2022/06/07

THE COMING INTERSPIRITUAL AGE, For Pre-Review-Kurt Johnson | PDF | Spirituality | Consciousness

THE COMING INTERSPIRITUAL AGE, For Pre-Review-Kurt Johnson | PDF | Spirituality | Consciousness


THE COMING INTERSPIRITUAL AGE, Kurt Johnson


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RELIGION
Evolution And The Coming Interspiritual Age: A Conversation With Kurt Johnson
By David Sloan Wilson
4 Comments



Kurt Johnson is a rare specimen. He is an evolutionary biologist who specializes in the taxonomy of butterflies and has named hundreds of species. He was also a Christian monk and is currently a leader among an international movement called Interspirituality, as he recounts in his book titled The Coming Interspiritual Age. I had the pleasure of working with Kurt over a period of two days at an event that I organized with two pastors, Wilfredo Baez and Arthur Suggs, in my hometown of Binghamton New York. The event was sponsored by a project that I direct called the Binghamton Religion and Spirituality Project, which seeks to understand the nature of religion and spirituality in the context of everyday life. Tired but with a feeling of accomplishment, we recorded our interview at the end of the second day.

Our interview explores Kurt’s personal journey and how all of the world’s religious traditions converge on a form of spirituality that is consistent with methodological naturalism.

DSW: Welcome, Kurt Johnson.

KJ: Thank you.

DSW: You are someone who has double credentials. First as an evolutionary biologist. Second as a contemplative, a word that we have been using over the past two days. You’ve been developing these credentials in parallel, from the very beginning it seems. As you were getting your Ph.D. in evolutionary biology, you were also a Christian monk as I understand it. I wonder if you could tell us your personal story and then we can begin to discuss what this represents in terms of a union of evolutionary science and this concept called interspirituality.

KJ: I think it is probably helpful for the introduction to see three tracks, so we don’t get stuck in a dichotomy between an extremely subjective experience, which is what most people would take a contemplative life to be, and a very disciplined and robust scientific life, knowing everything that requires. The third track is understanding what I have done in comparative religion. I went into the monastic life initially after my first Masters degree and before my second Masters degree and PhD.

DSW: What was your first Masters degree?

KJ: It was also in biology, from Iowa, after undergraduate school in Wisconsin and before I got my Doctorate at the City University Graduate Center’s program with the American Museum of Natural History. The reason [I went into the monastic life] was that I was deeply mining experience from the subjective lens and what was then impacting me as a consciousness and a heart and as a person of ethics, ideals, hopes—everything like that. I was a creature of the 1960’s, of course—that was a player. So I was being informed very much by that type of knowing, while simultaneously coming out of an academic background (my father was a division head in geography at the University of Wisconsin) that understood very rigorously what science and academic inquiry were and what objective knowing was about. I think I was an innocent victim of feeling deeply informed by both of those ways of knowing, in a way that I felt very compelled to simultaneously follow both tracks. I had also had minors in the humanities and a lot of opportunities in music, so I had an interesting career in the arts that I could have followed if I didn’t have to arbitrarily choose science…

DSW: Was the arts and spiritual side in your family, or was your family background mostly the science side?

KJ: I think it was mostly the science side, but I grew up in the Lakota country in western Nebraska, south of the native lands of the Lakota, which are now a big part of my shamanic and indigenous connections. So unknowingly there was an aesthetic part to my connection to nature that looked through the dual lens–the lens of the beauty of nature and the lens of the scientific knowing of how it works and all the details of science. I think I was naturally following the call to existentially being there, particularly in the 60’s, in the middle of the Vietnam war, in the middle of everything that was erupting with regard to psychodelic knowing and everything else that was going on then. I was a very high energy, super wired, overly intelligent, overly sensitive combination. I was radically, aggressively following those paths of knowing. So I took the opportunities at immersion in both.

DSW: What was your entry into the monastic tradition?

KJ: To be honest, I had gone through a very difficult time in my existential life. By that I mean in knowing what it means to be here, as a person, what made it satisfactory to live and not commit suicide. To be honest, if you were very conflicted, highly intelligent, highly sensitive person, I think I walked that line very finely.

DSW: So you had suicidal thoughts?

KJ: I went through that entire thing, absolutely. What was the predicament of being here, when you felt so much and saw so much and some of that was so horrendous. When I was in graduate school in my first Masters program I actually had a role model, a professor who had a monastic connection. I’ll be honest that I saw his stability and his way of being…there was something that he knew about reality that I thought—whatever that is, that’s something I’m interested in, because it’s not all over the place. It’s grounded, it’s clear, it’s loving, it’s compassionate, it’s highly knowledgeable–it’s all those things. I got very curious whether the order and sanity of a monastic life really had something to contribute to the path I was following, just as an existential person. I had to do novitiate first and then pursue my doctoral work after I got my minor seminary done.

DSW: So you had to take time out from the academic world.

KJ: I had to take at least two or three years before I was back in a doctorate program. By that time I was wearing a collar [laughs]—maybe pretending to be a Teilhard de Chardin.

DSW: So this was a Christian idiom, right? How did encountering the Christian idiom interact with the scientific worldview?

KJ: I think maybe innocently and naively I was a little bit of a Teilhard [de Chardin] mimic.

DSW: OK, he managed! [Chardin was a Jesuit priest and paleontologist who wrote The Phenomenon of Man. I discuss his work in relation to modern evolutionary theory in my book The Neighborhood Project this radio interview]

KJ: I suppose in a naïve kind of idealistic way I felt caught between those worlds.

DSW: Did you actually read Teilhard de Chardin?

KJ: Absolutely!

DSW: Ok, so you had him as a guidepost.

KJ: Yes, I had read him. I had never met him, obviously, but I had read him. The other thing about me was that I was not necessarily a religious person. Today when we understand the phrase “spiritual but not religious”, I was really one of those people that…I was at home in the monastic life, but I might not necessarily have been at home in the parochial clergy. One of those is an atmosphere for searching and inquiring, while the other one is being maybe more a servant of a creator, or a dogma, or a form. There is a big difference. I was interested in consciousness.

DSW: So the monastic training was less dogmatic than just becoming a churchgoer?

KJ: Absolutely. The people in the order that I was in were studying everything from Buddhism, to Vedanta [“Hinduism” with its many mystic forms] to occultism.

DSW: But it was a Christian order?

KJ: Yes it was, and it was at the time of [Thomas] Merton, who was making his crossover into Buddhism. There were other people at that time who were starting to make some crossovers. Certainly many in the order I was in–and it was an Episcopalian order, which made it even more liberal than if it had been a Roman Catholic order–they were doing radical inquiry into reality, in a way. What are the experiences we can have? What do they mean? When are they crazy and psychotic and when are they real? I was in a sense religion-neutral. I was doing what monastics do and not, as we used to say, playing church. I didn’t have any interest in playing church. We would tend to distinguish between those who were on a path of inquiry at the deepest parts of what was available in spirituality and just playing church. That would have never interested me.

DSW: Did you get the grounding and stability that you were seeking?

KJ: Absolutely. Absolutely. People who knew me when I went into novitiate, where I was all over the place—overly brilliant, overly sensitive, wired—I came out of there solid as a rock. I’ll be honest—that was because of silence, and the routine, and the stability of that life style. That grounded me very quickly. There was a sanity to it that grounded me.

DSW: Did you take that out of the monastery?

KJ: For sure. People who knew me before and after didn’t really think I was the same person, because I was so stable. A lot of the things that I did when I was in that life, especially when I was overseas, they were very high stress situations in Africa and other places, where we did certain work. I went from being a vulnerable person to being a very stable person. By chance then, the people at the American Museum of Natural History knew of me—I had published a lot even by my Masters degree. I had quite a bibliography. Once they knew that I was nearby and available, and I also had an expertise, they invited me into a research association there. I just had to get permission from my religious order, to come and go.

DSW: Let’s provide some background—your Masters work was in entomology, systematics…

KJ: Yes. My doctorate was in four areas. You had to pick four areas of competency. For me it was evolution, ecology, systematics, and comparative biology. I probably have 300 juried publications in journals, 7 technical monographs, so that environment was very much publish or perish. I was sometimes publishing 30 or 40 articles a year, because I was really grinding it out. But I was also blessed, to be honest, that most of the areas that I specialized–because my lab tool was butterflies–I ended up working in areas of the world where things had no names. I think I worked over the taxonomy of about 2000 species and maybe 200 genera, naming hundreds of new things, especially from poorly known areas of the world.

DSW: So you were an alpha taxonomist, as they put it?

KJ: That’s it. You know the drill. I was an alpha taxonomist, actually right on the cusp of when Cladistics and Vicariance Biogeography was being born. On my doctoral committee my professors were the people who were germinal in all that—Niles Eldredge, Donn Rosen, Gary Nelson, Norman Platnick, Toby Schuh. It was really an honor to study with them.

DSW: We’re getting your academic pedigree down.

KJ: The whole crew at the American Museum of Natural History. I was actually the first doctorate student in their entomology program. I was like the guinea pig. They had invited me there as a research associate. They realized that I had an unfinished doctorate so they said “Do you want to be our first doctoral student?”

