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Spiritual detours
Sometimes prayer takes us where we don't intend to go.
The unadorned self, living forward, and a great lake of beer
What I found when I looked up today’s date in four daily devotional books
Where are the dead?
Leonard DeLorenzo helps us envision where our loved ones have gone and how we relate to them.
Distracted by our own devices
I’ve become the sort of person who checks her phone constantly. I did not have to go this way.
by Amy Frykholm
Coakley's kind of theology requires more than claims. It needs prayer.
In response to our request for essays on the subject road, we received many compelling reflections. Here is a selection.
And what would happen if we didn't?
Whether we're dying or living with grief, there are faithful ways to do so. Marilyn Chandler McEntyre points us in the right direction.
We seem to always want something—anything—to happen. This has implications for the life of prayer.
by Jeff Vogel
Azra Akšamija and Jo Murphy make art that points to things made invisible by fear—both our own fear and our society's.
I love a good mountaintop experience. It’s a moment when everything changes. Insight flares up in the mind, illuminating the moment, the experience, the problem in a whole new way. You’re never quite the same again.
One such moment for me happened in prayer when I was on a three-day silent retreat.
I gobble books by musicians. Bruce Cockburn's memoir has more virtues than most.
by Brian Doyle
Growing in prayer is not simply acquiring a set of special spiritual skills. It is growing into Christian humanity.
Micha Boyett writes tenderly about her Southern Baptist background, even as she grafts herself into a more liturgical expression of the faith.
My student hasn’t allegorized Jane Eyre as Origen did the Bible. But she wrestles with passages until the text gives her a blessing.
“When I started out I was focused on whether God was or was not out there. Now I am much more comfortable with ambiguity.”
by Amy Frykholm