Fr. 44.50

Discipleship, Secularity, and the Modern Self - Dancing to Silent Music

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext Merkle’s analysis of secularity deepens our appreciation of its profound influence on religious and nonreligious people alike. She explores how our secular context requires reconsideration of our understanding of church and salvation, and the development of new spiritual and religious practices. This clearly written, creative book is theologically insightful and a rich resource for pastoral practice and reflection on one’s own life of discipleship. Informationen zum Autor Judith A. Merkle recently served as Professor of Religious Studies at Niagara University, USA. She is a member of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. Klappentext Judith A. Merkle examines the situation of Christian spirituality today, in a secular age, through the images of dance, silence, and music. Drawing on the work of Charles Taylor as well as core aspects of the tradition of Christian theology on discipleship, Merkle asks how these new conditions affect the practice of Christianity as modern discipleship. The author calls God the music maker. She argues that response to the reality of God can be captured through the image of dance. Merkle reminds us that people in secular society connect to God in diverse ways, not in the least through the call of creation and the call of conscience. She explores discipleship as a lens through which we can understand how a community of faith, service, prayer, worship, and sacramentality can be viewed and integrated in daily life. She emphasizes how the interconnection between prayer, Eucharist, and a believing community is inseparable from the dance of discipleship as it can be lived in secular society. The image of dancing to silent music is a powerful symbol of Christian religious experience in modern times. Zusammenfassung Judith A. Merkle examines the situation of Christian spirituality today, in a secular age, through the images of dance, silence, and music. Drawing on the work of Charles Taylor as well as core aspects of the tradition of Christian theology on discipleship, Merkle asks how these new conditions affect the practice of Christianity as modern discipleship.The author calls God the music maker. She argues that response to the reality of God can be captured through the image of dance. Merkle reminds us that people in secular society connect to God in diverse ways, not in the least through the call of creation and the call of conscience. She explores discipleship as a lens through which we can understand how a community of faith, service, prayer, worship, and sacramentality can be viewed and integrated in daily life. She emphasizes how the interconnection between prayer, Eucharist, and a believing community is inseparable from the dance of discipleship as it can be lived in secular society. The image of dancing to silent music is a powerful symbol of Christian religious experience in modern times. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Abbreviations and Documents Cited Introduction Part I Foundations 1. Silent Music and the Dance: A New Moment in Christian Spirituality 2. The Human Partner: the Steps of Modernity 3. The Step of Faith: Searching for the Face of God in Modern Life 4. The Dance of Religion: Do We Need It? Part II. Dancing to the Music: Discipleship 5. The Way of Jesus and Human Flourishing: Salvation and Atonement 6. The Eclipse of Desire and the Freedom to Dance 7. The Desire to Dance: Toward a New Asceticism 8. Being Music Makers: Church and Community in a New Era 9. The Scaffoldings of the Future Bibliography Index ...

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