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Winnerová Lauren F.

    Lauren F. Winner est une auteure dont les œuvres explorent les liens complexes entre la foi, l'histoire et l'expérience personnelle. À travers ses écrits, elle plonge dans les profondeurs des pratiques religieuses et de leur impact sur la vie humaine. Son approche se caractérise par une érudition profonde associée à un style personnel et captivant qui amène les lecteurs à réfléchir sur la spiritualité et l'histoire. Le travail de Lauren F. Winner offre une perspective unique sur les questions durables de la foi.

    The Dangers of Christian Practice
    Wearing God
    Mudhouse Sabbath: An Invitation to a Life of Spiritual Discipline
    • Winner’s original Madhouse Sabbath has sold 45,000 copies, been translated into three languages, and spawned a successful video study series. After her conversion from Orthodox Judaism to Christianity, Winner found that her life was indelibly marked by the rich traditions and spiritual practices of Judaism. She presents eleven Jewish practices that can transform the way Christians view the world and God, including attentive eating, mourning, candle-lighting, and Sabbath-keeping. Since first publishing the book, Lauren has earned her MDiv and PhD, and become an Episcopal priest. Her thought has deepened and developed. This new Study Edition incorporates the complete original text plus primary texts from Jewish and Christian sources, and new material on each of the eleven topics. The result is a powerful work for Christians wanting to explore in depth and understand the Jewish origins of Christianity.

      Mudhouse Sabbath: An Invitation to a Life of Spiritual Discipline
    • Lauren F. Winner—a leading writer at the crossroads of culture and spirituality and author of Still and Girl Meets God—joins the ranks of luminaries such as Anne Lamott and Barbara Brown Taylor with this exploration of little known—and, so, little used—biblical metaphors for God, metaphors which can open new doorways for our lives and spiritualities. There are hundreds of metaphors for God, but the church only uses a few familiar images: creator, judge, savior, father. In Wearing God, Lauren Winner gathers a number of lesser-known tropes, reflecting on how they work biblically and culturally, and reveals how they can deepen our spiritual lives. Exploring the notion of God as clothing, Winner reflects on how we are “clothed with Christ” or how “God fits us like a garment.” She then analyzes how clothing functions culturally to shape our ideals and identify our community, and ruminates on how this new metaphor can function to create new possibilities for our lives. For each biblical metaphor—God as the vine/vintner who animates life; the lactation consultant; and the comedian, showing us our follies, for example—Winner surveys the historical, literary, and cultural landscapes in order to revive and heal our souls.

      Wearing God
    • The Dangers of Christian Practice

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,9(147)Évaluer

      Challenging the central place that practices have recently held in Christian theology, Lauren Winner explores the damages these practices have inflicted over the centuries

      The Dangers of Christian Practice