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Wendell Berry and the Given Life
- Narrated by: Ragan Sutterfield
- Length: 5 hrs and 42 mins
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Publisher's summary
For the past 50 years, Wendell Berry has been helping seekers chart a return to the practice of being creatures. Through his essays, poetry, and fiction, Berry has repeatedly drawn our attention to the ways in which our lives are gifts in a whole economy of gifts. Berry presents us with the sort of coherent vision for the lived moral and spiritual life that we need now. His work helps us remember our givenness and embrace our life as creatures. His insights flow from a life and practices, and so it is a vision that can be practiced and lived - it is a vision that is grounded in the art of being a creature. In Wendell Berry and the Given Life, Ragan Sutterfield articulates Berry's vision for the creaturely life and the Christian understandings of humility and creation that underpin it.
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In Wrestling with God, Ronald Rolheiser offers a steady and inspiring voice to help us avow and understand our faith in a world where nothing seems solid or permanent. Drawing from his own life experience, as well as a storehouse of literary, psychological, and theological insights, the beloved author of Sacred Fire examines the fears and doubts that challenge us. It is in these struggles to find meaning, that Rolheiser lays out a path for faith in a world struggling to find faith, but perhaps more important, he helps us find our own rhythm within which to walk that path.
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Still Wrestling
- By Joseph B Oberting on 10-13-20
By: Ronald Rolheiser
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Grounded
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- By: Diana Butler Bass
- Narrated by: Diana Butler Bass
- Length: 11 hrs and 46 mins
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The headlines are clear: Religion is on the decline in America as many people leave behind traditional religious practices. In this follow-up to her critically acclaimed book Christianity After Religion, Diana Butler Bass argues that what appears to be a decline actually signals a major transformation in how people understand God. The distant God of conventional religion has given way to a more intimate sense of the sacred with us in the world.
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Audiobook Revolutionary
- By JJ James on 05-29-18
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Eager to Love
- The Alternative Way of Francis of Assisi
- By: Richard Rohr
- Narrated by: John Quigley O.F.M.
- Length: 9 hrs and 32 mins
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Francis of Assisi is one of the most beloved of all saints. Both traditional and entirely revolutionary, he was a paradox. He was at once down-to-earth and reaching toward heaven, grounded in the rich history of the Church while moving toward a new understanding of the world beyond. Franciscan Father Richard Rohr helps us look beyond the birdbath image of the saint to remind us of the long tradition founded on Francis' revolutionary, radical, and life-changing embrace of the teachings of Jesus.
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Richard Rohr Should Read Richard Rohr
- By Cloud Captain on 10-18-14
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The Year of Our Lord 1943
- Christian Humanism in an Age of Crisis
- By: Alan Jacobs
- Narrated by: Paul Boehmer
- Length: 8 hrs and 37 mins
- Unabridged
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By early 1943, it had become increasingly clear the Allies would win the Second World War. Christian intellectuals on both sides of the Atlantic thought the soon-to-be-victorious nations were not culturally or morally prepared for their success. These Christian intellectuals - Jacques Maritain, T. S. Eliot, C. S. Lewis, W. H. Auden, and Simone Weil, among others - sought both to articulate a sober and reflective critique of their own culture and to outline a plan for the moral and spiritual regeneration of their countries in the post-war world.
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The Audible is a Train Wreck
- By John on 09-04-18
By: Alan Jacobs
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The Illumined Heart: Capture the Vibrant Faith of the Ancient Christians
- By: Frederica Mathewes-Green
- Narrated by: Frederica Mathewes-Green
- Length: 2 hrs and 1 min
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Why are modern Christians so indistinguishable from everyone else? How come Christians who lived in times of bloody persecution were so heroic, while we who live in safety are not? How could the first Christians fast valiantly, but we feel deprived without dessert? How did New Testament believers pray without ceasing? How could the early Christian martyrs actually forgive their torturers? What did the Christians of the first centuries know that we don't? This book explores these questions.
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Illuminating wisdom! Thank you!
- By James A. Coles Jr. on 06-17-16
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Thank God for Evolution
- How the Marriage of Science and Religion Will Transform Your Life and Our World
- By: Michael Dowd
- Narrated by: Michael Dowd
- Length: 9 hrs
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Here is a revolutionary perspective on the relationship between religion and science that builds a bridge between people of all beliefs.