DSW: Let’s take a little side trip. Vladimir Nabokov. Let’s spend a few minutes on that because you are quite well known for your book Nabokov’s Blues. What is the Nabokov connection? [Editor’s note: Nabokov was an accomplished butterfly taxonomist in addition to a novelist]

KJ: Right. This is all very innocent but it’s amazing how it came about. I have Nabokov’s Blues and now I have a book coming out in 2015 from Yale University Press called Fine Lines: Nabokov’s Scientific Art, which is really a capstone book on his whole scientific career. Here’s how it came about. It’s so innocent it’s almost funny. In my office at the American Museum of Natural History was Nabokov’s collection, just by chance. In the biodiversity crisis era, when we were looking for hot spots and trying to understand what was the actual diversity of certain lineages, say in South America and the Andes and so on, I was naïve enough to pick Nabokov’s blues [a subfamily of butterflies] as a group that I thought was small enough to be finish-able. In other words, one could cladistically go to the end of that phylogenetic tree, to include everything and it wouldn’t be so damn big to be totally unruly. I think we started with maybe 12 or 13 species in his group and by the time we were done we had over 100. So, what happened was that absolutely innocently picking it as a group that we thought we could do the work—and we did. However, we also ended up discovering, again by chance, that all of the work that he had done.—which has fallen into disrepute– was actually correct, because he had used a phylogenetic method, the modern paradigm, before its time. So, we ended up writing the papers, and then the book, reviving the correctness of his taxonomies. They had been incorrectly abandoned by the so-called “numerical taxonomists” of the 60’s—who relied on simple resemblance, not a phylogenetic method. It was later, in 2011, that DNA analysis (thanks to the Harvard DNA lab) showed his evolutionary and biogeographic predictions were also correct, which is the subject of the new book. [Editor’s note: Johnson recounted his work on Nabokov at length and this part of the interview will be published separately. We then turned to interspirituality].

DSW: Let’s get to the main event of this interview, which is the entire concept of spirituality and how all of its manifestations can be reconciled with scientific understanding. A little background: Why are you here? Why am I interviewing you face to face? Because you came for a two-day event in the little city of Binghamton New York, called “The Coming Interspiritual Age”, the title of your book. That meeting was not at Binghamton University but rather the First Congregational Church. The audience was not professors and students. It was members of the community, although it did include some university representatives. For me this makes it especially poignant and interesting. The concept of the coming interspiritual age and the fact that such a thing could be fully consistent with what I like to call methodological naturalism, is big news. Bigger news than anything involving Nabokov. Let’s get right to that. What is the coming interspiritual age, and how is it possible for something that sounds so religious to be—I want to say 100% compatible with methodological naturalism.

KJ: Let’s see if we can get at it this way. A discussion began after—it had been going a long time but amped up after– Vatican II, about the relationships of all the world’s religions in their narratives and also their experiential track, which in a sense was an evolutionary tree of nested sets of human subjective experience, which had gotten translated into religious narrative about what the contemplative or deeper inquiry experiences in spirituality are. The comparative religion theologians who were talking in that period were also talking with the contemplatives across all the world’s traditions. What do you call them? Saints, gurus—all those people who go really deep into that type of inquiry–what might be called mystical or whatever. As the world went cosmopolitan, the religions started to talk with each other at this experiential level. There was a discovery that the existential experience that everyone had in contemplative inquiry, like myself as a monk, or somebody as a Tibetan lama, or as a Hindu guru, or as a Sufi mystic or whatever it might be– the resulting experience was that everything is profoundly interconnected and that nothing is separate. What happened, then, was a discovery that what all religions had in common would allow a global universal spirituality to arise, which could agree about basic understandings of how humanity had experienced ultimate reality and also what type of moral and ethical behavior would result from those types of realizations. The simplest one would be that if everybody starts to figure out that the ultimate mystical experience is that everything is interconnected and nothing is separate, it has the immediate implication of how parts of that system treat each other. It has an ethical and values-related result, which predicts that there is a possibility for religion not to be part of the ongoing problem in the world–which has been fighting over ideas and theology and eschatologies and end-time scenarios–and actually making those narratives secondary to the depth of moral understanding that comes from inner inquiry. Even if you are a humanist or an atheist or a non-theist, whatever it might be, you come to this understanding that is reflected in the new physics and in quantum theory–everything that has to do with profound interconnectedness. This implies a way that we need to be with each other that has very clear ethical and moral implications.

DSW: So science comes to its own conclusion about everything being interconnected.

KJ: Right. The religions, then, end up where they are able to meet in understanding that the entire tree of experiences has actually been one existential phenomenon from which you draw the same conclusion, which is a behavioral conclusion about the kind of civilization that’s predicated on not only the cosmological notion of how things are interconnected, but the experiential report—because that’s different than a notion—the experiential report that that’s how things are put together.

DSW: Is this what you call second tier consciousness?

KJ: Yes, it is what many writers today call second tier consciousness. In other words, there has been an evolution out of what they call the old first-tier consciousness which has everything in boxes. Islam, Judaism, Christianity—all this at loggerheads. This theology, that theology. This doctrine, that doctrine. This creed, that creed. Again reflecting argument, conflict, war, everything imaginable. Because identity is tied up in a certain box, which then competes and fights with other boxes.

DSW: You just described first-tier consciousness. I want to assert, and have you agree, that it extends into the secular realm as well. All of the national identities and conflicts engendered. That’s also a form of first-tier consciousness. So first tier consciousness is not restricted to religion. It includes religion plus…

KJ: …Ethnic identifies, sexual identities, gender identities, you name it. Anything that puts you in a box and sets you off against other boxes. First-tier consciousness needs to be identified with a box and will defend the box. What happens with the evolution of second-tier consciousness–which involves the heart, this deeper perception of interconnectedness and also involves the pragmatics of a global civilization–is that you suddenly realize: Oh my Gosh, the way that we get to mutuality and caring and understanding is that all forms serve us but we don’t need to be bound by any particular form. You start to see that the boundaries falling away are not negative. They are positive and that you’re actually happier and freer and in more harmony with others when there is no more of this conflict and warring, silo to silo. It simply drops away in the sense of how a person wants to identify themselves and therefore they don’t have anything to protect any more. So that just happens out of the way things are comprehended. Does that make sense?

DSW: That makes sense to me! [laughs] Could I contrast it with the New Atheism? We talked about this yesterday. I think it’s so interesting because there is a whole narrative about science and religion being irreconcilable. Steven Jay Gould referred to it as separate magisteria. Interspirituality is trending in a different direction. I want to have you speak on that topic, if you would.

KJ: Basically, it’s trending in a different direction because of what happens experientially. What allows this to happen is real people stepping up in real time. By that I mean contemplative leaders across the traditions, who because they are contemplative leaders are the writers of the books that are revered, the speakers that are revered, the leaders that are revered–when they start to announce that the boundaries falling away is what brings together a new possibility of this type of unanimity and unity and profound interconnectedness, experientially it brings the message that the need to defend these boundaries is no longer really a primary concern. What’s interesting is that there is an adaptive significance to that type of mutuality serving a global community, as opposed to the conflict war-based model, which has a very different result. If you start looking at it as being attractive to people as an idea—when you have that adaptive positive–that is steering civilization in a very different direction than the other model. It really steps into naturally being a choice. The way that we have put this in the evolutionary context is that interspirituality is the inherent evolutionary response of the religions to globalization and multiculturalism. In other words, the response that religion could have to become part of the solution to a global civilization that’s healthy and works, rather than part of the problem that it has always been based on conflicts about ideas and creeds and dogmas. Religion itself would evolve to this understanding that back-burners theology and ideas, back-burners the mental parsing out process, and makes central the matters of the ethical teachings, the idealistic teachings, and the things that come from love, kindness, compassion, mutuality, and interconnectedness. This is the vector of its understanding. It has inherently evolved in a way that’s positive toward the globalization process rather than remaining a negative force. This is the way we frame it when we challenge people—religion can either step up to that inherent evolutionary path to meet globalization in a positive way, or if it doesn’t, as Ken Wilber said, it will forfeit the claim that it has something to add to international and global phenomenon. Everything that we say about all the bad things that religion has done in the name of god –all of that is true. But there is a unique element in the spirituality of the world’s religions, in the sense of its ethics and ideals and basic teachings, that speaks profoundly to the transformation of will—the positive transformation of behavior. At that level, it can still claim to be part of a conveyer belt process to a global civilization that would be healthy.

DSW: What is the role of counterfactual belief? Why is it that religions of the past have included counterfactual beliefs and how is it possible for religion and spirituality of the future to avoid counterfactual beliefs?

KJ. I think the answer to that is simple in the sense of the way interspirituality looks at this. The original lens of religion is what we call the magic-mythic lens. It was so subjective that it wasn’t interested in the disciplining of subjective experience in the way that objective knowing —the type of thing that science does. Subjective experience that wasn’t meeting any test, in the sense of its usefulness or anything like that. Now there is a distinction between the magic-mythic and rational and the integral. We say that the way forward is a balance of these skills. We look at humanity and we say, we’ve got subjective skills and we’ve got objective skills. The subjective skill area is murky, there’s no doubt about it. You could actually say that the objective area is murky when you look at it methodologically and a lot of other ways. But we need a balanced approach to who we are.

