God in All Things: Earthing Our Spirituality

by Gerard W. Hughes

Paperback, 2003

Status

Available

Description

Gerard Hughes's popularity lies in the fact that he always writes directly for the individual struggling with issues of faith and life and gets right to the heart of spiritual needs and concerns. His best-seller GOD OF SURPRISES published nearly 20 years ago has sold nearly a quarter of a million copies. GOD IN ALL THINGS is a follow up to that book written for a different world and a different spiritual climate. This is a guidebook for the inner journey. It is about recognising God in the ordinary, in the joy and sadness of things, about knowing that God cannot be separated from whatever we experience. It is written for people on the fringes of Christianity, or those who are disillusioned with church structures and dogmatic theology. Hughes has written this book because he is concerned at the split between religion and life, as if religion was something apart and detached from the rest of God's creation. Apart from being a brilliant spiritual guide this book is a call to a faith in terminal decline to enlarge its concept of God and break out of the straitjacket of pious religion.… (more)

Publication

Hodder & Stoughton Religious (2003), 256 pages

Rating

½ (5 ratings; 3.9)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Priory
Gerard Hughes is the author of "God of Surprises" and his books aim to speak directly to the individual stuggling with issues of faith and life and get right to the heart of spiritual needs and concerns. This book is the follow up to "God of Surprises" and is written for a different world and a
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different spiritual climate. This is a guidebook for the inner journey. It is about recognizing God in the ordinary, in the joy and sadness of things, about knowing that God cannot be separated from whatever we experience. It is written for people on the fringes of Christianity, or those who are disillusioned with church structures and dogmatic theology. Hughes has written this book because he is concerned at the split between religion and life, as if religion was something apart and detached from the rest of God's creation. It is a call to a faith in terminal decline to enlarge its concept of God and break out of the straitjacket of pious religion.
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