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Living the Heart of Christianity: A Guide to Putting Your Faith into Action

Living the Heart of Christianity: A Guide to Putting Your Faith into Action
By Tim Scorer, Marcus Borg

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Product Description

A personal companion to Borg's bestseller, The Heart of Christianity that helps people put faith into action.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #836405 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-01-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 160 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
TIM SCORER is a master of experiential spiritual formation. He is the author of Experiencing the Heart of Christianity for groups and co-author of Living the Heart of Christianity for individuals, based on Marcus Borgs bestselling The Heart of Christianity . He has also created the learning process and written the leaders guides for Experiencing the Bible Again for the First Time, and Experiencing Jesus. Tim brings a passion for transformational faith and practical experience with community organizations, congregations, and retreatants as a long-time member of the management team of Naramata Centre, and on the staff at Penticton United Church. Marcus Borg is Hundere Distinguished Professor of Religion and Culture at Oregon State University, and the author of many bestselling books including The Heart of Christianity: Rediscovering a Life of Faith.


Customer Reviews

The Heart of Christianity: Strong and Vibrant5
Jesus scholar Marcus Borg's The Heart of Christianity throws open the windows of the Christian church and blows out the cobwebs that have clouded the view of the living post-Easter Jesus and his vital place in our lives. Published by HarperCollins in 2003, the book proposes to bridge the yawning, deepening, darkening gap between belief-centered dogmatic Christianity (what Borg calls the "earlier paradigm") and the "emerging paradigm."

The Emerging Paradigm
Borg identifies the latter as a worldview that embraces Christianity as a means to God rather than the means, that sees the Bible as a sacrament--a means of experiencing God--rather than God's literal word, that understands the living Christ as the wisdom of God at the heart of our faith. Coincidentally, this wisdom bears a striking resemblance to the wisdom of all the world's great and enduring religions.

Jesus
Jesus,according to Borg, is a mystic, healer, wisdom teacher, and political rebel--a charismatic leader whose single-minded commitment to God's justice through systemic change to the domination system that oppressed the majority of people in his world cost him his life while giving the faithful a new lease on this life. For 2000 years, Christians' devotional contemplation of Jesus pre- and post-Easter has been an endeavor to understand and emulate his generosity, compassion, and love.

This new paradigm is about loving God and loving what God loves rather than rigidly adhering to a specific set of beliefs about a punitive God.
Borg identifies Christianity itself as a sacrament of--a means to--God. Borg argues that one must be transformed in his or her own lifetime; thus, salvation means being healed and becoming one with God, Thus, faith as sacrament. Living in faith is about the quality of life here and now for the self and for the community--a central concern of Jesus--rather than salvation in an afterlife.

Borg suggests we read the Bible again for the first time, to see it in historical context, and to embrace language and story as a product of its time, place, and people. Borg's interest in language--like so many preachers, he traces the words to their roots and follows their meanings to the present in a way that reveals the very holiness of language and all communication--and its role in our understanding of God is part of the adventure of this exciting, intelligent, incisive, challenging book.

Very pleasing4
I really liked it. It was fair. People view this man as radical or too liberal and therefore unfair or threatening. In his book he doesn't do any demeaning he just speaks logic as he understands it. He makes his case and he does it very admirably.
It was a bit text booky and a little slow in the early middle-middle of the book. However, he ends it beautifully. He describes that being Christian and thinking like a Christian involves no doctrines but a way of life and that it involves no sacrifice of intellect while making a case for Christianity in our pluralistic world. It was very well done. For someone struggling with an exodus from religion, esspecially Christianity or views themselves as a closet atheist or agnostic, Borg brings back the essentiality of Christianity. I recommend it to a person who is patient. It isn't a quick read, but it isn't scholarly jargon either. Also, no matter the energy it takes to read, the ending and the nourishment of the book are absolutely worth it.

Beautiful book of non-denominational Christianity5
I wish this book could be sent to every member of Congress and the Senate, and they would read it.

To be Christian is not to be judgemental, but to be compassionate.

Read this and re-think whether you, or our leaders, are really living a Christian life.