DSW: This is a nod to evolutionary psychology, a topic that This View of Life has paid a great deal of attention to. One thing you said during our sessions today, which I want to make sure is captured in this interview, is that the mythic-magic view is deeply embedded in our species and we’ll never get rid of it. Just go to a movie and you will see it. It’s part of human nature to be storytellers and to operate in magic-mythic mode—to offer that deep, gut level, kind of inspiration. Therefore this is not something that we want to or can eliminate. We need to somehow harness it, but also to partition it in a way that we can also operate in rational scientific mode. Maybe you could expand upon that.

KJ: I think you said it really well. The sense of the magic-mythic, the heroic, what moves you when you look at the art. That sense of who we are is so important to how humanity can advance to solve the world’s problems and go wherever its destiny may be as an amazing creative and skillful species. It’s not something to be discarded, but to be channeled in a way that truly serves the holistic identity of who we really are–that tells the stories that allow us to be more creative, to actually meet the world’s problems in creative ways and to meet them together. So, for instance, the archetype of the warrior gets transformed from the warrior who is knocking off heads to the warrior that wants to understand cancer. That would be the modern archetype of the warrior.

DSW: I think I’d like to end with the fact that we’ve spent the last two days together–were actually brought together–in a venue that took place in a church, the First Congregational Church. As we were reminded by the Pastor, Art Suggs, the First Congregational Church has led the way in progressive movements. It was among the first to ordain a black pastor, a woman pastor, a gay pastor—decades before the rest of society–so that’s the benign side of religion. And the audience for the event that we staged was not professors. It included a few professors and some students, but for the most part it was members of the community, who not only resonated to the message but had their own profound stories to tell. So interspirituality is not something that is known only among an elite and is difficult to translate. That is very optimistic. This is not just some academic exercise but is something that can actually thrive and compete in the Darwinian struggle of ideas. [pause] Do I have the last word?



KJ: You may have the last word. I think you’re absolutely right. The audience that was here this weekend represents the direction that the human heart wants to see at the grassroots level. It wants to move away from what’s chronically led to competition and conflict and war and those negative sides of the evolutionary pathway. It wants to see us get to a type of altruism and mutuality and interconnectedness where there is another way that we do things that is self-evident by who we are now as a more advanced hominid. That we become a hominid that gets past the tribe and the clan and all of these things that are so deeply embedded in us. Interspirituality is trans-ethnic, trans-national, trans-religious. It’s trans- all of those boundaries. If that appeals to the grassroots human heart, that gets a big yes. That even has political implications, relative to how it drives the future of the decisions that societies make. Actually that is how we phrased the last paragraph of The Coming Interspiritual Age— we are still here, still able to make those critical ongoing decisions. David, I want to thank you, and your work, for being such a huge part of that view of a possible optimistic future.

DSW: So you get the last word [laughs]. Thank you, Kurt.

KJ: Thank you!



Published On: May 20, 2015

David Sloan Wilson



David Sloan Wilson is president of Prosocial World and SUNY Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Biology and Anthropology at Binghamton University. He applies evolutionary theory to all aspects of humanity in addition to the rest of life, through Prosocial World and in his own research and writing. A complete archive of his work is available at www.David SloanWilson.world. His most recent books include his first novel, Atlas Hugged: The Autobiography of John Galt III, and a memoir, A Life Informed by Evolution.



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The Coming Interspiritual Age Paperback – January 8, 2013
by Kurt Johnson (Author), David Robert Ord (Author)

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This book details the vision of interspirituality within a comprehensive and powerful synthesis of world religions and spirituality, the discoveries of modern science, and the developmental and evolutionary view of history. It is the first book to review and predict the ongoing history of world religions and spirituality in the context of developmental history, the evolutionary consciousness movement, and current scientific understandings of anthropology, human cognitive development, brain/mind and scientific consciousness studies.

This book addresses Brother WayneTeasdale’s vision of “The Interspiritual Age,” a vision that parallels the equally well-known and publicized visions of the world’s developmental and evolutionary consciousness movements (known therein as coming “Integral Age” or “Age of Evolutionary Consciousness”) and the international humanist movement (known therein as the emerging “international Ethical Manifold”). As such The Coming Interspiritual Age is the first synthesis of interfaith and interspirituality with the popular writings of integral leaders Ken Wilber and Don Beck.

The book includes provocative sections regarding the inherent unity within the world’s religious and spiritual understanding (especially their shared mystical understandings), the relationship of these and modern scientific studies of consciousness and brain/mind, the developmental and evolutionary views of history, the inevitable ongoing processes of world globalization and multiculturalism, the emergent understanding of the Divine Feminine, the nature of spiritual experience and the reputed spirit realms, and the various predictions around and surrounding the year 2012. The book concludes with extensive “how-to” sections regarding the development and practice of interspirituality as it can happen both within the world’s current religious traditions as well as in new, creative and entrepreneurial settings worldwide.
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Editorial Reviews

Review
"A landmark contribution" -- The Interfaith Observer / "A must read...at the cutting edge of spirituality"-- Kosmos

Fr. Thomas Keating: I'm very glad this wonderful book continues to draw praise and interest. I support and recommend it.

"Stunning, and I might say, coming at us like a freight train, or a rising sun"-- Shared Purpose


The Parliament of the World's Religions-- "... widely endorsed... Advancing the work of Bro. Wayne Teasdale, The Coming Interspiritual Age explores themes of oneness, unity, and diversity on a world-wide scale... Forecasting a global shift toward spiritual consciousness..., the authors unwrap an evolving makeup of religious communities to showcase how new forms of personal identity and scientific contexts in religion are creating a collective interspirituality."


Ken Wilber-- "If you're not sure what all this means-- and even if you are-- get this visionary book and find out what all the excitement and enthusiasm is about. It might change your world." [bookcover]
From the Back Cover
Richard Rohr-- "I really cannot exaggerate the value and importance of this book. This is where we are going."

Matthew Fox-- "This ambitious book joins the multiple efforts at interspirituality in our time...to spawn something more resembling a full-hearted life... I welcome it!"

Pir Zia Inayat-Khan-- "Bro. Wayne Teasdale's momentous legacy of mystical ecumenism is powerfully amplified and elaborated on in this sprawling work of historical, scientific, and spiritual synthesis."

Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee-- "This panoramic book helps us to understand why Interspirituality is so central to our shared destiny".

Andrew Harvey-- "Profound heart and deep intellect inform every page of this rich and beautiful book".

Neil Douglas-Klotz-- "Good News for Postmodern Humanity!... a compelling and comprehensive peek towards a positive future."

Lama Surya Das-- "...Compelling and accessible...a tremendous contribution to the emerging field of global spirituality and the evolution of enlightened wisdom.... It documents the trend toward a global unity consciousness and makes crystal clear the gifts the Great Wisdom Traditions can bring to this global discussion".

Rev. Canon Charles P. Gibbs, United Religions Initiative-- "...here is a book of authentic hope... a book with the potential to change your life, to change our lives, and with them the future of humanity."

Yasuhiko Genku Kimura, Vision in Action-- "...a magnificent post-modern integral vision, heralding a new kind of spirituality."

Nancy Roof, Kosmos-- "...If you want to keep abreast of the leading edge of spiritiality, this book is a must read."

Paul Chaffee, The Interfaith Observer-- "The Coming Interspiritual Age is a hugely ambitious project-- an extemely readable extended apologia for interspiritiality."

Ashok Gangadean, World Commission on Global Consciousness and Spirituality-- "...This book deserves to be widely read on a global scale as we discover our new shared story of our human evoluionary journey."

Aster Patel, Governing Board, the Auroville (India) Foundation-- "This book senses the urgency of our destiny... and brings together myriad strands that could hasten the process".

The Temple of Understanding-- "If one can use The Coming Interspiritual Age as a map and guidepost, then there exists the possbility that it will light the way towards a global interfaith and intercultural peaceful future for humankind." Alison van Dyk, Chair and Executive Director

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Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Namaste Publishing (January 8, 2013)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 440 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1897238746
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1897238745
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.4 pounds
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1 x 9 inchesBest Sellers Rank: #361,024 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)#92,249 in Religion & Spirituality (Books)Customer Reviews:
4.2 out of 5 stars 29 ratings




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Dr. Kurt Johnson has worked in science and spirituality for over 40 years. This dual career in science and spirituality is detailed at WIKIPEDIA under Kurt Johnson, entomologist. In spirituality Kurt is co-author of the recently published book THE COMING INTERSPIRITUAL AGE with David Robert Ord, the Editorial Director of Namaste Publishing (publishers of such spiritual teachers as Eckhart Tolle and Michael Brown). As a New Release the book has been in Amazon’s Top Ten in Spirituality. In science Kurt is the co-author of the best-selling NABOKOV’s BLUES, with Steve Coates of The New York Times, which was a Top Ten Book in science in 2000. In 2016 Kurt followed with the book FINE LINES: VLADIMIR NABOKOV'S SCIENTIFIC ART with Yale University Press and co-editor Stephen Blackwell. Kurt was originally a Christian monk and founded, with Br. Wayne Teasdale and others, the InterSpiritual Dialogue (www.isdna.org, www.interspirituality.com) association for discussion of contemplative experience across traditions. Ordained in three spiritual traditions, he works also with The Contemplative Alliance (www.gpiw.org) and Integral communities (www.thecominginterspiritualage.com). In science Kurt’s PhD is in evolution, ecology, systematics and comparative biology. Associated with the American Museum of Natural History (30 yrs.) he published 200+ articles on evolution and ecology, including the 2011 Harvard DNA sequence study vindicating Vladimir Nabokov’s views of evolution. In 2015 Kurt was elected to The Evolutionary Leaders. However, Kurt’s primary interest is the simplicity of nondual spiritual practice.

