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| a must-listen!!
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Guests Include: Elisabeth Elliot |
Believe me, hear this & you just might be changed... I just heard it today - man, it's powerful stuff.
Joann, this talk esp. made me think of you - and I wanted to share it with you - but I figured I'd share it in a somewhat public (even if protected ;)) forum...
LISTEN IN, FOLKS... Elisabeth Elliot presents no-nonsense, in-your-face, radical, SACRIFICIAL Xnty... | | |
| HELPFUL READING LISTS for CHRISTIANS who want to "love the Lord [our] God" with all their MINDS...
http://www.serioustimes.com/information.asp?TopicID=12
btw, a great conference related to this: http://www.serioustimes.com/Information.asp?TopicID=56
sample of speakers:
| Kelly Monroe Kullberg is the founder and director of project development of The Veritas Forum, now on over fifty campuses, which she first organized at Harvard in 1992. She edited and co-authored the bestselling of Finding God at Harvard: Spiritual Journeys of Christian Thinkers and taught senior electives at Harvard College in film and C.S. Lewis while serving as a chaplain to the Harvard Graduate School Christian Fellowship from 1988-1997. Her forthcoming book, to be published by InterVarsity Press, is Finding God Beyond Harvard. |
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James W. Sire (Ph.D., University of Missouri), formerly a senior editor at InterVarsity Press, is a frequent guest lecturer at colleges and universities in the United States and Europe. He is the author of numerous books, including the bestselling The Universe Next Door, now in its third edition, and the forthcoming Praying through the Psalms. |
and now, sample from the recommended reading lists:
Reading Lists
?Be assiduous in prayer and reading. In the one you speak to God. In the other God speaks to you.? - Cyprian of Carthage
At Serious Times, we believe in reading ? not simply for the mind, or even the soul ? but as that which is decisive to making a lasting life impact. Serious Times has compiled a number of reading lists to serve the study of the flow of history, the shape of culture, and the critical areas of spiritual formation, the Christian mind, vocation, and the church.
The following lists are designed as beginning reading plans for select areas related to understanding the times, and how to live in light of those times. They are not meant to be exhaustive, only suggestive.
Click on the topic for each list.
Church Enlightenment Entering The Great Conversation Middle Ages Modernity One Year Reading Program Postmodernity Renaissance/Reformation Spiritual Formation Ten To Begin With Twenty Five toward a Christian Worldview Vocation
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RENAISSANCE:
Bainton, Roland The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century Boston: Beacon Press, 1952/1985 As historian Jaroslav Pelikan writes in the foreword to this classic work, ?This book has stood for a third of a century as the place to begin a study of one of the most complex and controversial phenomena in the history of culture.?
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Manchester, William A World Lit Only By Fire: The Medieval Mind and the Renaissance Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1992 The late William Manchester, most known for his biographies of John F. Kennedy and Winston Churchill, also penned one of the most popular and accessible introductions to medieval life and thought. Manchester wrote history as if it were a novel, yet without sacrificing accuracy. In other words, the way history should be written.
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McGrath, Alister E Reformation Thought: An Introduction Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988 It would be difficult to find a more concise introduction to Reformation thought than McGrath?s slim volume. Bypassing the tome that could be written about the historical period itself, McGrath focuses on the specific ideas that fueled the era. Excellent and balanced ? a wonderful introductory text for anyone. |
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 Enlightenment
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Chadwick, Owen The Secularization of the European Mind in the 19th Century Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1975 Do not be put off by this book?s ponderous title. This is one of the most remarkable books on the staggering shift that took place during the Enlightenment. Chadwick charts with unparalleled skill the declining hold of the church and its doctrine on European society, resulting in a seismic shift in Western life and thought.
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Gay, Peter The Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Paganism New York: Norton, 1966/1977 This National Book Award winning volume features a master historian at work in the area of his life study. Gay sees the Enlightenment as a cohesive and conscious whole, and importantly charts how it truly did give rise to modern paganism.
