Spiritualizing the City

Spiritualizing the City
Title Spiritualizing the City PDF eBook
Author Victoria Hegner
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Total Pages 216
Release 2016-11-25
Genre Science
ISBN 1317396693

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Urban spaces have always functioned as cradles and laboratories for religious movements and spiritualities. The urban forms a central and nourishing agent for the creation of new religious expressions, and continually negotiates new ways of being spiritual and establishing spiritual ideas and practices. This book explores the intense and complex interplay between the (post) modern city and new religious and spiritual movement, bringing the city and its annexes into the foreground of current research into religion. It develops a new, ethnography-based analysis of the ways in which the pluralist experience of the "urban" inscribes itself into various religious practices and vice versa: how do religiosity and spirituality appropriate and transform meanings of the urban? It focuses on new religious expressions, cosmologies and ways of life that go beyond established belief systems and religious understandings, and explores new conceptions of the word "urban" in a world of increasingly extended urban environments. The book examines how cities are both considered as sites and sources of spirituality, where the globalization of religions takes place as well as the fact that globalization is linked closely to the process of localization. The socio-cultural and political uniqueness of the specific urban context are analyzed to present an innovative perspective on how the interplay between the urban, spiritual and religious should be understood. This book brings a timely new perspective and will be of interest to academics and students in geography, sociology, urban studies, cultural studies and anthropology, as well as for urban planners and policy makers.

The Spiritual City

The Spiritual City
Title The Spiritual City PDF eBook
Author Philip Sheldrake
Publisher John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages 68
Release 2014-07-21
Genre Religion
ISBN 1118855663

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A Spiritual City provides a broad examination of the meaning and importance of cities from a Christian perspective. Contains thought-provoking theological and spiritual reflections on city-making by a leading scholar Unites contemporary thinking about urban space and built environments with the latest in urban theology Addresses the long-standing anti-urban bias of Christianity and its emphasis on inwardness and pilgrimage Presents an important religious perspective on the potential of cities to create a strong human community and sense of sacred space

Religion and Dialogue in the City

Religion and Dialogue in the City
Title Religion and Dialogue in the City PDF eBook
Author Julia Ipgrave
Publisher Waxmann Verlag
Total Pages 330
Release 2018
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 3830987943

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Urban spaces throughout Europe are increasingly characterised by a mixture of different religions and worldviews. Being home to a wide range of religious and non-religious groups and individuals does not mean that cities are automatically also spaces of interreligious and interfaith encounters. Whether a city is a venue for interreligious encounter and dialogue, or merely a place where various religions and worldviews exist side by side, is a central question for the continuing social cohesion of modern societies. This volume presents selected findings of the international research project 'Religion and Dialogue in Modern Societies' (ReDi) which investigated dialogical practice in the five metropolitan cities Oslo, Stockholm, London, Hamburg and Duisburg. It offers a range of case studies addressing two fields of activity: dialogue and interreligious encounters in the urban space and dialogue in education.

Prophetic Lament

Prophetic Lament
Title Prophetic Lament PDF eBook
Author Soong-Chan Rah
Publisher InterVarsity Press
Total Pages 230
Release 2015-09-03
Genre Religion
ISBN 0830836942

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The American church avoids lament but lament is a missing, essential component of Christian faith. Soong-Chan Rah's prophetic exposition of the book of Lamentations provides a biblical and theological lens for examining the church's relationship with a suffering world. Hear the prophet's lament as the necessary corrective for Christianity's future.

Prayer as Transgression?