4.2 out of 5 stars

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1.0 out of 5 stars Cheap Journalistic wasteReviewed in the United States on April 13, 2019
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I was lured into buying this book, based on Kurt Johnson's reputation as an insightful, deep author, and on exhilarating endorsements by serious teachers (eg. Richard Rohr, Paul Knitter, Rami Shapiro, etc). What a huge disappointment! This is just cheap journalistic writing, that even talks about 'merchants' like Deepak Chopra in the same vein as Bede Griffiths and Sri Aurobindo!?! There are many better books on Interspirituality out there....

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Trailwulf

5.0 out of 5 stars Deep Think About SpiritReviewed in the United States on March 29, 2013
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This is a five star book with tremendous historical sweep and provocative emphasis on the continuing spiritual evolution of the human race. It calls us all to affirm the gifts of our particular religious roots and their contribution to the one tree of life. This is not pointing to some homoginized ecumenicity but to many different wells that all tap in to the same aquifer. It allows one to affirm and participate in his/her religious tradition, avoid seeing all other traditions as being in error or perverting the truth, and promotes an ever-widening appreciation for and learning from "how others do it." This book is not for the religious bigot but for every longing heart and open mind who seeks deep peace and serenity of spirit.

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Old Phoenix

5.0 out of 5 stars Necessary CompendiumReviewed in the United States on January 21, 2014
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The previous reviews cover important details about this book, which I will try not to repeat. Much of the narrative resonated with my own reading, experiences, and personal evolution, so the material was easy to take in. It is well written and accessible to the non-scientist and non-theologian but satisfying to the expert. The familiar portions provided comfort food, while the information new to me made a fine dessert. For anyone interested in the intersections between science and spirituality and/or religion, this is a treasure house. For someone new to the subject, this is the place to start and then pursue the particular leads found inside that excite your imagination and make your heart race.The bibliography alone is worth the price of the book.


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marjorie lipari

5.0 out of 5 stars The Coming Interspiritual AgeReviewed in the United States on February 22, 2013
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A serious no fool around read.....I suggest this book be taken to heart.
Its detailed tracking of the dynamic process of human spiritual development through shifting paradigms
and the musing of how the future just may be unfolding in a direction of a greater We awareness.
On so many levels this book announces without a doubt the brilliance
of Kurt Johnson and David Robert Ord proving they have indeed done there homework on every
page with information at a depth that holds the potential to alter ones perceptions on a cellular level.
A stellar read !!!!

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Dr. Sonya Jones

5.0 out of 5 stars If you don't read another book this year, read The Coming Interspiritual AgeReviewed in the United States on May 29, 2013
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The Coming Interspiritual Age advances the work begun by Interfaith thinkers such as Father Bede Griffiths, Paramahansa Yogananda, and Brother Wayne Teasdale. Further, this text asks us to think seriously about the role of science in relation to contemporary spirituality. Too often, the scientist and theologian are placed in different categories, but Kurt Johnson, co-author of this text and a scientist/theologian himself, asks us to consider the sacred dimensions of both science and spirituality. If you don't read another book this year, read this one--slowly and thoughtfully. In its way, this text is prophetic of where Interspiritualy is likely to head over the next several decades as religious plurality makes inroads into the political and social fabric of a globalized world.

Dr. Sonya Jones, Professor of Comparative World Religions, Honors Program, The University of Kentucky
aka Swami Shraddhananda, Spiritual Director, Slate Branch Ashram

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Timothy H. Miner

5.0 out of 5 stars The next evolution of human spiritualityReviewed in the United States on February 13, 2013
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Dr. Kurt Johnson and David Ord have produced an excellent survey of the three thousand years plus of human spirituality and condensed it down into five hundred pages. The bottom line is that spirituality evolves as does the gamit of human activities. The next stage of human spirituality is the concept of "interspirituality" which was a term first used by Bro. Wayne Teasdale in his book "The Mystic Heart." Dr. Johnson's close relationship to Bro. Teasdale makes this book especially compelling to read. It provides a more up-to-date review of interspirituality, including modern structures like the Order of Universal Interfaith which was created since that first book. This work is on the "top-ten-must-reads" for our spiritual society.

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Bruce J. Casino

5.0 out of 5 stars New, universal, approach to spirituality and profound insights on science and religionReviewed in the United States on February 1, 2013
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Dr. Kurt Johnson provides a vision, deeply rooted in an integrated veiw of major faith traditions, of how to live a rich and blissful life both for the individual and for a planet in crises. He provides profound insights on everything from evolutionary psychology to the gap between rich and poor, to how to nurture the mystic in all of us. His interfaith perspective provides a new universal approach to spirituality for the individual which those in any faith tradition will gain from. His deep rootedness in science, in particular the very latest studies in biology, allows a modern (or post-modern) person to understand the scientific underpinnings of spirituality and religion and to form a comprehensive veiw of their relationship. All this in an eminently readable page turner with fresh insights leaping off each page. Read it, you will not be disappointed.

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David Sloan Wilson

5.0 out of 5 stars Authentic integration of spirituality and scienceReviewed in the United States on July 7, 2015
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It's easy to dismiss a book like this as new-agey but in fact it is solidly grounded in science. Kurt Johnson combines a PhD in evolutionary biology with monastic training. The concept of interspirituality notes that all religious traditions converge upon the scientifically validated fact that everything is interconnected. Certain ethical principles follow from this fact. See my interview with Johnson on the online magazine This View of Life for more.


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busmar
5.0 out of 5 stars compellingReviewed in Canada on August 18, 2013
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A compelling march through human evolution with a larger-than-planetary perspective. This brings into focus thinking that many have been hinting at, and which religions have been pointing to --- until they became lost in themselves.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 27, 2016
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Fine study of de Chardins influence Augustine R
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The Coming Interspiritual Age
by Kurt Johnson, David Robert Ord
 3.88  ·   Rating details ·  25 ratings  ·  4 reviews
This book details the vision of interspirituality within a comprehensive and powerful synthesis of world religions and spirituality, the discoveries of modern science, and the developmental and evolutionary view of history. It is the first book to review and predict the ongoing history of world religions and spirituality in the context of developmental history, the evolutionary consciousness movement, and current scientific understandings of anthropology, human cognitive development, brain/mind and scientific consciousness studies.

This book addresses Brother WayneTeasdale’s vision of “The Interspiritual Age,” a vision that parallels the equally well-known and publicized visions of the world’s developmental and evolutionary consciousness movements (known therein as coming “Integral Age” or “Age of Evolutionary Consciousness”) and the international humanist movement (known therein as the emerging “international Ethical Manifold”). As such The Coming Interspiritual Age is the first synthesis of interfaith and interspirituality with the popular writings of integral leaders Ken Wilber and Don Beck.

The book includes provocative sections regarding the inherent unity within the world’s religious and spiritual understanding (especially their shared mystical understandings), the relationship of these and modern scientific studies of consciousness and brain/mind, the developmental and evolutionary views of history, the inevitable ongoing processes of world globalization and multiculturalism, the emergent understanding of the Divine Feminine, the nature of spiritual experience and the reputed spirit realms, and the various predictions around and surrounding the year 2012. The book concludes with extensive “how-to” sections regarding the development and practice of interspirituality as it can happen both within the world’s current religious traditions as well as in new, creative and entrepreneurial settings worldwide. (less)


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Geoff Little
Sep 02, 2013Geoff Little rated it it was amazing
First, are you familiar with this book’s publisher, Namaste? Based from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, the publishing house keeps a small, select roster, releasing 2-3 titles annually. They also keep a giant in the building. It was Namaste, via founder Constance Kellough, who brought Eckhart Tolle to the world in 1997 with The Power of Now. That title went on to sell six million copies in 33 languages. In 2008, Oprah Winfrey hosted Tolle for a 10-episode television series viewed by 35 million. Tolle has followed The Power of Now with six additional books and related products. He remains one of the most sought after spiritual teachers in the world, sharing company (and occasional appearances) with the Dalai Lama.

So, if you are Namaste Publishing and you want to go big on a title (and by the countless blurbs in several of the book’s front pages, and on the back jacket, it seems they do) what do you got? Where is the monster hook? With The Coming Interspiritual Age (TCIA), Namaste has done it. Here please find: Tolle-level grandeur. They’ve given us a brilliant 14 billion-year planetary (occasionally interplanetary) ride captained by authors Johnson and Ord. Both are scholars with professional religious experience (Ord is also on staff at Namaste as editorial director). At over 400 pages, TCIA is a profound study of human spirituality that is at once accessible, brisk, rigorous, and exhilarating.

