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Working on God [Hardcover]

Winifred Gallagher (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 2, 1999
Why do I exist? Is this all there is? What is my true nature? What is most important in life? How should I live? These are humanity's oldest spiritual questions. At the year 2000, however, many who ask them are profoundly estranged from religion. To some, religion is belief in the unbelievable--incom-patible with intelligence and learning. To others, it's just another bureaucratic institution--legalistic, hypo-critical, untrustworthy. Still others have been alienated by their birth traditions, while an increasing number lack any such grounding. What unites this diverse group of skeptical, ambivalent "neoagnostics" is a sense of something deep and vital that eludes the reach of their intellect and education and an inchoate desire for meaning.
        
A half-century of the great secular experiment of Einstein, Marx, and Freud has proved that if religion--the record of our struggle to understand existence and behave accordingly--has grave flaws, so do the materialistic "faiths" that were intended to replace it. After looking for answers in some obvious places, from relationships and accomplishment to art and science, Winifred Gallagher realized that she had not seriously considered religion since childhood's version of Chris-tianity collided with a college education. Asking the question "What if religion could be about something else?" she decided to explore her own heritage, as well as Buddhism, Judaism, and the New Age. She discovered a vast, quiet, "millennial" spiritual revolution that is transforming religion into a process of moving toward--and struggling with--the sacred. Transcending denom-inational boundaries, this new sensibility embraces modern realities from physics to psychiatry, addresses existential questions, values personal experience over institutional authority, draws insights from multiple traditions, welcomes women as clergy and teachers, and expands morality beyond the personal to the systemic, from economics to ecology.
        
A reporter of behavioral science, Winifred Gallagher began her investigation of postmodern religion with research and interviews, but watched it also become a very personal story of epektasis--straining toward mystery. Journalism and journey unfold over time spent in a Zen monastery and a cloistered convent, small-group discussions and healing rituals, a Conservative synagogue that shares a Christian church, and the birthplace of the New Age. Written with humor, empathy, and a rigorous curiosity, Working on God breaks new ground in depicting the broad-based spiritual move-ment that is transforming culture as well as religion.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Speaking to Americans who are skeptical about religion, but nonetheless feel a spiritual hunger, Winifred Gallagher offers a humorous and profound discussion about the state of national spirituality. Before writing this book, Gallagher made her living reporting on behavioral sciences (The Power of Place). Relying upon her impressive research skills and powers of observation, Gallagher decided to embark on a pilgrimage to resolve her uncertainty regarding the role religion would play in her life. She meditates in a Zen monastery, meets with the head of an African American mosque, journeys to Israel, and enters the protective fold of cloistered nuns. In the process she comes to many provocative conclusions, including the following:
I'm beginning to grasp that religion needn't focus on beliefs, but can at least begin with trust in your own experience of what is, but is mysterious--a different kind of challenge for a neoagnostic.... Most important, I'm already thinking of religion as a process of working on God.
--Gail Hudson

From Publishers Weekly

A self-described "neoagnostic," Gallagher (Just the Way You Are) takes her readers with her as she "works on God," her phrase for trying to find where religion fits in her life. On one hand, she finds the traditional Roman Catholicism in which she was reared too embarrassing for an intellectual to profess. On the other hand, she feels she needs some kind of spirituality to find meaning in life. Her approach is an eclectic one. Sampling Zen Buddhism, Judaism and Christianity, she tries to construct a religion tailored to her individual needs. Ultimately, she discovers her life is so saturated by Christian language and images that she must use them as her starting point. However, she refuses to accept the doctrine of Christ's atonement. Pointing out that many of Christianity's central tenets?Christ's divinity, Christ's participation in the Trinity?were not codified until the 3rd century, Gallagher feels justified in taking for herself the title "Early Christian," as someone who can say only, "Jesus is special, but I'm not sure just how special." Gallagher's honesty and integrity will resonate with those who can acknowledge a "resurrection experience" but who can't quite profess the Resurrection.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; 1 edition (March 2, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679447946
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679447948
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 5.7 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,704,691 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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15 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book just makes me feel better, June 8, 1999
By A Customer
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This review is from: Working on God (Hardcover)
Having been raised by atheist parents, I always felt that there was "something more" out there, yet was completely turned off by the dogma, intolerance, and narrow-mindedness I found in the churches I attended. After reading Ms. Gallagher's book, I felt so much better about things - even religion. I always wondered why I felt so peaceful just to be sitting inside the Catholic church before the service started, yet not always agree with what was being said to me in the sermon. I always wondered if maybe I wasn't "getting it" because I could not identify with those people who talked like Jesus was their best buddy and how every decision in their life was governed by Him as opposed to their own free will. I now understand that religion and spirituality is so much more, and that is it OK to reach into the toolbox of religions to use what is best for me. It doesn't matter what religion you follow, if any, because all of them point in the same direction essentially - be good to yourself, be good to others, live in the here and now, know that somehow everything will be alright in the end, and that there is indeed something more out there than just you and your physical body; you are not alone. Thanks, Winifred. I look forwarding to reading your other books.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good shot at a difficult subject, September 10, 1999
This review is from: Working on God (Hardcover)
A nice piece of work that takes a good shot at what may be an impossible question to answer: What sort of religion can make sense to the educated person of the 21st century? She goes at it with energy and a nice touch with words, but she doesn't provide an unambiguous answer, and I don't think she promised one, either.

(And a short note to the dude or dudess who penned the review directly below this one: Read James 2:26: "For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead." Or do you not read anything that isn't Paul?)

Some quibbles: This is a bicoastal book. The author flits between New York and California, but doesn't seem to be interested in anything lying between, so we get a lot of gonzo stuff that isn't much in evidence in, say, Springfield, IL. Other answers are trying to sort themselves out. Old Catholicism is one, but it hides well. Willow Creek is another--but you'd have to be a Midwesterner to spot it.

On the other hand, it's a good, thoughtful read, and sent me in some interesting directions on my own exploration of the same difficult question. I chose Old Catholicism, and it works for me. I won't be so prideful as to assume that God has only one plan for everyone.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars From a skeptic's point of view, July 10, 2000
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PeacefulNan "PeacefulNan" (East Central GA United States) - See all my reviews
That's how Winifred Gallagher, self-avowed neo-agnostic, approaches her exploration of the various religious paths available today. She investigates the whole gamut of spirituality from New Age practices at Esalen to Islam, Zen Buddhism, Judaism, and Christianity in its various forms. Although by the end of her journey, she has settled into life as an Episcopalian with Judaic study habits and Zen meditation practices, she admits this is not the path for anyone. Gallagher is essentially an encourager, pushing each of us to explore the spiritual dimensions of life and find a path that resonates for us... a path we can follow with passion. Highly recommended.
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AT FOUR-FIFTEEN on a cold, starry morning in California wine country, I slip out of my sleeping bag and into leggings, two layers of fleece, and sandals. Read the first page
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New Age, B'nai Jeshurun, New York, Father Hehir, New Testament, Rabbi Omer-Man, Rabbi Bonder, Dai Bosatsu, Huston Smith, Martin Luther King, Sister Paula, Ansche Chesed, Mary Ann, Mary Jane, Canon Jeff Golliher, Canon Susan Harriss, Dalai Lama, Pastor Karpen, Thomas Merton, Graduate Theological Union, Gregory of Nyssa, Holy Spirit, Los Angeles, Shunryu Suzuki, Ash Wednesday
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