Unwanted Wisdom: Suffering, the Cross, And Hope
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| Unwanted Wisdom: Suffering, the Cross, And Hope | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The film The Passion of the Christ raised anew the question: why did Jesus suffer such an excruciatingly painful death? For centuries, those afflicted with suffering have been counseled by the church to unite their sufferings to those of Jesus. This book asks the question how the cross of Jesus can be reimagined in such a way as to offer a path of hope rather than resignation. Drawing upon resources as diverse as Simone Weil, William Lynch, Dorothee Soelle, Karl Rahner, and Jon Sobrino, as well as the author's personal experience of deep loss, the book explores the terrain of suffering, from the universal pain brought about by the loss of loved ones to the exceedinly indivdual imprisonment of mental illness and the global catastrophe of AIDS. The book also questions the extra burden of suffering put upon gay Catholics by the church's teaching of life-long celibacy for homosexuals. Inspirational, intelligent, and globally informed, Unwanted Wisdom sends out a message of hope to all Catholics who've yearned to apply the wisdom of Jesus to their own personal suffering.
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| 10-09-07 | 5 | (NA) |
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Unwanted Wisdom is an excellenct book on cooping with suffering. Crowley explains how suffering can be a revelatory experience and how hope is essential to the transformation of suffering. Most intriguing is that this author draws on his own grief and the suffering of his brother and sister as they entered the process of a suffering death. Crowley is bold in his willingness to confront and engage systematic/social stigma (specifically around AIDS) and even bolder in sharing his personal experience with his brother's death. This book albeit academically solid, is written from the heart. The best theology written is that arising out of personal experience! Thank you, Crowley . . . I used this book in my M.Div thesis.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-10 01:27:29 EST)
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