Prayer as Transgression?
Title Prayer as Transgression? PDF eBook
Author Sheryl Reimer-Kirkham
Publisher McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages 214
Release 2020-09-23
Genre Religion
ISBN 0228002982

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Healthcare settings are notoriously complex places where life and death co-exist, and where suffering is an everyday occurrence, giving rise to existential questions. The full range of society's diversity is reflected in patients and staff. Increasing religious and ethnic plurality, alongside decades of secularizing trends, is bringing new attention to how religion and nonreligion are expressed in public spaces. Through critical ethnographic research in Vancouver and London, Prayer as Transgression? reveals how prayer occurs in hospitals, long-term care facilities, and community-based clinics in a variety of forms and circumstances. Prayer occurs quietly on the edges of day-to-day healthcare provision and in designated sacred spaces. Some requests for prayer, however, interrupt and transgress the clinical machinery of a hospital, such as when a patient asks for prayer from the chaplain while the operating room waits. With contributions by researchers, healthcare practitioners, and chaplains, the authors consider how prayer transgresses the clinical priorities that mark healthcare, opening up ways to think differently about institutional norms and social structures. They show how prayer highlights trends of secularization and sacralization in healthcare settings. They also consider the ambivalences about prayer arising from staff and patients' varied views on religion and spirituality, and their associated ethical concerns amidst clinical and workload demands. A window onto religion in the public sphere, Prayer as Transgression? tells much about how people live well together, even in the face of personal crises and fragilities, suffering, diversity, and social change.

The last vials: being a series of essays upon the subject of the second advent. Publ. separately in the year 1846. By a clergyman [R.A. Purdon]. 10th ser.; 17th year, no.1-28th year, no.4

The last vials: being a series of essays upon the subject of the second advent. Publ. separately in the year 1846. By a clergyman [R.A. Purdon]. 10th ser.; 17th year, no.1-28th year, no.4
Title The last vials: being a series of essays upon the subject of the second advent. Publ. separately in the year 1846. By a clergyman [R.A. Purdon]. 10th ser.; 17th year, no.1-28th year, no.4 PDF eBook
Author Robert A. Purdon
Publisher
Total Pages 428
Release 1855
Genre
ISBN

Download The last vials: being a series of essays upon the subject of the second advent. Publ. separately in the year 1846. By a clergyman [R.A. Purdon]. 10th ser.; 17th year, no.1-28th year, no.4 Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The Meaning of the City

The Meaning of the City
Title The Meaning of the City PDF eBook
Author Jacques Ellul
Publisher Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages 237
Release 2011-06-17
Genre Religion
ISBN 1606089730

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Jacques Ellul, a former member of a Law Faculty at the University of Bordeaux, was recognized as a brilliant and penetrating commentator on the relationship between theology and sociology. In the Meaning of the City he presents what he finds in the Bible--a sophisticated, coherent theology of the city fully applicable to today's urbanized society. Ellul believes that the city symbolizes the supreme work of man--and, as such, represents man's ultimate rejection of God. Therefore it is the city, where lies man's rebellious heart, that must be reformed. The author stresses the fact that the Bible does not find man's fulfillment in a return to an idyllic Eden, but points rather to a life of communion with the Savior in the city transfigured. The Meaning of the City, says John Wilkinson in his introductory essay to the book, is the theological counterpoint to Ellul's Technological Society, a work that analyzed the phenomenon of the autonomous and totally manipulative post-industrial world. Ellul takes issue with those who idealistically plan new urban environments for man, as though man alone can negate the inherent diabolism of the city. For Ellul, the history of the city from the times of Cain and Nimrod through to Babylon and Jerusalem reveals a tendency to destroy the human being for the sake of human works. Nevertheless, continuing the theme of the tension between two realities that characterizes all his works, Ellul sees God as electing the city as itself an instrument of grace for the believer. William Stringfellow describes The Meaning of the City as a book of startling significance, which should rank beside Reinhold Niebuhr's Moral Man and Immoral Society as a work of truly momentous potential. Douglass D. McFerran adds that it is a book worth serious consideration by anyone interested in the relationship between religious commitment and secular involvement. And John Wilkinson sums it up: There are very few convincingly religious analyses of the sociological phenomena of the present day. . . . Ellul's biblically based sociology is today furnishing the matter for a large and growing group of social protestants, particularly in the United States.