In beginning such a review, my spell check stayed unhappy with both the words “interspiritual” and “interspirituality.” I took this as a sign with where to start talking. The authors explain interspiritual as the idea that “the entire religious experience of our species has [in fact] been a single experience unfolding through many lines and branches, together empowering our species for higher evolution.” Interspiritual was coined in 1999 by Roman Catholic lay monk Brother Wayne Teasdale (1945-2004). Teasdale was a pioneer of interfaith theory and considered an expert in the area by his life’s end. Here is a signature Teasdale quote referenced throughout TCIA:

"The real religion of humankind can be said to be spirituality itself, because mystical spirituality is the origin of all the world religions. If this is so, we might also say that interspirituality—the sharing of ultimate experiences across traditions—is the religion of the third millennium. Interspirituality is the foundation that can prepare the way for a planet-wide enlightened culture, and a continuing community among the religions that is substantial, vital, and creative. (The Mystic Heart by Wayne Teasdale, New World Library Press, 1999)."

The Coming Interspiritual Age has grand ambitions. The book is up for re-framing Earth history, holding the tension between science and religion, and newly explaining how 100 billion or so of us have ever lived, want to more fully live, and may, in fact, soon be able to live. This is done not by reviewing interfaith discourse(s), but through scientific and religious epochal exploration.

The authors understand that the influence of the origins of human identity are profound. They address this issue early and often – how might we process that much of the world now, not to mention across time, has used religion (not science) to explain human identity? They shift to recent times to review forces of scientific discovery, pointing toward patterns and processes for answers of what a coming age should entail. In one case, they note major world religions are now increasingly comfortable with evolution as an explanation of human origins – that there is a traceable pattern of acceptance in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam with between 30 and 40 percent of adherents accepting the theory. There is a continued interest across similar identity questions leading to what process can be deduced from this pattern? How can such a process be better understood, and modeled?

Author Kurt Johnson, Ph.D., has a professional background that includes time as an Anglican monk. He has completed doctoral studies in evolutionary biology and ecology and now works primarily in comparative religious studies. He resides in Brooklyn, New York.

TCIA examines, across many chapters representing the bulk of the book, the Magic-Mythic age, into the rise of the God-Kings, onto the Renaissance and Enlightenment. The book arrives at our present time, ripe with scientific knowledge, but in terms of spirituality, comfortable and even hungry for – wait for it – trappings of the Magic-Mythic age again. The authors point to the hubbub of the Mayan December 21, 2012 date as an indicator of the public’s thirst for prophecy and fulfillment. Further, they note the unsurpassed popularity of morally conscious fantasies such as Star Wars and the Harry Potter series. It is a wonder that our scientific knowledge doesn’t appear to have the same sort of narrative satisfaction as these spiritually-minded films.

“Seldom do terrorists act in the name of consciousness religions,” write Johnson and Ord. The book projects history to arrive where religious identification is ultimately immaterial. The authors explain that we are moving, albeit slowly, from “hot religions” to “cool.” This is to say that, across the globe, dooming one another in the name of “our one true god/no-you-are-going-to-Hell” is on the decrease. A conscionable life-givingness, a generosity, an embodied compassion, all are becoming persuasive and soon, pervasive. Territory formerly occupied by religious creeds is falling to the unstoppability of a conscionable spirituality filled with deeds. That is to say that in the eyes of Johnson and Ord creeds are losing their level of influence. The more that such a spirituality be born – the more consciousness across our planet. The more consciousness, the more one-ness. This One-ness is our endgame according to the book. This is the great interspiritual hallmark meant to gird the Third Millenium.

It seems impossible to come to this book without one’s own personal background coloring the experience of the contents. For me, as one identified (if reservedly) as a Christian (I am a member in the Presbyterian Church USA), I was thrilled with this book’s desire for total redemption of and ultra-connection among all peoples. The emphasis on deeds over creeds makes great sense to me, and the book fleshes out early… it’s the institutions that provide the creeds. For example:

"Almost everything wrong with the world is the result of the way the institutional space is misaligned or out of control. When was the last time your bank did you a favor? What was your opinion of the “no questions asked” multi-trillion dollar bailout of the financial industry? When you examine social structures anywhere in the world, the most obvious disconnect is between the needs and wants of the “I” and “We” that built the institutional space, and the way the institutional space behaves toward us."

(Such a passage is an example of the book’s ability to humanely editorialize more philosophical points.) But to continue the idea of Christianity and TCIA, was Jesus an advocate of interspirituality? I believe so. I see Christ pointing – always – to this experience and truth: God is Love. Love for You. Love for All. I see the early church and apostles carrying this out, while wrestling with how to keep the institutional Judaic laws (creeds). It was an emerging conversation then, messy and too often culturally influenced. Meanwhile, we do not see from Christ the exclusion of other faiths and traditions. If you could be with him, you could Be. With. Him. It was a deeds experience. The only strong teaching we have from Jesus on religion was his calling out of the Judaic Scribes and Pharisees – their abuse of the power they held in their positions. Meanwhile, a generation or more later, tasked with capturing his version of Christ’s life, John, that most mystic of Christ’s disciples, up in years, opens his gospel account with, to my mind, an interspiritual account of reality. I hope you are familiar with his words beginning John 1, culminating with the declaration the light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it.

I commend The Coming Interspiritual Age to those with the following interests:

Anyone with a love of futurism, no matter what religious disposition. Anthropology majors and those (including me) who wish they’d been. Historians. Those who enjoy the occasionally-expressed science-minded side of Fr. Richard Rohr (who is a featured blurb on the back cover), Joseph Campbell fans (which makes me think of Bill Moyers, who also deserves this company). Stephen Hawking fans with an interest in religion. Readers of Brian McLaren’s most “meta” works will be delighted. If you are familiar with any of the community Tami Simon and Sounds True keeps (thinking of Mirabai Starr first, and there are others), this is a great extension (and gentle amalgamation) of the values of that group. Also, Krista Tippett, and her similarly bold cadre of thinkers, dreamers, and doers.
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Martha Jette
Sep 09, 2013Martha Jette rated it it was amazing
We are now well into the third millennium and change is coming in so many facets of our lives than we could have previously ever imagined. The authors of The Coming Interspiritual Age call this the Fifth Great Advance of civilization or the Dream of Holism.
As a civilization, humans have lived through many stages with our current one focused on not only the importance of rationalization and an analytic mind but also the beginnings of holistic thinking and the exploration of consciousness. In this book, the authors propose a coming Sixth Great Advance moving us toward full globalization.
A primary concern of this new age will be the creation of a one-world spiritualism that draws upon the precious jewels found within the myriad of world religions as the basis of a new worldwide belief system. It is essential, the authors write, that as the awareness of our increasing global community enters full consciousness, that we take those jewels into consideration in the formation of one global belief system that unifies us as one human race on this planet.
They caution, however, that this could also become “hijacked” by religion if various parties to this formation become too egocentric and controlling. Unfortunately, personal, regional and territorial desires over the years have opened the door to greed, degradation of the environment, rivalry between various religious factions and differing concepts on what is most important in life. This in turn has led to terrorism and wars between nations.
By cultivating an expanded worldview and promoting discourse among the various world religions, a global vision could unfold as to how humanity as a whole should spiritually behave with good conscience in the future. This will come, the authors believe, as humans experience further awareness and expanded consciousness, realizing the connectivity of all humans rather than any personal, regional or territorial desires.
The Coming Interspiritual Age provides a compelling summary on the theory of evolution – how the human species consciously developed over thousands of years taking in the importance of language and writing on the evolving mind and also their impact on our belief systems.
This book focuses primarily on the writings of Roman Catholic lay monk and interfaith leader, Brother Wayne Teasdale (now deceased), from his book The Mystic Heart: Discovering a Universal Spirituality in the World’s Religions. It was Teasdale, the authors note, who first coined the term ‘interspirituality,” which involves thinking of the ‘we’ rather than the ‘I’ and acting from the heart.
The ‘I, We and It’ of daily life is something that everyone experiences no matter where they live. ‘I’ refers to self, ‘We’ to those we know including family, friends and associates, and ‘It’ refers to the institutions that govern how we should act, think and feel based on a particular country’s ideals and religions.
Ironically, it is the “I and We” that created the institutions (‘It’) in the first place that people now feel threatened by such as government structures and banking systems that act with impunity. As the world inches closer to globalization the authors believe these institutions that rule our lives will also have to change from being self-serving and money driven entities to thinking and acting from the heart with full awareness of global needs rather than their own.
This is a book that looks both backward and forward in an attempt to offer the full picture of our current state of spirituality, as well as what steps must be taken to move toward an interspiritual world. It is well written, informative and most of all, thought provoking.
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Leah
Jul 15, 2013Leah rated it it was amazing
What a wealth of information about secular history, about anthropology, about world and indigenous religions, about individuality, and about our common humanity this book contains! It includes enough material for a lifetime of study and learning, and as you read, you might find yourself remembering certain books, classes, and professors, or you might find yourself suddenly interested in a new-to-you concept or era. To help navigate, and to assist your future topical study, useful End Matter (don't you love that term?) includes:

* Appendix I, Synopsis of the Developmental Periods
* Appendix II, Magic-Mythic and Apocalyptic Views of 2012
* Appendix III, Link to the Interspiritual Multiplex Resource Website
* Bibliography of "Books and articles consulted or referred to in The Coming Interspiritual Age"

Authors Johnson and Ord tell us "Generally, the expression 'spiritual world' refers to the entire dimension of consciousness, including the 'spirit realm' or 'astral realm' referred to in virtually every religious tradition." [chapter 14] They remind us some religious styles and traditions are closer to "revealed';" other could better be described as "consciousness" religions, though each has elements of the other; both types are important and complement each other. The late Brother Wayne Teasdale insisted, "Everyone is a mystic." Everyone participates on some level in the mysteries of this world and worlds unknown. Beyond this planet earth, within this globe, in some wholly other ethereal realm? Maybe all of those.

