The first several years of her work were enormously difficult. She had to beg for food and supplies while experiencing loneliness and a yearning for the comforts of convent life. She wrote in her diary:

“The poverty of the poor must be so hard for them. While looking for a home I walked and walked till my arms and legs ached. I thought how much they must ache in body and soul, looking for a home, food and health. Then, the comfort of Loreto [her former congregation] came to tempt me. “You have only to say the word and all that will be yours again,” the Tempter kept on saying … Of free choice, my God, and out of love for you, I desire to remain and do whatever be your Holy will in my regard. I did not let a single tear come.”

Deserve to Die Like Angels

Thanks to her steadfast devotion, the work continued. She founded hospices where people received medical attention and were allowed to die with dignity per their faith. Muslims were read the Quran, Hindus received water from the Ganges, and Catholics received final anointing, all in accordance with Teresa’s belief that no matter their status in life, people deserved to die like angels—loved and wanted.

Expanding Her Reach

By the 1960s, she had opened orphanages, hospices, and leper houses throughout India. In 1965, she expanded her congregation abroad and opened a house in Venezuela with five sisters. Her reach increased with every passing year, and in 2012 her order had over 4500 sisters active in 133 countries and was managing homes for people dying of HIV/AIDS, leprosy, and tuberculosis and operating soup kitchens, dispensaries, mobile clinics, family counseling programs, orphanages, and schools.

As her circle of care grew, Teresa proclaimed:

“By blood, I am Albanian. By citizenship, an Indian. By faith, I am a Catholic nun. As to my calling, I belong to the world.”

Mother Teresa drew praise for her work and an array of criticism—much of which was aimed at her rigid belief structure. She was canonized in 2016. Today she is known within the Catholic Church as Saint Teresa of Calcutta.

Nelson Mandela: The Prisoner Who Kept an Open Heart

Nelson Mandela (1918-2013) was a complicated man. He trained as a lawyer and openly opposed apartheid (a system of segregation in South Africa that privileged whites). In his early years, Mandela was attracted to Marxism and wanted to engage in nonviolent protests, but he crossed the line into sabotage against the government in 1961 out of frustration. That was one of the factors used against him when he was sentenced to life in prison for conspiring to overthrow the government. Nevertheless, his commitment to democracy was evident, even at his trial, where he said:

“I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons will live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to see realized. But if it need be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.”

Decades in Prison

Mandela spent the next twenty-seven years in prison. He wrote his autobiography in secret during that time and garnered support from people all around the world. Outside pressure mounted until he was finally released in 1990.

Refused to Be Consumed

The most remarkable thing about Mandela’s story is that he was not consumed with anger, hate, or a need for vengeance after he was set free. Instead, he worked with his oppressors to end apartheid, ran for president of South Africa, and led an unparalleled racial reconciliation process.

Forgiveness is truly the most miraculous aspect of being human. That was certainly the case for Mandela. Seeking revenge would have been most understandable after everything he went through, but he chose to be a unifier instead. He kept his heart open despite a lifetime of adversity. That won him the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.

Global Efforts

After his term as president, Mandela kept on combating poverty and HIV/AIDS through his charitable Nelson Mandela Foundation and worked tirelessly to bring about peace. In a 2002 Newsweek interview, he confessed:

“I really wanted to retire and rest and spend more time with my children, my grandchildren and of course with my wife. But the problems are such that for anybody with a conscience who can use whatever influence he may have to try to bring about peace, it’s difficult to say no.”

 

Remarkable Role Models

As I have made clear in my writings, I do not believe in perfection. That is why I never put people on pedestals and worship them. Yet, I do see people as role models. I see behaviors that can be replicated.

That is what Gandhi, Mother Teresa, and Mandela are to me. Role models. They weren’t flawless, yet they stepped into the public square—where everyone gets criticized, no matter who they are and what they do—and devoted their lives to caring for others in the best ways they knew how. They showed an ability to stay centered during times of tremendous pressure and overcame periods of grief, doubt, and despair with a devotion to causes larger than themselves. Selfish needs were supplanted by selflessness. When they could have stopped, when they could have retired and thought only of themselves, all four continued to work for the benefit of people they did not know because it was the right thing to do.

When I have challenging days of my own, I often think of them, and that helps me get back on track. I try to emulate their admirable actions and forgive them for their limitations.

* This article was curated from Co-Human Harmony: Using Our Shared Humanity to Bridge Divid


Gudjon Bergmann
Author, Coach, and Mindfulness Teacher
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Recommended books:Monk of All Faiths: Inspired by The Prophet (fiction)
Spiritual in My Own Way (memoir)
Co-Human Harmony: Using Our Shared Humanity to Bridge Divides (nonfiction)
Experifaith: At the Heart of Every Religion (nonfiction)
Premature Holiness: Five Weeks at the Ashram (novel)
The Meditating Psychiatrist Who Tried to Kill Himself (novel)

The Ten Most Read Articles of 2022: Interspirituality for the Modern Day Seeker | Gudjon Bergmann

The Ten Most Read Articles of 2022: Interspirituality for the Modern Day Seeker | Gudjon Bergmann


The Ten Most Read Articles of 2022: Interspirituality for the Modern Day Seeker

JANUARY 6, 2023 
BY GUDJON BERGMANN


Humanity, interfaith ministry, beliefs, integral theory, moments of peace, Christianity and Buddhism, faith definitions, trans-rational spirituality, and thoughts about God. Those were some of the topics broached in my ten most-read articles of 2022. Below you will find a quick summary of each and links to the original articles.


