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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
39 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
She Speaks of More Than Sin,
By
This review is from: Speaking of Sin (Paperback)
From telling of her baptism at birth by a Catholic Priest, to attending Methodist & Baptist Churches on becoming a tenn-ager, to being a Seminary student at Yale Divinity School, Barbara Brown Taylor skips & leaps from the worlds of pluralism, post-modernism, even secularism... to the worlds of Karl Menninger, to Paul Tillich, to her Episcopal priesthood. I heard echoes of her Mercer Lectures focused upon "Worship of An Awesome God." One of those became the last chapter of her, "The Luminous Web!"Professor Taylor finishes her first chapter on the lost language of salvation: "to speak of sin in any compelling way, we need to go diving for the core experiences that word names... We may discover that sin is our only hope." She describes the multiple ministeries of the Washington Church of the Savior, compared to the AA group meeting in the basement of a small Presbyterian, to find that they had one thing in common. There was tne absence of self-defense. There seemed to be no need to place blame. From three Hebrew words for sin, as "missing the mark..." she concludes: "My concern is that neither language of medicine nor the language of law is an adequate substitute for the language of theolgy." She includes multi-cultures, multiple philosophies and many faiths in her awesome coverage of "the Lost Languages of Salvation!" This may top all of her long list of gift books. Chaplain Fred W. Hood
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Language does all that?,
By uu humanist (Lansdale, PA USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Speaking of Sin (Paperback)
This book talks about the elimination of the word "sin" in our comtemporary language. She addresses what effect this has had on individuals and society. She has a powerful story to tell! I belong to a Unitarian Universalist Church and we practice a modern form of religion. We use wisdom of the past, science, sociology, current events, and our own personal experience to inform us. Due to our modern practice of religion, we have dropped religious language. I do believe in my faith's views and practices, but I think Barbara Taylor is on to something.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best books I've ever read,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Speaking of Sin (Paperback)
Not since Abraham Joshua Heschel's "The Prophets" have I found such a well written, engaging, "ah-ha" sort of book. If you are a pastor or leader in a church--or if you have any personal experience with sin--there's just no excuse for you not reading this book.
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