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Things Seen and Unseen: A Year Lived in Faith [Hardcover]

Nora Gallagher (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (34 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 20, 1998
"Faith is not about belief in something irrational or about a blind connection to something unreal. It's about a gathering, an accumulation of events and experiences of a different order . . . the longing a soul has to find its shape in the world."  

In the late eighties, Nora Gallagher entered Trinity Episcopal Church as a tourist and ended up a pilgrim. What she wanted was peace, she thought. What she got was something entirely different. In this remarkable book she describes her journey from secular life into "the world of the almost known," the world of faith.
     With her piercing powers of observation focused inward on herself and outward on her community, Nora Gallagher takes us into a year of her own spiritual searching and into the life of a parish church. During this year, Gallagher struggles with faith in the midst of community, a fatal illness in her family, guests in the church soup kitchen, and the efforts of a priest who is a gay man and the church's vestry to decide whether he should be called as their rector.
     As Gallagher sits with a friend dying of AIDS and another with cancer, serves communion wine at the altar, locates buckets for the Holy Week foot washing, and copes with homeless men and women and their critics, we learn with her that "the road to the sacred is paved with the ordinary."
In the generous language of uncertainty, suffering, grace, and commitment, Gallagher writes of faith and its meaning and the need for ritual and sacrament. She continually reveals in her choice of metaphors her own emerging faith, and we seem to experience her discovery with her, in real time. She gives us, as well, a beautifully rendered portrait of a community struggling with change, without ever losing sight of the cross.
Perceptive, candid, and wonderfully written, Things Seen and Unseen embodies the demands and rewards, the mysteries and realities, of both personal and communal faith.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"I came to this church five years ago as a tourist and ended up a pilgrim," writes Nora Gallagher, speaking of her year at Trinity Episcopal Church in Santa Barbara. It started with an occasional Sunday visit, a shy toe dip into the Episcopal Church. Eventually she delved into a yearlong journey to discover her faith and a relationship with God, using the Christian calendar as her compass. What Kathleen Norris did for the language of the church in Amazing Grace, Gallagher does for the Christian calendar--finding contemporary meaning in an ancient calendar that is often misunderstood or overshadowed with oppressive dogma.

Starting with the chapter titled "Advent," and ending with "Ordinary Time," Gallagher speaks to the biblical and historical themes of the church's calendar, then offers a translation for living in America at the end of the millennium. Most touching is her raw honesty, whether writing about feeding the homeless in the Community Kitchen or the unglamorous job of caring for a friend with AIDS. Indeed, it is Gallagher's humble interpretations of faith that make her seasonal wisdom so trustworthy. "I learned something about faith, its mucky nature, how it lies down in the mud with the pigs and the rabble," she says when writing about the darkness of Advent. "...God is not too good to hang out with jet-lagged women with cat-litter boxes in their dining rooms, or men dying of AIDS, or, for that matter, someone nailed in humiliation to a cross." --Gail Hudson

From Library Journal

This is a book for those who doubt their faith, resist the institutional church, and yet are drawn to both. Faith, says journalist Gallagher, is "an accumulation of events and experiences of a different order." The author offers her insight into faith in artfully written chapters sprinkled with the wisdom of an array of writers from C.S. Lewis to medieval mystic Mechthild of Magdeburg. This is not, however, a collection of platitudes but a story of faith practiced in understanding and supporting a gay priest and in helping the homeless, hungry, sick, and dying, primarily through the Episcopal church to which she belongs. She avoids "cheap and casual religious jargon" to tell of work, doubt, searching?and moments of grace. Recommended for most devotional collections.?Linda V. Carlisle, Southern Illinois Univ., Edwardsville
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 241 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1st edition (October 20, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679451323
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679451327
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (34 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #818,757 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Nora Gallagher's novel Changing Light has received outstanding reviews in the New York Times Book Review, the Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle and the Los Angeles Times. It is one of three novels chosen by Borders for its March-April Original Voices program. Her memoir Things Seen and Unseen: A Year Lived in Faith received outstanding reviews from the Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle and the Los Angeles Times among many others and was a bestseller. Annie Dillard called it ' a wonderful book' and said, 'Nora Gallagher...describes church life and spiritual life with absolute accuracy." Her second memoir, Practicing Resurrection, received outstanding reviews and was a finalist for Beliefnet Book of the Year.

She was born in New Mexico, and spent her childhood in its high deserts. After college she worked as a free-lance magazine journalist in the United States, Nicaragua, and Czechoslovakia. Ms. Gallagher is particularly interested in what happens to ordinary people in the shadow of larger events.