10. A Trans-Rational Approach to Spirituality

In this article from 2018, I explain the pre/trans fallacy and how people can transcend and include rationality when they approach the topic of spirituality. Instead of abandoning reason altogether—as some have suggested—it is possible to push to the limits of the intellect and transcend it. In that way, spirituality meets rational criteria before we enter into the unknown or unknowable.

Read the full article


9. Interfaith Explainer: The Difference Between Intrafaith, Interfaith, Multifaith and Interspirituality


When people are unfamiliar with terms, they often use them interchangeably. I offered simple definitions of each term in this article and gave examples. In short, intrafaith means within a faith, interfaith means among or between faiths, multifaith means many faiths, and interspirituality means exploring the connection.

Read the full article


8. Interfaith Quotes About God

Published just before Christmas 2022, this article made it into the top ten. Extracted from The Little Book of Oneness and Goodness, the quotes come from various sources, including Swami Prabhavananda, Martin Luther, Ibn-al-Arabi, Alcoholics Anonymous, Meister Eckhart, Guru Nanak, Kabir and more. The goal was to offer a variety of perspectives. Based on the response, it seems to have worked.

Read all the quotes


7. What If We Viewed Christianity Like Buddhism?

The idea for this article started with a simple observation. In the West, many people view Buddhism as a philosophy rather than a religion and use it to become more peaceful and compassionate. 
My question was: What if we viewed Christianity in the same way? Many readers seem to resonate with this idea since the article was the 7th most read of 2022.

Read the full article


6. Personal Image of God

Written in 2018, this article seems to have become another perennial favorite. In it, I write about the difference between the personal and trans-personal concepts of God and use Huston Smith’s concept about idolatry—reducing God to something less than God—to explain the limitations of simple definitions while also underlining the importance of creating a personal relationship to that which we perceive as God.

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5. Seven Metaphors to Help You Create Moments of Peace

I was delighted to see this article climb so high on the top ten list. At the beginning of 2022, I planned to write a short book, Creating Moments of Peace, but I decided to share the central ideas for free on my publication instead. The seven metaphors—anchor, bandwidth, steering wheel, instinct, weather, current and tower—offer readers several ways to view moments of peace in their lives, encouraging both additions and ownership.

Read the full article


4. Integral Changed Everything: How Studying Ken Wilber’s Integral Theory Changed My Life


This is the longest essay I have posted on my publication. Extracted from my 2019 memoir, Spiritual in My Own Way, the article details my seven-year obsession with integral theory and how it changed my life. As I warned at the beginning of the article, a stretched mind will return to its original form, so don’t go down this rabbit hole unless you are ready to have your mind expanded.

Read the full article


3. Let’s Face It, Beliefs and Values are More Important to People Than Facts and Information

Studying the world’s religions prepared me well for the times we are living in. It helped me understand the uniquely human desire to hold beliefs and values close to the heart. Understanding why people would do that becomes doubly important in a post-truth world. Since this article was the third most read in 2022, it looks like many readers were looking for similar answers and used my piece to explore one aspect of a larger puzzle.

Read the full article

2. What is an Interfaith Minister?

This article must appear in search results when people look for the definition because it has remained one of the most read articles in this publication since it was published in 2018. In the article, I offer a definition and three examples of how interfaith ministers serve their communities.

Read the full article

1. Be Informed by Your Faith or Spiritual Tradition, Lead with Your Humanity

I used the Dalai Lama and Mr. Rogers as examples of people who are deeply informed by their faith yet lead with their humanity. It makes me tremendously happy to see that this article was catapulted to the top of the list. Despite all the talk of division and hate, there are a lot of people in the world who are working to make it better. Seeing that readers are interested in that work warms my heart.

Read the full article

Thanks for reading in 2022. I look forward to providing you with interesting content in 2023.

Happy New Year!

Gudjon Bergmann
Author, Coach, and Mindfulness Teacher

Being: A Journey Toward Presence and Authenticity eBook : Forehand, Karl: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Being: A Journey Toward Presence and Authenticity eBook : Forehand, Karl: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store






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Being: A Journey Toward Presence and Authenticity Kindle Edition
by Karl Forehand (Author) Format: Kindle Edition


4.8 out of 5 stars 22 ratings

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Many of us spend our lives searching for worth, value, and security through doing "enough." It's time to discover a new way of living and becoming where we remember that we are human beings, not human doings. Embark on a powerful journey toward presence and authenticity, learning how to be where you are and who you are. Because after all, "being" is not a destination-it is an ongoing and meaningful adventure.

