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Sacred Wandering

Sacred Wandering
Author: Dana Arcuri
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2019-04-08
Genre:
ISBN: 9780991076857

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Are you in the midst of messy places? The Sacred Wandering is a wilderness journey. When you are in life transitions. For some, it's hard times with hurt, doubt, and disappointment. Our wilderness journey is the place God allures us. Where He pursues us. When He speaks to us in our pain. It's during our messy moments when He wraps us in His tender embrace. When He extends His grace.Dana Arcuri shares her own real, raw, and messy places. Chronic pain. Depression. Lost dreams. Grief. Broken relationships. Church hurt. Healing father wounds. Surviving sexual assaults. As she revisits past trauma, she follows God's nudge to bravely break the silence. And to grow her faith in the dark.In The Sacred Wandering, Dana reveals her tears, trials, and triumphs. With wisdom and transparency, she shares her personal stories and biblical insight to help you trust God in your own wilderness journey. The purpose is to spiritually strengthen you. To learn valuable lessons. To refine you. To know that you are enough just as you are. The Sacred Wandering provides hope and healing. Through valleys and victories, your messes can become God's masterpiece. It's your daily manna. Nourishment for your soul. To encourage you. To sustain you along your wilderness season. To help you to grow your faith in the dark.


Wandering Women and Holy Matrons

Wandering Women and Holy Matrons
Author: Leigh Ann Craig
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 328
Release: 2009-03-16
Genre: History
ISBN: 9047427726

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This book explores women’s experiences of pilgrimage in Latin Christendom between 1300 and 1500 C.E. Later medieval authors harbored grave doubts about women’s mobility; literary images of mobile women commonly accused them of lust, pride, greed, and deceit. Yet real women commonly engaged in pilgrimage in a variety of forms, both physical and spiritual, voluntary and compulsory, and to locations nearby and distant. Acting within both practical and social constraints, such women helped to construct more positive interpretations of their desire to travel and of their experiences as pilgrims. Regardless of how their travel was interpreted, those women who succeeded in becoming pilgrims offer us a rare glimpse of ordinary women taking on extraordinary religious and social authority.


Sacred Stories

Sacred Stories
Author: Mark D. Steinberg
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 867
Release: 2007-01-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 0253218500

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Sacred Stories brings together the work of leading scholars writing on the history of religion and religiosity in late imperial Russia during the critical decades preceding the 1917 revolutions. Embodying new research and new methodologies, this book reshapes our understanding of the place of religion in modern Russian history. Topics examined include miraculous icons and healing, pilgrim narratives, confessions, women and Orthodox domesticity, marriage and divorce, conversion and tolerance, Jewish folk beliefs, mysticism in Russian art, and philosophical aspects of Orthodox religious thought. Sacred Stories demonstrates that belief, spirituality, and the sacred were powerful and complex cultural expressions central to Russian political, social, economic, and cultural life. Contributors are Nicholas B. Breyfogle, Heather J. Coleman, Gregory L. Freeze, Nadieszda Kizenko, Alexei A. Kurbanovsky, Roy R. Robson, Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal, Gabriella Safran, Vera Shevzov, Sarah Abrevaya Stein, Mark Steinberg, Paul Valliere, William G. Wagner, Paul W. Werth, and Christine D. Worobec.


Wandering God

Wandering God
Author: Morris Berman
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 367
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0791493245

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The third book in Morris Berman's much acclaimed trilogy on the evolution of human consciousness, Wandering God continues his earlier work which garnered such praise as "solid lessons in the history of ideas" (KIRKUS Reviews), "filled with piquant details" (Common Boundary), and "an informative synthesis and a remarkably friendly, good-natured jeremiad" (The Village Voice). Here, in a remarkable discussion of our hunter-gatherer ancestry and the "paradoxical" mode of perception that it involved, Berman shows how a sense of alertness, or secular/sacred immediacy, subsequently got buried by the rise of sedentary civilization, religion, and vertical power relationships. In an integrated tour de force, Wandering God explores the meaning of Paleolithic art, the origins of social inequality, the nature of cross-cultural child rearing, the relationship between women and agriculture, and the world view of present-day nomadic peoples, as well as the emergence of "paradoxical" consciousness in the philosophical writings of the twentieth century.


Wandering with Sadhus

Wandering with Sadhus
Author: Sondra L. Hausner
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2007
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0253349834

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Intimate portraits of the life of Hindu Sadhus.


The Wandering Holy Man

The Wandering Holy Man
Author:
Publisher: University of California Press
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2020-06-09
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0520304144

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Barsauma was a fifth-century Syrian ascetic, archimandrite, and leader of monks, notorious for his extreme asceticism and violent anti-Jewish campaigns across the Holy Land. Although Barsauma was a powerful and revered figure in the Eastern church, modern scholarship has widely dismissed him as a thug of peripheral interest. Until now, only the most salacious bits of the Life of Barsauma—a fascinating collection of miracles that Barsauma undertook across the Near East—had been translated. This pioneering study includes the first full translation of the Life and a series of studies by scholars employing a range of methods to illuminate the text from different angles and contexts. This is the authoritative source on this influential figure in the history of the church and his life, travels, and relations with other religious groups.


Wandering God

Wandering God
Author: Morris Berman
Publisher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2000-02-17
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780791444429

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Presents an analysis of the "nomadic" consciousness of our ancestors, and the forces --religious and political --that overwhelmed it during the Neolithic era, and considers its revival in the twentieth century.


Wandering through Guilt

Wandering through Guilt
Author: Paola Di Gennaro
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 285
Release: 2015-06-18
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1443879916

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The first comprehensive study on the pattern of guilt and wandering in literature, this book examines the relationship between the two complex concepts as they appear in twentieth-century novels, positing its methodological premises on archetypal criticism and both close and distant reading, but also drawing on psychology, anthropology, mythology, and religion. This research deciphers a common paradigm and literary representation whose archetype within Western literature is found in the biblical figure of Cain, while presenting a critical framework valid for boundary-crossing comparative approaches. From Graham Greene’s The Power and the Glory and Malcolm Lowry’s Under the Volcano, to Wolfgang Koeppen’s Death in Rome and Ōoka Shōhei’s Fires on the Plain, this book is not merely a thematic study, but an analysis of the literary phenomena that appear in those novels where the sense of guilt is controversially subjective, or so collective as to be perceived as universal, as is often the case with war and postwar literature. Di Gennaro goes beyond the analysis of explicit rewritings of the story of Cain, in order to uncover the monomyth through its rhetorical structures and mythical methods. The wasteland with no religion; the lost, abandoned garden; the classical and religiously-corrupted city; and the tropical, cannibalistic island at war are the respective settings of these narratives, where the issue is neither homelessness nor journeying, but, rather, the desperate and futile movement toward self-consciousness, or self-destruction. After the Second World War, much was silenced rather than left unsaid. This study retraces those silent cries over history through the powerful literary marks of myths.