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Religion without God
- By Paul on 09-22-10
By: Michael Dowd
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Change Your Thoughts—Change Your Life
- Living the Wisdom of the Tao
- By: Dr. Wayne W. Dyer
- Narrated by: Dr. Wayne W. Dyer
- Length: 9 hrs and 9 mins
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Five hundred years before the birth of Jesus, a God-realized being named Lao-tzu in ancient China dictated 81 verses, which are regarded by many as the ultimate commentary on the nature of our existence. The classic text of these 81 verses, called the Tao Te Ching or the Great Way, offers advice and guidance that is balanced, moral, spiritual, and always concerned with working for the good.
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Less is more
- By CAT on 06-25-08
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The Life We're Looking For
- Reclaiming Relationship in a Technological World
- By: Andy Crouch
- Narrated by: Andy Crouch
- Length: 5 hrs and 55 mins
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Our greatest need is to be recognized—to be seen, loved, and embedded in rich relationships with those around us. But for the last century, we’ve displaced that need with the ease of technology. We’ve dreamed of mastery without relationship (what the premodern world called magic) and abundance without dependence (what Jesus called Mammon). Yet even before a pandemic disrupted that quest, we felt threatened and strangely out of place: lonely, anxious, bored amid endless options, oddly disconnected amid infinite connections.
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Way too much scripture
- By Lee Nettles on 05-11-22
By: Andy Crouch
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What listeners say about Wendell Berry and the Given Life
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- Classical Mom
- 04-02-22
Lovely book...
But it's a shame that the narrator (also the author) is so wooden and robotic and takes WAY too many pauses between words that it is VERY difficult to listen to. Speeding it up didn't help much; it still sounded odd. Why didn't someone give him some advice to improve his reading-out-loud-voice? This book is about being human but his reading is not human-like. Sad.
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- w.l.
- 09-06-19
Can't say if this was good or not due to narration
This may have been a good book, but the author narrated it and spoke slowly and choppily. Plus, his pronunciation of some everyday words caused me to wonder what he was saying, resulting in my brain wandering off to work on the word spoken. For example, "heals" he pronounced as "hills." Also in a discussion of power tools to do yard work, the narrator seemed to be discussing the use of a sai to cut grass instead of a weed whacker. I still don't know what he wanted to say there, perhaps "scythe?" I suppose it's an accent, but there were a number of words that just off threw me off track. I tried to think kind thoughts; perhaps the author has a disability? But kind thoughts did not make the listening any easier.
The second problem was totally my fault. For some time I had wanted to read something by Berry. I don't really know why, it must have been because of hearing about him somewhere along the line. I should have read something, or maybe many things, by Berry before reading about his writings and philosophy. However, the book made me hunger to read a work or two by him, so that's a plus.
Berry might be called a Luddite by someone like me who embraces technology, but in learning more about him, I understand his reasoning. Our distance from the growing of food, the use of giant supermarkets, the lack of meal preparation, and our reliance on fast food, distances us from the Earth and causes a separation from our position of stewards. As well, it encourages factory farms, and entire industries created in the packaging, shipping, marketing, and selling of products. Berry sees this as unsustainable. And when I look at the process, it is.
There are many topics explored here, and now I have to pick just one book by Berry to get a clearer idea of his philosophy. I wish the author/narrator had not caused me to rate the book as average. It might actually be good, but Sutterfield was a distraction to the topic.
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- carly forward
- 08-23-17
The Narrator is extremely ........ frustrating
I was unable to... finish listening to this... book. The content was... really great. But... the narrator paused... a lot ... for ... no reason. it finally just... got too annoying... to listen to.
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- J. Colvin
- 11-28-18
Wonderful book. I will need to listen again and again.
Wonderful book. I will need to listen again and again. Definately a different way of viewing. The world.
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- Betty B.
- 03-14-19
Ugh
I bought this thinking it was by WB, not realizing it was another author. I have dozens of WB’s books and he is a revered fav. This book was largely disappointing because:
1. Heavily religious overtones by a member of organized religion (which WB rightly holds suspect);
2. The self narration is annoyingly plodding as mentioned by another reviewer, I finally put it on 1.5x speed to get through it;
3. The author/narrator tellingly misstates the title of Wallace Stegner’s influential novel ANGLE of Repose as ANGEL of Repose; and finally
4. Nothing new or particularly insightful is presented—it reads like an undergraduate term paper.
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3 people found this helpful