264 SMI.I /1//1
Smith J. K. A., ;
Imagining the Kingdom : How worship works / Smith, James K.A.. Volume 2. — Grand Rapids : Baker Academic, 2013. — (Cultural Liturgies). — ISBN 978-0-8010-3578-4
ДКД 264
ДКД 264
Зміст:
Contents:

How to Read This Book;
Introduction: A Sentimental Education: On Christian Action;
Part 1: Incarnate Significance: The Body as Background;
1. Erotic Comprehension;
2. The Social Body;
Part 2: Sanctified Perception;
3. "We Tell Ourselves Stories in Order to Live": How Worship Works;
4. Restor(y)ing the World: Christian Formation for Mission;
Index.
Анотація:
"Imagining the Kingdom is a fit successor to Jamie Smith's remarkable Desiring the Kingdom. The new book is, like its predecessor, learned but lively, provocative but warmhearted, a manifesto and a guide. Smith takes Christians deeper into the artistic, imaginative, and practical resources on which we must draw if we wish to renew not only our minds but also our whole beings in Christ."

Alan Jacobs, Honors College of Baylor University

"In this wonderfully rich and engagingly readable book of 'liturgical anthropology,' Smith makes a persuasive case for the thesis that human beings are best understood as worshiping animals. It has important implications at once for practical theology's reflection on religious formation, liturgy, and pedagogy and for philosophical theorizing about just what religion is. And it develops as an engaging and lively conversation among an astonishing mix of people: imagine Calvin, Proust, Merleau-Ponty, Augustine, Wendell Berry, Bourdieu, and David Foster Wallace all in the same room really talking to each other about being human and how to think about it!"

David Kelsey, Luther A. Weigle Professor of Theology Emeritus, Yale Divinity School

"Jamie Smith shows us that the gospel does not primarily happen between our ears but in all the movements of the body by which we are formed and in turn form the world. I know of no more thorough and sophisticated account of how secular liturgies form and deform us and how Christian liturgies can help. Though sophisticated, Smith's book is also a delight. Its pages are filled with great poetry and insights from films, novels, and everyday life. Smith shows how we encounter God with our whole selves and how God carries us even when we don't know what is going on."

William T. Cavanaugh, senior research professor, DePaul University