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Hardcover Christ of the Celts: The Healing of Creation Book

ISBN: 0470183500

ISBN13: 9780470183502

Christ of the Celts: The Healing of Creation

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Christ of the Celts

"I explore the Celtic image of Christ as the Memory of what we have forgotten. He remembers the dance of the universe and the harmony that is deep within all things. He is the Memory also of who we are."
--from the Prelude

"Diagnosing the human soul with a longing for peace in the face of fear and fragmentation nurtured by global political forces and fundamentalisms, Newell offers the ancient traditions of...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A must read for a new century

This book changed my world view toward Christianity. In fact, to call it Christianity would be a disservice because the church has gotten a very bad reputation in the last century for being judgmental and hypocritical. This book shows us a Jesus and a theology that has been lost to time. I strongly encourage you to read this book and discover the power of love and the Christ that dwells in each of us.

Celtic spirituality

Philip Newell writes movingly and powerfully about Christ of the Celts. Some of what he writes will rattle a few pre-set notions about who we are, and how we are created in God's image. He tells stories of people he has met and how they have struggled with what they have been taught by their churches, and what they feel inside. It is challenging, and for me rewarding and enriching.

Excellent

Every Western Christian should read this book. It challenged a lot of the preconceived ideas and much of the teaching I have received in traditional western Christian churches. It is very well written and has opened up new doors in my personal journey with Christ. One of the best books I have read as a Christian.

Christ of the Celts

Bold and Exciting ! Newell asserts that "There is despair about much of what Christianity has to offer. So many of its teachings and practices seem either irrelevant to the deepest yearnings of the human soul or flatly opposed to them." A soft-spoken poet no more, he boldly addresses the woes of Christianity today and offers practical solutions for the healing of the human soul. "What we need today are insights and spiritual practices that remind us of the Unity of our origins and that further nourish the longing for peace that is stirring among us." Whatever our religious inclinations, Newell invites us to consider the ancient teachings of the Celtic tradition that emphasize the innate goodness of humankind as exemplified by Christ as the restorer of self-less giving and the importance of Creation with reference to the interconnectedness to all things. Without a working knowledge of these two foundational truths, wholeness in ourselves and our world is not possible. A must-read for anyone interested in psychology, politics or religious philosophy.

An Evangelical Voice from a Distant Land Calls Us to Remember the Goodness of God's Creation

For far more than 1,000 years, Celtic Christians have been evangelists from a distant land, bringing fresh insights to the faithful around the world -- and sometimes finding themselves harshly rebuffed for their effort. Throughout the 20th Century, in fact, the Celtic revival flowered and began to re-seed Christendom -- even before similar movements took hold in the U.S. Millions of Americans are familiar with Jim Wallis, the best-selling author of "God's Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It (Plus)" and founder of Sojourners. But, in Scotland in 1938, 10 years before Wallis' birth in 1948, the Rev. George MacLeod founded the Iona Community with principles that are a first cousin to what Wallis shaped decades later. Millions of Americans are aware of a renewed interest in the Orthodox realm of Christianity -- rediscovering the beauty of icons, the seemingly fresh perspectives of Orthodox theology and the way that Orthodox worship engages all the senses. MacLeod was making this connection in the 1930s. Millions of Americans love the hauntingly beautiful Celtic music that's everywhere these days. But the Celtic musical revival in worship really is the full flowering of a generation of Iona leadership in which J. Philip Newell ran the historic abbey in the far west of Scotland and talented musicians like John L. Bell literally were producing a whole new hymnal and book of liturgy. Countless Americans already know Newell's inspirational voice -- calling to them to re-engage their spiritual senses through popular books like "Listening for the Heartbeat of God: A Celtic Spirituality." Now, Newell takes a startlingly different approach toward readers and offers a full-fledged manifesto that seeks to reshape the way most Western Christians think about the core of their faith. This isn't the first time Americans have heard this appeal to a Creation-based spirituality -- and an abandonment of the original-sin-and-redemption approach to the faith. In 1983, for instance, American theologian Matthew Fox published, "Original Blessing: A Primer in Creation Spirituality Presented in Four Paths, Twenty-Six Themes, and Two Questions," a milestone in the rebirth of this strain of spirituality. In his earlier books, Newell already has been reflecting these themes. But "Christ of the Celts" -- weighing in at a remarkably slim 161 pages -- is really Newell's full-fledged Christology. And, since timing is everything in our rapidly churning global culture -- Newell couldn't be hitting American bookstores at a more opportune time. Everywhere readers look these days, American evangelicals are engaged in vigorous -- sometimes even angry -- debate over the future of Christianity. From the traditional end of the spectrum, Wheaton College English professor Alan Jacobs has a brand-new book appearing this month, "Original Sin: A Cultural History" trying to remind Americans that the traditional original-sin approach to faith still serves a ver
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