From the start, the authors remind us of the ultimate non-dualism of the interdependence of all creation, despite most of us operating most of the time detached from the other than us. Ultimately, it's about our "primary interspirituality, shared consciousness and heart, right here, right now." [chapter 28] That fact partly explains why, to quote Ari Ariyaratne, "We who have been born Buddhist, Hindu, Christian, Muslim, or any other faith can be very comfortable in each other's temples."[chapter 10] However, please be warned, interspirituality is not syncretism, not a blend or a blended religion. [chapter 18]

The Coming Interspiritual Age ... "coming age?" That era is both here and now, and yet to come, very much in the sense of Jesus of Nazareth's earthly ministry and the eschatological lifestyle to which the Spirit summons and enables the present-day Church of Jesus Christ. We're moving into "...the collective―the world of 'We,' including all that's transcultural, transnational, trans-traditional, and world-centric." [chapter 23] Consider this book for a study group, as the basis of a university, community college, or continuing education course, possibly as a discussion document for an ecumenical or interfaith group. Outstanding! (less)
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Fr. River
Aug 03, 2013Fr. River rated it it was amazing
THE COMING INTERSPIRITUAL AGE BY KURT JOHNSON AND DAVID ROBERT ORD


This book gives a history of humanity, basically a history of religion, and points out how we need to come together in common belief, an interspirituality. Its argues that basically we have evolved to the point for our survival we need to come together in common belief. I too belief in interspirituality,but I am a Christian, and I follow Christ, while believing God revealed himself in other religions. I find the arguments of this book place interpspirituality on a level that is beyond the reach of the common person, and intellectualizes spiritual practice. I have had interns from local interspiritual seminaries and each one struggles with putting into practice his theological perspective. In other words the rubber does not meet the road. I believe that we must strive for interspiritual faith giving all of our beliefs respect. (less)

Amazon - The Im-Possibility of Interreligious Dialogue: Cornille, Catherine: 9780824524647: Books

Amazon - The Im-Possibility of Interreligious Dialogue: Cornille, Catherine: 9780824524647: Books

The Im-Possibility of Interreligious Dialogue
 Paperback – October 1, 2008
by Catherine Cornille (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars    10 ratings
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In the face of competing religious claims in our shrinking world, many turn to dialogue as a hopeful way of fostering understanding and reducing violence. But why does actual dialogue so often fail? This provocative essay investigates the possibilities and limits of interreligious dialogue. By showing the significant obstacles for dialogue within Christianity, the book also proposes ways in which these obstacles may be overcome from within. Major themes include Humility, Conviction, Interconnection, Empathy, and Generosity.
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Publisher ‏ : ‎ Herder & Herder (October 1, 2008)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 280 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0824524640
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0824524647
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 14.2 ounces
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 0.9 x 9.25 inches
Best Sellers Rank: #1,718,856 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#388 in Christian Ecumenism
#3,573 in Comparative Religion (Books)
Customer Reviews: 4.8 out of 5 stars    10 ratings
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Mark J. Suriano
4.0 out of 5 stars Good framework for inter religious thinking.
Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2020
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A very thorough and insightful look at the realities of inter religious dialogue. The book is definitely geared toward official level questions that arise from broad ecumenical conversations. Despite its title, it is attempting to create a positive framework for dialogue.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Gave me a good Grade
Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2020
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I enjoyed this book. It was nice to watch her video on YouTube as I read along with the book. It made it very easy to understand, and kept it interesting. There is a lot of good quotes, and I learned a lot about interfaith dialogue. I used this book as one of my final papers ever on University, and I got a good grade on that paper.
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Katherine Ei
5.0 out of 5 stars Humility, Commitment, Interconnection, Empathy, and Hospitality
Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2020
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Those are the headings which attracted me to this book. My choice has not been a disappointment in my seminary interreligious studies.
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sp
5.0 out of 5 stars needed it for school
Reviewed in the United States on November 7, 2020
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It came quickly in for a good price
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DA
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book
Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2020
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Excellent book. Received as described.
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TAL
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2017
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Great book for those who are into interreligious dialogue.
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William E. Farragher
5.0 out of 5 stars Interreligious dialogue is POSSIBLE !!!
Reviewed in the United States on November 8, 2016
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I belong to Krista Tippett discussion group that is interreligious and this book has been a real help
in guiding our back and forth wordplay. Excellent writing and an encouraging path to humility and acceptance of others' views of life and faith.
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Mr. S. Chizhande
5.0 out of 5 stars the im-possibility
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 30, 2013
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The book was is easy to read and you do not have to have a dictionary to check on most of the words. It a book I recommend to those who want know more about inter-faiths.
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Phil R
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book and a bit of a game changer I ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 20, 2016
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Great book and a bit of a game changer I think. Liberal catholic and have to be happy with ideas and a bit of po-mo. If you like honest spirituality and ideas then this is great.
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The Im-Possibility of Interreligious Dialogue
by Catherine Cornille
 3.70  ·   Rating details ·  20 ratings  ·  4 reviews
In the face of competing religious claims in our shrinking world, many turn to dialogue as a hopeful way of fostering understanding and reducing violence. But why does actual dialogue so often fail? This provocative essay investigates the possibilities and limits of interreligious dialogue. By showing the significant obstacles for dialogue within Christianity, the book also proposes ways in which these obstacles may be overcome from within. Major themes include Humility, Conviction, Interconnection, Empathy, and Generosity. (less)
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Paperback, 280 pages
Published October 1st 2008 by Herder Herder (first published May 1st 2008)
Original TitleThe Im-Possibility of Interreligious Dialogue
ISBN0824524640  (ISBN13: 9780824524647)
Edition LanguageEnglish
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Apr 12, 2014Joe rated it liked it
This book was written like a text book, almost entirely from a Christian perspective, and contained almost no discussion about the various conditions where interreligious dialogue might be useful. The author seemed to write as if the dialogue were for the sake of itself. There were some good points and useful tips in the chapters that were included, but it seemed to be written for the sake of religion itself, rather than how to use interreligious dialogue as a tool within other dialogues.
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Morgan Bell
Nov 16, 2018Morgan Bell rated it really liked it
Cornille's book is a helpful overview of the challenges and opportunities of interreligious dialogue. As a Catholic theologian, she reaches for resources proper to her own tradition (i.e. mysticism, natural theology) which often requires a mental translation for its applicability in a Protestant context. However, she carefully balances openness and hospitality to other faith traditions while recognizing the particularity and, at times, incommensurability of those same faith traditions. Interesting read. (less)
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Antony Christy
Jun 29, 2013Antony Christy rated it really liked it
By the very title of her book, the Im-possibility of Interreligious Dialogue, Catherine Cornille makes it clear that it is an epistemological choice that a person or an institution as whole or a religious community has to make, in a particular situation either for or against interreligious dialogue. The possibility and the process of Interreligious dialogue depends on varying situations and interpretations of those situations. For instance, the author writes, “within the past fifty years, the Roman Catholic Church has created a special Secretariat for non-Christians (1964), changed its name to the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue (1988), folded it back into the Pontifical Council for Cultures (2006), and subsequently reinstated it. That is enough to remind us of the volatile nature of the interreligious dialogue.” Noting the fact that when two religions encounter today, more than “peaceful exchange and productive collaboration” which are deemed as the ideals to which all religions strive, there is tension and violence, disturbance or indifference, attitudes of self sufficiency and inner complacency, the author presents a set of conditions that favour a genuine interreligious dialogue , be it on the part of the individual or on the part of the community. (less)
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Blair Hodges 
Jan 15, 2016Blair Hodges rated it liked it
This book discusses five conditions the author views as helpful in facilitating interreligious dialogues: humility, commitment, interconnection, empathy, and hospitality. It's written largely from a Catholic perspective and doesn't do much to exemplify interreligious dialogue itself, although it refers to some examples offhandedly. The author makes an interesting case that the most robust discussions require both dedicated adherence to one's own tradition and openness to learn something truly new and true from other traditions at the same time. Also, she resists efforts which begin from detached standards beyond any particular tradition. Each dialogue partner must draw creatively on ones own tradition for motivation to dialogue.

