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Hardcover Everyday Faith: Practical Essays on Personal Faith and the Ethical Choices We Face in Daily Life (from the Pages of the Akron Beacon J Book

ISBN: 1886228817

ISBN13: 9781886228818

Everyday Faith: Practical Essays on Personal Faith and the Ethical Choices We Face in Daily Life (from the Pages of the Akron Beacon J

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Writing about religion can kill your career, a friend told sportswriter Terry Pluto. Don't do it, advised media colleagues. Pluto followed his conscience anyway and began writing a new column for the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

every day life in a nutshell

Terry Pluto is of course most known for his sports columns, and it was a great day for the Cleveland Plain Dealer when he came on board. He has a gift of expressing very deep and complex issues in a plain and human manner. "Everyday Faith" is like a bowl of nuts, providing small satisfying treats, and sustenence for the spirit. It is a great "keeper" book for any family and a wonderful gift for young as well as older adults.

A Great Read

Terry Pluto flies under the radar as one of the most insightful and most talented writers in the country. This book is a collection of his newspaper columns on faith and life. Pluto tackles pertinent topics of faith and life in these columns and provides more illumination and reason in a short column than many pastors do in an entire sermon. He cuts straight to the bone of any discussion with his words and maps out difficult intersections between faith, theology and life. He's not afraid to be uncertain of the answers but he always will probe for life's ultimate meaning. This collection is wonderful reading regardless of whether you are clergy, agnostic or anywhere in between. You will not be disappointed by Pluto's work and you may come out a little bit more wise for the effort of reading this book.

An Outstanding Collection of Terry Pluto's Columns

In the name of full disclosure, I need to confess that I am a huge Terry Pluto fan. For those of you who have never heard of him, he is an award-winning faith and sports columnist for the Akron Beacon Journal and the author of nineteen books. Among readers of the Beacon, he has a legion of fans. On a personal note, Pluto is the reason I subscribe to the Akron Beacon Journal, even though I am a major contributor to the Beacon's competitor, The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer. Journalists like myself subscribe to the competition to know what they're up to. Not me. I buy to read Pluto. There, I've said it. With that out of the way, I can get down to business and tell you about his latest book EVERYDAY FAITH, a collection of fifty-seven of his "Your Faith" columns, published Saturdays in the Beacon's Religion section. I'm very familiar with each of the essays contained in this latest anthology. In fact, most of these columns I've clipped, saved, copied and shared with distant friends. They're that good.They're good because he asks the questions we ask of God in the middle of the night, when we can't sleep. They're good because Pluto realizes that faith and living are inseparable and that it's faith that oftentimes makes living more understandable. They're good because he seeks answers on how it all fits together as we tuck our kids in bed at night, are called on to discipline an employee, deal with a sibling, handle grief or the death of a dream, or when we don't feel like praying. In his writing, Pluto works out his faith with "fear and trembling," like the Good Book suggests, and we, who have the privilege to read him, are the beneficiaries.In one essay titled "Clergy: Your People Want To Know What Happens to Their Prayers," he challenges pastors, rabbis and imams to talk to their congregations about prayers that don't seem to get answered. Pluto writes: "Your people...want to know they are not alone, that others also have had a feeling of dropping off God's radar screen. They're not so much angry as they are seeking hope. They want to know they still matter to God, and the trials they are facing will end and there is a purpose behind it." Pluto also tackles --- no, wait, tackles isn't the right word; he doesn't "tackle" issues, he merely leads the discussion.Another essay is titled "Where Is God When People Die?" and brings out questions so many of us asked after 9/11: "Where is God among the rubble and bodies? Where is God in the tears, the blood, the agony? Where is God when innocent people die, when it seems the world no longer makes sense?" In less than 200 words, Pluto untangles evil and assures us that when we weep, so does God. He's not a preacher. He's a searcher, just like us.Pluto weaves universal truths from simple questions, using down-home stories about people like you and me, pulling in quotes from area clergy to round it out and make his point. Scripture is quoted liberally. The biggest criticism I hear of his work among some of my Christi
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