Plain and Ordinary
Tuesday, March 28th, 2006I’m always startled by how ordinary true spirituality is.
|
|||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||
|
Tips for
Small Group Study 1. Use Death by Suburb as an 8-week study on the spiritual disciplines. 2. Each week study one of the 8 chapters that explain the suburban toxins and the spiritual practices that counter them. 3. Download the free discussion guide for a list of questions to guide the discussion for each chapter. 4. Download Dave's Favorite Writers for additional resources on Christian spirituality. 5. Sign up with your email address to receive regular blog updates by the author. 6. Add your suburban story of The Thicker Life to the blog. |
Archive for March, 2006Plain and OrdinaryTuesday, March 28th, 2006I’m always startled by how ordinary true spirituality is. Good and NumbWednesday, March 8th, 2006One of the greatest dangers of the good life is becoming numb to the suffering around us |
Advance Praise for
Death by Suburb "Death by Suburb ... addresses and overcomes the split in our religion, our lifestyles, and even our consciousness." —Fr. Richard Rohr, O.F.M., author of Everything Belongs: The Gift of Contemplative Prayer "With a compassion born of his own experiences of suburban unreality and dysfunction, Goetz effectively evokes a thicker sense of our social and religious worlds." —Leigh Schmidt, Princeton University, author of Restless Souls: The Making of American Spirituality "Goetz sees the parched lives, the truncated spirits beneath the suburban bliss, and the grace too. In his gracious eyes suburbia begins to look like an outbreak of the Kingdom of God." —William H. Willimon, author of Sinning Like a Christian
|
|||
![]() |
|||||