Helpful, but not outstanding. (less)

The Practice of Pastoral Care, Revised and Expanded Edition: A Postmodern Approach: Doehring, Carrie: 9780664238407: Books - Amazon

The Practice of Pastoral Care, Revised and Expanded Edition: A Postmodern Approach: Doehring, Carrie: 9780664238407: Books - Amazon



Carrie Doehring
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The Practice of Pastoral Care, Revised and Expanded Edition: A Postmodern Approach Paperback – Illustrated, January 2, 2015
by Carrie Doehring (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars 233 ratings

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The Practice of Pastoral Care has become a popular seminary textbook for courses in pastoral care and a manual for clinical pastoral education. In it, Doehring encourages counselors to view their ministry through a trifocal lens that incorporates premodern, modern, and postmodern approaches to religious and psychological knowledge. Doehring describes the basic ingredients of a caregiving relationship, shows how to use the caregiver's life experience as a source of authority, and demonstrates how to develop the skill of listening and establishing the actual relationship. This new edition elaborates on and expands the author's previous work, adding an intercultural perspective that gives more attention to religious pluralism in the pastoral care setting. It offers a road map for using a step-by-step narrative, relational, embodied approach to spiritual care that respects the unique ways people live out their values and beliefs, especially in coping with stress, loss, and violence. Readers will be able to confidently and professionally offer pastoral care and counseling to members of their congregations or other places of ministry.


Editorial Reviews

Review


"A remarkable contribution. Somehow Dr. Doehring is able to weave together the threads of theology, trauma, mental health, culture, self-reflection, research, and practice into a beautiful piece of work that constantly reminds the reader of the distinctively spiritual character of pastoral care. The book is filled with evocative stories, useful concepts, practical tools, and always, Dr. Doehring's own distinctive voice, wisdom, and humanity. Highly recommended for not only pastoral counselors, but counselors from every helping profession." --Kenneth I. Pargament, Professor of Psychology, Bowling Green State University; author of Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy: Understanding and Addressing the Sacred; and Editor-in-Chief, APA Handbook of Psychology, Religion, and Spirituality (Vols. 1 and 2)





"In this revised and expanded edition of her extensively read text, The Practice of Pastoral Care, Professor Carrie Doehring offers a clear and insightful explanation of intercultural pastoral and spiritual care. The book's lucid prose makes it accessible for beginning students who are taking introductory courses. At the same time, Doehring's richly nuanced conversation with current literature in the field makes the book an indispensable resource for seasoned scholars. Doehring unpacks the meaning of spirituality in lived experience, using examples and diagrams and making reference to stories and films that help the reader understand the intersection of psychological, cultural, and theological dimensions of pastoral and spiritual care. She emphasizes the values of respect and compassion and teaches us how to embody these values in caregiving conversations and interactions. This is an eminently practical and wise guide for those learning to offer life-giving care." --Mary Clark Moschella, Roger J. Squire Professor of Pastoral Care and Counseling, Yale Divinity School





"What was already a number-one go-to book in pastoral care has become even better in this new edition. I am especially grateful to see such an expert teacher, scholar, and caregiver tackle the question of theology-as-practiced in a way that readers will find immensely useful. This book reflects years of accumulated wisdom and real sensitivity to both personal suffering and intercultural dynamics, and is a classic in the field." --Bonnie J. Miller-McLemore, author of Christian Theology in Practice





"In this revised and expanded edition, Carrie Doehring makes another remarkable contribution to pastoral theology and to contemporary practices of pastoral care. Using a narrative approach, she provides rich interdisciplinary and current resources for engaging the complex and intersecting differences that shape contexts for care as well as the embodied relationality of those who give and receive such care. Her experienced skill as a teacher shapes each chapter accessibly. Doehring artfully demonstrates the practice of intercultural care as a theologically reflective and co-creative process that seeks spiritual integration and relational justice." --Nancy J. Ramsay, Professor of Pastoral Theology and Pastoral Care, Brite Divinity School





"I welcome this new edition from a leader and pioneer in the field of contemporary pastoral care. Its rich interweaving of narrative, literature, autobiography and cutting-edge theology promises to enrich and challenge practitioners in church and academy for years to come."
--Elaine Graham, Grosvenor Research Professor of Practical Theology, University of Chester, UK



"A carefully constructed and nuanced articulation of the essential features and dynamic operations of pastoral and spiritual care. Whilst not neglecting historic resources, Doehring helps situate the practice of care squarely in contemporary postmodern and pluralist settings drawing on narrative, intercultural and theological engagements with the complex exigencies of human experience. Spiritual caregivers of all kinds must have, read and digest this book." --Emmanuel Y. Lartey, L. Bevel Jones III Professor of Pastoral Theology, Care, and Counseling, Candler School of Theology, Emory University

About the Author


Carrie Doehring is Associate Professor of Pastoral Care and Counseling at Iliff School of Theology in Colorado. She is a licensed psychologist and an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). In addition to the first edition of The Practice of Pastoral Care, she is the author of Internal Traumatization and Taking Care: Monitoring Power Dynamics and Relational Boundaries in Pastoral Care and Counseling.


Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Westminster John Knox Press; Revised and Expanded edition (January 2, 2015)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 254 pages

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4.6 out of 5 stars

Top reviews from the United States


Brigitta

1.0 out of 5 stars Worst ever book!Reviewed in the United States on October 22, 2018
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This book is probably the worst book I've ever read. If I didn't have to read it for a class I was taking, I would have returned it for a refund! The type is small and the leading is too tight, making it very hard to read. Also the "graphics" are mostly black type on a dark gray background--unattractive, hard to read, and did not add to the text. The text was also difficult, geared to professionals already in the field of pastoral care. (I'm a novice.) The author used many compound words in compound sentences, which made me pause at the end of the sentence, wondering what did the author say. And having to back over it again, sometimes three times. I did not give this book any stars as I would never recommend it to anyone!
P.S. The teacher has now assigned another book for this class.

4 people found this helpful

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Kevin Compton

4.0 out of 5 stars Some chapters are greatReviewed in the United States on October 27, 2020
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Bought this for a simony course. There are a lot of ideas distilled in this title. It reads like a survey of a lot of information. Some chapters are very dense, like I had to read them aloud to really make sense of the sentences. When the book is good, it is very, very good. When it is not, it is overly dense, overly broad, and overly intentional about trying to hit all of the possible applications, sometimes even in the same sentence.


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Rick Long

5.0 out of 5 stars It is the number one book in my library for caregiving and I could not recommend it more enthusiasticallyReviewed in the United States on September 9, 2015
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Dr. Doehring's revised edition of "The Practice of Pastoral Care" should be considered the standard for all spiritual caregivers to deepen skills and abilities in creating what she describes as "intercultural care"-care based in compassion, walking with, creating safe and ethical environments for caregiving and caregiver self care. Using approaches from psychology, social work, theology and spiritual care. Dr. Doehring does a masterful job in synthesizing a comprehensive approach that remains true to the basic tenet of spiritual care-empathic and compassionate based caregiving that seeks to encourage wholeness and freedom for the suffering soul. It is the number one book in my library for caregiving and I could not recommend it more enthusiastically.

10 people found this helpful

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Melissa M. Skelton

5.0 out of 5 stars AmazingReviewed in the United States on February 6, 2021
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A through, sophisticated and helpful book on perspectives related to functioning as a caregiver in today’s world. Foundational and reflects the complexity of the narratives of caregivers and those to whom they offer care.

One person found this helpful

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MS COLLEEN M DAY

4.0 out of 5 stars Ethical guide for Pastoral CarersReviewed in the United States on October 18, 2015
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This is a comprehensive treatment of the practice of Pastoral Care. It is a very helpful guide for all working in the areas of chaplaincy and pastoral care reflecting the wisdom of experience and reflective practice.

The ethics of professional boundaries and the dangers of crossing those boundaries are explored.
It should be recommended reading for all working in these areas where so much harm can be done when those involved with spiritual care are more involved with self than those seeking their care.

5 people found this helpful

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James F. Gorton

5.0 out of 5 stars Easy to read and understand.Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2019
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Good book for CPE students.

2 people found this helpful

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Evenson Household

5.0 out of 5 stars CPE introReviewed in the United States on December 19, 2018
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Great help as I enter CPE

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Kristen

3.0 out of 5 stars ... -- it provides information on care but can become dull or dry and doesn't always hold my attentionReviewed in the United States on October 25, 2016
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This book is okay -- it provides information on care but can become dull or dry and doesn't always hold my attention.

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Mike
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic bookReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 5, 2018
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I bought this book as part of a reading list for my studies.It is excellent
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Good
5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 13, 2018
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I really enjoyed this book. It was hugely useful to me.
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Pastor Victoria
5.0 out of 5 stars This is an excellent and easy to read and understand book on pastoral care. This book give clarity between caregiver and care seReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 6, 2016
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Will encourage any Theology student to get this book! This specifically teach on basics of pastoral care! Absolutely informative. Great!
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 2, 2015
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As expected
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Cay Hasselmann
3.0 out of 5 stars Fängt super an.Reviewed in Germany on January 28, 2019
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Alles wissenswerte ist am Anfang geschrieben, danach wird es immer weiter verwässert ohne neue Impulse zuzulassen.
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Masterpeace
29-01-2021
not Christian.
If you are looking for a Christian book on pastoral care and counselling... this is not it. it is very liberal and loose in theology and speaks far more the language of humanistic sociology rather than Christian Theology.