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May, Henry F The Enlightenment in America New York: Oxford, 1976 Most works on the Enlightenment focus on the continent and, specifically, the French philosophes. May charts how the ideas of the European Enlightenment ? men like Voltaire, Locke, Hume and Rousseau ? came to the United States and profoundly shaped the country during the Revolutionary age. Treating the Enlightenment as a ?religion,? he explores how the clash between Protestant Christianity and the Enlightenment shaped the ensuing century. This is a very good, and very important, book. | |
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Middle Ages
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Cantor, Norman F The Civilization of the Middle Ages New York: Harper Collins, 1993 Cantor is arguably the leading medieval historian of our day. He is certainly the most published. This is his foundational work on the period, and it stands out among the best single-volume works on the period.
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Colish, Marcia L Medieval Foundations of the Western Intellectual Tradition, 400-1400 Yale Intellectual History of the West. Mew Haven: Yale University Press, 1997 This is a weighty and academic tome, and not for the faint of heart, but it would be hard to find a more respected introduction to the intellectual history of the period. Colish lays to rest any doubt that the foundations of the Western intellectual traditions were laid in the Middle Ages.
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Evans, G.R Faith in the Medieval World Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2002 IVP?s ?Histories? series is wonderful, and this installment by Evans provides a highly accessible introduction to the key figures and events. There is a focus on people and stories, and it is full of art and photography.
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Gies, Frances and Joseph Life in a Medieval City (1969). Life in a Medieval Castle (1974). Life in a Medieval Village (1990) New York: Harper Perennial This trilogy of books is simply wonderful, providing social history at its best. It brings history to life and is entertaining in the most complimentary sense of the word. Excellent for children/students as well as for adults.
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Huizinga, Johan The Autumn of the Middle Ages Translated by Rodney J. Payton and Ulrich Mammitzsch. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996 This is an acclaimed work of history, giving a portrait of life, thought and art in fourteenth and fifteenth century France and the Netherlands. This book replaces an earlier translation of Huizinga?s work, titled The Waning of the Middle Ages.
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Manchester, William A World Lit Only By Fire: The Medieval Mind and the Renaissance Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1992 The late William Manchester, most known for his biographies of John F. Kennedy and Winston Churchill, also penned one of the most popular and accessible introductions to medieval life and thought. Manchester, along with other popular historians such as Barbara Tuchman (see below), writes history as if it were a novel ? yet without sacrificing accuracy. In other words, the way history should be written.
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Powers, Eileen Medieval People Available in a Dover paperback edition, a Barnes and Noble hardback, as well as a London/Folio Society edition. First published in 1924 Power brings to life six people who lived between the ninth and sixteenth centuries, including a peasant on a country estate in Charlemagne?s time; a Venetian traveler of the 13th century; a prioress and a middle-class Parisian housewife of the 14th century; and a merchant and a cloth maker from the days of Henry VII. This book will be enjoyed by students and teachers, as well as anyone interested in the period.
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Russell, Jeffrey Burton A History of Medieval Christianity: Prophecy and Order Arlington Heights: Harlan Davidson, Inc., 1968 This is a lesser-known work, but frequently used in graduate programs. The interest of the work is the approach Russell takes to the study of the era, namely the swing back and forth between the spirit of prophecy and the spirit of order. There can be little doubt that understanding this dynamic is of enormous value in understanding the entire era.
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Tuchman, Barbara A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1978 Tuchman was one of the most entertaining and engaging historical writers, winning multiple Pulitzer Prizes. While focusing on a single century, and building around the life of one man in particular (Enguerrand de Coucy VII), she offers one of the best windows into the wider medieval world available. | | | | |
| The "Infinite Abyss"
"We burn with desire to find a firm footing, an ultimate, lasting base on which to build a tower rising up to infinity, but our whole foundation cracks and the earth opens up into the depth of the abyss."
"I traveled much further away from you into more and more sterile things productive of unhappiness, proud in my self-pity, incapable of rest in my exhaustion."
"What else does this craving, and this helplessness, proclaim but that there was once in man a true happiness, of which all that now remains is the empty print and trace? This he tries in vain to fill with everything around him, seeking in all things that are not there the help he cannot find in those that are, though none can help, since this infinite abyss can be filled only with an infinite and immutable object; in other words by God himself."
(Pascal... Augustine... Pascal...) | | |
| Hi, if you're my friend & are confused - but want to get "connected" - just shoot me an email: link to left. Thank you! | | |
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