Out Into the Desert: Thriving Outside Organized Religion eBook : Forehand, Karl, Forehand, Laura, Giles, Keith: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Out Into the Desert: Thriving Outside Organized Religion eBook : Forehand, Karl, Forehand, Laura, Giles, Keith: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store





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Out Into the Desert: Thriving Outside Organized Religion Kindle Edition
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Sometimes, when we begin to question our faith or have doubts about our tradition it can feel like we are wandering out into the desert. When we take a step back and honestly evaluate organized religion in the 21st century, many times it doesn't make any sense. The more we cling to it and try to save it, the worse it becomes. In addition, widespread abuse, cover ups and victim-shaming causes some of us to question whether it will ever be right again.

Out Into the Desert is an honest survey of Western Christianity, along with Karl and Laura's personal story as they journeyed through 20-plus years of ministry. Let the Forehands be your guide as they examine these questions and more ... 

Is it okay to take some time off from religion and do this assessment?
Are there things we can't see because we're too close?
Where else can we find community?
Is it possible to thrive outside of organized religion?
If Jesus were physically here, would he go to church?
===

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Quoir; 1st edition (15 August 2022)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 725 KB


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Karl Forehand



Karl J. Forehand was a bi-vocational pastor for 20 years and has training in spiritual leadership coaching, plant-based nutrition, and spiritual direction. He lives in Missouri with his wife Laura and dog Winston. He has three grown children and two grandchildren.

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Top reviews from other countries

RFP
5.0 out of 5 stars I wish there were more than five stars
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 24 January 2023
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This is a twenty dollar book. This is a soft-cover book. This is an EXCELLENT book! I first "met" Karl Forehand (figuratively, of course) in his 2020 book, "The Tea Shop." Karl's authentic, and down-to-earth writing speaks to me with unexpected clarity and honesty. In this new book, Karl is joined by his wife, Laura, herself an accomplished writer, supremely able to convey thoughts and feelings with uncommon thoroughness and sensitivity. Reading this book was, to me, very much like having a quiet, personal conversation with these two inspiring people.

Having formerly been a church music director for a couple of decades, I was going through the motions of organized religion, unsatisfied and disillusioned by "The Show" until I became aware that there is more - so much more - to God and spirituality than the habitual (addicted?) participation in the weekly business-as-usual services. As Evangelical "Christianity" coopted it's foundation and purpose with a need for political power, the desert seemed to be a good place to retreat. It is! I highly recommend "Out Into the Desert" as required reading for any person who is truly seeking authentic and meaningful spirituality.

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James Inglis
5.0 out of 5 stars Covers important ground for those "rethinking church"
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 1 January 2023
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I was fortunate enough to read the original release of this in 2020, and I could see the importance of a book like this. The 2022 edition is even better, if only for the fact that it covers another two years of Karl and Laura’s lives over the pandemic.

Firstly, if you come from a more conservative Christian tradition and/or have a deep affiliation for the institution of the church, please allow your defenses to drop a little and approach this with an open mind. I, like Karl and Laura, have spent many years of blood, sweat and tears furthering the mission of the church. And even though life and faith shift may have changed some things for us, we’re still looking for glimpses of what the church (and the people that make it up) are trying to be. If you’re still feeling defensive but determined to power through this book, first go and read Pagan Christianity written by George Barna and Frank Viola first (published by Zondervan - bona fide Evangelical publication) and then come back to this.

Disclaimers aside, I appreciate this book. It isn’t always easy to read but it covers important ground for anyone who for one reason or another is “rethinking church”. I’ve enjoyed Karl’s other books, but the secret weapon of this one is Laura - you realize pretty quickly that both voices are necessary to get a fuller picture. It’s not a scholarly work and there are a couple of areas that they could have unpacked a little bit more, but I have no hesitation in giving this 5 stars.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Guide for the DeconstructingReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 16 August 2022
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Karl and Laura Forehand share their stories about their deconstruction that resonates in me. We have questions in our spiritual journey, yet it's good to know there are those who went on before.

The desert can be a great place to be.

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Joe Machuta
5.0 out of 5 stars This is a must read for anyone deconstructing their faith!Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 16 August 2022
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Karl and Laura take you on a journey from the certainty of ministry to the beautiful uncertainty of freedom from the organization and during that journey find the peace of exploring possibility and find real community in the process.

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Karen Shock
5.0 out of 5 stars We are not alone!Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 22 November 2022
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This book is just what I needed in this season of my life. The vulnerability of Karl and Laura throughout this book was like a healing balm to my deconstructing heart. It's easy to read and so very easy to relate to. I found myself shaking my head in agreement so many times... thinking "been there done that." I'm so grateful to have this book on my desk as a great reminder that I am not alone on this journey.

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