
Book Review: The Post-Traumatic God
We review “Post-Traumatic God: How the Church Cares for People Who Have Been to Hell and Back” by David W. Peters
We review “Post-Traumatic God: How the Church Cares for People Who Have Been to Hell and Back” by David W. Peters
“Jesus can make the blind see, but he can’t make the disciples understand.”
How might we nurture and grow the divine within?
“Jesus’s duty and ministry were to save people, not condemn them. That’s not to say that he didn’t give us some idea of who might or would be condemned by God at some point, but only (at that time, anyway,) that he was not the designated one to do that. That was God’s providence entirely.”
From our friends at Episcopal News Service: The Episcopal Diocese of West Tennessee has announced a slate of three nominees for election as its fourth
“I carried the weight of what I thought other people thought about me for years. I don’t know at what moment I realized that I didn’t have to carry the weight of the (mostly imaginary) expectations of others any more. Once I did it was a revelation.”
Luci and Jordan continue through Acts
“There’s something very magical about the liminal times of day – dawn and twilight. They are not quite one thing or the other, neither day or night.”
“Three times Paul begs God to remove his limitation, and three times he is told, No. No, for my grace is sufficient. No, because if I remove this thorn, you will not need to rely upon me. No, for without gravity to keep your feet on the ground you will start to imagine you can fly on your own. No, because I am the Lord and you are not.”
The retreat from refugee resettlement flies in the face of our nation’s history of being a place of refuge to persecuted persons. The Episcopal Church, through the ministry of Episcopal Migration Ministries, is committed to welcome for all.