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The Practice of Pastoral Care: A Postmodern Approach

by
Carrie Doehring
3.87 · Rating details · 280 ratings · 16 reviews
Drawing on psychological, theological, and cultural studies on suffering, Carrie Doehring encourages counselors to view their ministry through trifocal lenses and include approaches that are premodern (apprehending God through religious rituals), modern (consulting rational and empirical sources), and postmodern (acknowledging the contextual nature of knowledge). Utilizing strategies from all three perspectives, Doehring describes the basic ingredients of a caregiving relationship, shows how to use the caregiver's life experience as a source of authority, and demonstrates how to develop the skill of listening and establish the actual relationship. She then explains the steps of psychological assessment, systemic assessment, and theological reflection, and finally she delineates the basic steps for plans of care: attending to the careseeker's safety, building trust, mourning losses, and reconnecting with the ordinariness of life. (less)

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Paperback, 200 pages
Published February 16th 2006 by Westminster John Knox Press
Original Title
The Practice of Pastoral Care: A Postmodern Approach
ISBN
0664226841 (ISBN13: 9780664226848)
Edition Language
English

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Oct 20, 2008Mike rated it really liked it
If you have a problem with the "postmodern worldview" don't let the subtitle scare you off. This book has good advice for pastors and those who find themselves doing similar work. (less)
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Aug 17, 2021Jason rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: professional-since-2015
Wish I knew about this book years ago. It does a great job explaining the evolution of an individual's theology and the power of embracing beliefs that are life-giving. (less)
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Jun 21, 2017Sofia Wren rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: nonfiction
For school and I actually like it
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Nov 17, 2019Yonasan Aryeh rated it it was amazing
With a title like this, it should be obvious to the reader that this work is intended for a religious audience. The fact is that every religion has someone that fills in the role of pastoral care. The title may not be pastor. It could be teacher, Rabbi, Bishop, etc.

In fact, this work takes more of an agnostic or non-denominational approach, with credentials from Yale Divinity. The book is designed to take an intercultural approach to reach anyone in a similar position. Even better, storytelling is the heart of pastoral care in this work. With my own doctoral in semiotics, seeing the implied relevance of storytelling is encouraging and bolsters the foundation of this work.

I’ll admit it - I went into this review process thinking that I was not going to enjoy the book. That’s now how it ended.

So why is storytelling so essential for this? To quote the author at different points, narrative builds trust, finds meaning in praxis, assesses interwoven theologies, and presents a cohesive, digestible, tangible way to connect to the person. We use storytelling everyday, so why not use it in pastoral care? After all, are religions not based on the concepts of bigger picture, individual narrative in the whole of creation? Based on trust? Based on value and meaning? The answer, of course, is yes to all of the above.

“The mingling of the care seeker’s and caregiver’s narrative worlds generates an intersubjective space for meaning-making.”

The author’s voice is the most challenging part of this work. The discussion is quite academic in nature, using larger terminology and theoretical theologies that can leave a reader reeling from vocabulary and cobwebs alone. But this is not a cobweb of a book - this is a complex web drafted in a format that requires the intellectual mind to engage the theological components and make sense of the mess. Quite frankly, it requires a higher-level degree in order to fully benefit from the work and digest it in a way that is comprehendable and useable to apply to providing pastoral care for one’s own congregation. Whether that is a Master’s, Doctorate, or Smicha, this is not entry-level material, which is it’s greatest weakness.

Disclosure: I have received a reviewer copy and/or payment in exchange for an honest review of the product mentioned in this post. This product is reviewed based on content and quality in consideration of the intended audience. Review or recommendation of this product does not solicit endorsement from Reviews by J or the reviewer. (less)
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Jun 01, 2020Rob O'Lynn rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: ministry, psychology, spirituality, theology
An excellent introduction to the practice of pastoral care, especially one that is grounded in the methodological approach of the Clinical Pastoral Education movement. Slight theological differences aside, this volume promotes a holistic approach to the caregiving relationship.

Unlike most volumes that (incorrectly) approach "pastoral care" from a counseling perspective that would require a long-term commitment comprised of weekly sessions, this volume rightly approaches "pastoral care" from the more interventionist approach connected to crisis management ministry (i.e., chaplaincy).

While there is (and should be) a counseling approach to chaplaincy and crisis intervention, that is not the beginning point. There is a much-needed triage element to Doehring's work that underlies her approach, something is almost always missing from other works that focus more on treatment than assessment, something that is certainly more apropos to pastoral ministry. (less)
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May 11, 2018Lori Neff rated it really liked it
I read this book as a part of a Pastoral Care class. I really enjoyed it - it was inspiring, informative. The charts were helpful and practical. I do wish there had been more examples given. I do understand the author's desire to keep the book broad in practice, but when she suggested that spiritual practices could help in a crisis, I wondered what an example might be.
Overall, very glad I read it and will hang on to it for future reference. (less)
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Jan 13, 2017Brian Sturtz rated it really liked it · review of another edition
The author offers an integrated method to listen well to the stories of others. Part of listening includes picking up on the theology of the other person and seeing if that theology is life giving or life limiting. A reader could be turned off by her use of technical terms and a very broad view of "spirituality". However, there are plenty of practical applications given as well as helpful diagrams. Good book for those seeking to better their pastoral care skills. (less)
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Dec 26, 2020Katie Ruth rated it it was amazing
Shelves: 2020
In this comprehensive contribution to the field of pastoral care, Doehring unpacks best practices for those in ministry contexts drawing on wisdom from her own experiences, storytelling, and modern psychology. Her thoughts on reflexivity and the expansion of one's own theological journey to make space for that of others is a very necessary aspect of pastoral care, and one I hope to see more of in the future. (less)
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Nov 17, 2019Joshua Lawson rated it really liked it
Shelves: spiritual-care
I read this book as part of my first unit of Clinical Pastoral Education. Doehring does an excellent job outlining the major goals and methods of spiritual care. I've already begun integrating her pastoral approach with my own. (less)
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Feb 06, 2021Melissa M. Skelton rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Amazing

A through, sophisticated and helpful book on perspectives related to functioning as a caregiver in today’s world. Foundational and reflects the complexity of the narratives of caregivers and those to whom they offer care.
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Jun 04, 2017Alan Londy rated it really liked it
Informative but uneven.
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Jan 26, 2015Mark rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
This is an excellent study, discussion, and reference on how to provide appropriate pastoral care to a diverse and pluralistic population. One of the emphases is that the care giver must not assume that the care seeker share the care giver's frame of reference, be it faith, social structures, beliefs, or cultural norms. The care giver must not impose his or her beliefs onto the seeker. The care giver must derive from listening to the care seeker where he or she is coming from, and to offer affirmations and options, not suggestions or judgment.

This is achieved through what Carrie describes as self-reflexivity in which the care giver works intentionally with a trusted group of peers to understand her or his assumptions and actions in care giving. These assumptions include various social systems such as sexism, racism, heterosexism, and religions. Through this activity the care giver learns how she or he may have inadvertently harmed the care seeker by imposing assumptions, beliefs, and judgment in a harmful manner. The goal is to ensure that the care giver and care seeker relationship can be as healing and supportive as possible.

The material in this book is based on a Christian starting point. However, if the reader is looking for "biblical counseling" material, he will be disappointed. Carrie's material incorporates the principles she discusses: she allows her Christian faith to influence how she incorporates the diverse counseling material that is available and provides a perspective that she believes can be the most healing through established best practices. The principles in this book align very much with counseling and victim advocacy principles that are taught in colleges and universities. Even those without faith backgrounds can find much to inform and assist with their counseling work and practices, especially in their interactions with care seekers that do come from highly spiritual and/or religious frames. Each chapter ends with exercises to reinforce and assist the care giver in putting into practice the principles discussed.

(The book was supplied as an ARC via NetGalley by the publisher.) (less)
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Sep 18, 2014David Cowpar rated it liked it

The author is a female Presbyterian minister. Despite this she seems to be a Feminist and a liberal theologian. She very seldom mentions the work of the Holy Spirit and Jesus in the lives of the individuals she is caring for.
There are hints that she is a universalist, or that she believes Christianity to be merely a coping mechanism for life and not a fact/truth.
Her book claimed to be a postmodern approach to pastoral care though she, which she herself admits, uses a blend of pre-modern, modern and postmodern approaches to pastoral care.
There are some good take away points from the book, but it was not the best book I’ve read on pastoral care/theology. (less)
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Sep 04, 2013Michael Woods rated it it was amazing
Shelves: nonfiction, pastoral-care, religious, theology-philosophy
A very good introduction to pastoral care. A must read for anyone thinking of attending seminary or answering a call to ministry or chaplaincy. The author discusses 21st Century considerations as they relate to the practice of caring for those God has called us to serve.

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Oct 20, 2014Rob Sabin rated it really liked it
Just read this the second time. This time for CPE and I find greater relevance to ministry now, than the first time I read it in seminary. I could have grown wiser or this ministry lends more toward the post modern view.
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Jan 18, 2014Kate Davis rated it really liked it
Shelves: nonfiction, theme-spirituality-religion, z-seminary, nf-leadership, nf-church-cong
This is the book I would give to people who wonder about The Seattle School's approach to pastoring. Narrative based, postmodern. Which is great, except that I read it three years in--obnoxious. (less)
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