Her essays, book reviews, op-eds and journalism have appeared in many publications including The New York Times Magazine, DoubleTake, The Los Angeles Times Magazine, Utne Reader, The Village Voice, Mother Jones, and The Los Angeles Times.

Ms. Gallagher has received fellowships from the Wesleyan Writers Conference, Blue Mountain Center,the MacDowell Colony; and Mesa Refuge.

A sermon is collected in Sermons that Work (Morehouse Publishing March 2003) and a poem in the anthology, September 11, 2001: American Writers Respond.


She is licensed to preach by the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, is preacher-in-residence at Trinity Episcopal Church, Santa Barbara and serves on the advisory board of the Yale Divinity School. She lives in California and New York City with her husband, the novelist and poet, Vincent Stanley. They are the godparents of five children.


 

Customer Reviews

34 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
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3 star:
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2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (34 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

28 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Report from the front lines of Faith, May 11, 2000
Christian living is not a matter of assent to a certain set of truths, nor of wearing "WWJD" bracelets and a big smile. Christian living is the often heart wrenching process of walking each day -- each hour -- in the presence of the living God.

Nora Gallagher is not a theologian -- she's a journalist -- and Things Seen and Unseen is a reporter's notebook, a journal of life in the Christian front lines. Her church family falls into division, and pulls together over the selection of a new pastor. The soup kitchen in the parish hall draws criticism from the neighbors -- and from members of the congregation. Gallagher's beloved brother, Kit, grows ill and moves toward death.

None of this is earth shattering, but as Christians, we all live in a shattered -- and reclaimed -- world. Gallagher reminds us of that mysterious reality on each page.

Some things are seen, and other's unseen. Gallagher reminds us that what we see often depends on where we look. For that, her book is a treasure.

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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Changed my life- opened a door that I had long ago closed., November 4, 1999
This review is from: Things Seen and Unseen: A Year Lived in Faith (Hardcover)
I read an excerpt of Nora Gallagher's "Things Seen and Unseen" in Utne Reader magazine almost a year ago. I remember sitting in the cafe at B&N, and feeling drawn to the religion section to immediately hunt down this book. As a "recovering Catholic", I was amazed that someone else felt as I did- that I had a deep, quiet longing for God but felt too alienated from the church of my childhood, and too isolated in my desire, to reach out to organized religion. In fact, I went through a long period of fascination with Wicca and other nature religions, always remaining on the fringes of involvement, and never feeling quite comfortable with "worshipping" pagan gods & goddesses. Even though I still feel that there are healthy expressions of the divine missing from traditional religious life, I now know that those facets are available to us if we refuse to define God in the narrow terms fed to us. This book led me to explore the Episcopal faith, and while there is enough in common with Catholicism to keep it from feeling too foreign to me, there are so many clear and beautiful differences that I feel that I have found a spiritual home at last. Just as Ms. Gallagher describes, my church encourages outreach and involvement with each other AND with those outside our comfortable circle. It is an inclusive environment that expects everyone to participate in ministry. AND, our priest is a woman, which of course, is lightyears away from my previous experience. Nora Gallagher writes in a way that, when read, actually changed my breathing! It felt like lectio divina, and prompted me to dive deep and allow myself to love God again.
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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 5 star reviewer revisits, January 9, 2001
By 
I reviewed this book on November 19, 1999, and gave it 5 stars back then. If I could, I'd award it 10 stars. I have re-read THINGS SEEN AND UNSEEN several times since then and it NEVER disappoints. I am sorry to see an obviously fundamentalist reviewer give it only 3 stars, but, Jerrod, all I can tell you is that when I want to read a book that strictly "agrees with what the bible says", I read the Bible. Everything else is someone's experience of their faith described on paper, which is as it should be. When I pick up a book about a person's spiritual journey, I come to it prepared not for a perfect regurgitation of Biblical quotes, but of that individual's unique relationship with God. I have a unique relationship with God, don't you? Or do we prefer to have our faith force-fed to us? We have souls AND minds- best not to waste either God-given gift.

I have given or recommended this outstanding book to many friends, including several priests and others in ministry.

It continues to be, as my rector put it, a seminal book in my faith journey.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
HERE I AM in an empty church. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
vestry meeting, base community, parish hall, altar area
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Ann Jaqua, Episcopal Church, Holy Spirit, Mark Asman, Santa Barbara, Roman Catholic, Los Angeles, Anne Howard, Mark Benson, San Francisco, Martha Siegel, Betty Bickel, New Mexico, New York, Terry Roof, Elizabeth Reifel, George Barrett, Good Friday, Holy Week, Lois Hitz, Ash Wednesday, Chris Boesch, Community Kitchen, Mount Calvary Monastery, Bishop Righter
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