Seeking God in all things : theology and spiritual direction

by William E. Reiser

Paper Book, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

253.53

Collections

Publication

Collegeville, Minn. : Liturgical Press, c2004.

Description

The practice of spiritual direction assumes a theology of the Holy Spirit, a theology of revelation and of the Church, and a theology of prayer. Seeking God in All Thingsexplores each of these themes as the underpinnings of spiritual direction and examines what makes the Christian religious experience distinctive. Since not every experience of God bears a Christian imprint, William Reiser, SJ, asks whether and in what way a Christian might be ale to assist someone who is not Christian in developing his or her interior life. This question looks beyond suggesting the concrete steps a person might take in initiating, nurturing, and solidifying a way of praying. It looks, rather, toward the fundamental issue of helping others as they discover and deepen their relationship to the mystery of God. Chapters are It Is God Who Directs," *Imagining Divine Action in Human Lives, - *Where Do Holy Desires Come From? - *What's Distinctive About the Christian Religious Experience? - *Further Elements of Christian Distinctiveness, - *The Incarnation as a Starting Point for Spiritual Direction, - and *Should Christian Spirituality Move Beyond Jesus? - William Reiser, SJ, PhD, is a professor of theology in the religious studies department at Holy Cross College, Worcester, Massachusetts. Over the past twelve years, he has also served as an associate staff member at the Center for Religious Development in Cambridge. He is the author of Jesus in Solidarity with His People, published by Liturgical Press. "… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member kaulsu
I am beginning my review with a question, which is probably not proper, but I am sincerely befuddled by the following on page 122:

"[There have been any number of efforts to discover a trinitarian resonance within the spiritual experience of non-Crhistian religions and even to locate in them
Show More
incarnationsensitivites.] I think that the theory behind such efforts is that if God is indeed triune, then any revelatory experience should bear a trinitarian imprint, no matter how faint. But the only way such theorizing could proceed would be by sacrificing the Spirit: the Spirit would have to cease being the Spirit [italicized] _of Jesus_ and become the trans-cultural, trans-historical, and trans-religious breath or power of God. The Trinity, in other words, would become the great universal idea that potentially culd draw the religions of the world together."

My understanding of the Trinity is weak (I am not a Trinitarian Christian), I know, but I
Show Less

Language

Physical description

xii, 172 p.; 23 cm

ISBN

0814651666 / 9780814651667

Barcode

PI003489
Page: 0.2987 seconds