Reimagining Christianity: Reconnect Your Spirit without Disconnecting Your Mind
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More About This Title Reimagining Christianity: Reconnect Your Spirit without Disconnecting Your Mind

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Alan Jones, Ph.D., is an Episcopal priest and the Dean of Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, California. He lectures all over the world as well as on the Webby Award—nominated gracecathedral.org. Dr. Jones’s books include Seasons of Grace: The Life-Giving Practice of Gratitude, winner of the prestigious 2004 Nautilus Award in the spirituality category.

English

Acknowledgments.

Preface.

Prologue: Does Faith Have a Future?

1. Belonging and Believing: Getting Past Tribalism.

2. Literalism and Other Headaches.

3. The God-Shaped Space in Our Hearts.

4. Poles Apart: Skeptics and Believers Choose Sides.

5. Living with Anxiety, Rushing to Belief.

6. See How Those Christians Love One Another.

7. A Faith to Live By: Religion and Cultural Politics.

8. God Unbound: Mysteries at the Heart of Faith.

9. Missing Each Other and Missing Ourselves.

10. Recovering the Sacred: The Really Real.

11. Healing the Wounded Imagination.

12. Jesus the Broken Man.

13. Mary, the Pregnant Life.

14. Trinity Means Communion.

15. The Challenge of Christ: Christian Life and Practice.

16. Revising the Great Story.

17. Here Comes Everybody.

Epilogue: Spiritual Practice, Spiritual Presence.

Suggested Reading List.

Index.

English

Jones (Seasons of Grace) is dean of Grace Cathedral in San Francisco and belongs to the wave of Christian preachers and theologians who are attempting to reclaim a sincere faith while accommodating critical reasoning. He tries to show how advantageous it might be for each person, as well as for Christianity as a whole, to reject a foolish or nostalgic literalism about the Christian message in favor of a broad inclusivity of all people. In his own words, "There are no outsiders." For most collections. (from the Spiritual Reading column by Graham Christian) (Library Journal, January 15, 2005)

The dean of San Francisco’s Episcopal cathedral opens his new book with a gauntlet-throwing epigraph from James Baldwin: "[W]hoever wishes to become a truly moral being... must first divorce himself from all the prohibitions, crimes [and] hypocrisies of the Christian Church." So begins one of our day’s great statements of liberal Protestantism. For Jones, religion is a love affair, a great story, an experience to be shared with community--not a creed to nitpick and defend. Jones invites spiritual seekers to "reimagine" Christianity. Who was Jesus? A "broken and ruined man" who asks us to live as though each day were our last and to "possess nothing." And what about Mary? How are we to make sense of her perpetual virginity? Jones muses, "Mary is a book we can read.... Don’t get caught in the sticky mess of doctrinal controversy. Just look." The Trinity, he says, is not fuzzy math, but a radical statement about community. Jones is not only innovative but erudite. He draws on novels by Nick Hornby and John Updike; he laces his text with musings on Emily Dickinson and John Wayne. Indeed, with his literary flair, his emphasis on community and practice and his sharp-edged liberalism, Jones reads like a cross between Lawrence Kushner and John A.T. Robinson. This book is a winner, both charitable and bold. (Oct.) (Publishers Weekly, September 13, 2004)

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