Alive in God: A Christian Imagination
By (Author) Cardinal Timothy Radcliffe
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Continuum
3rd December 2019
3rd October 2019
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Christianity
Christian life and practice
Roman Catholicism, Roman Catholic Church
231
Paperback
432
Width 135mm, Height 216mm
459g
How can we touch the imagination of our contemporaries with our faith The disciples returning from Emmaus (Luke 24) said that when they met the stranger on the road, their hearts burnt within them as he expounded the Scriptures. What blocks the reception of Christianity today is not so much secularism or atheism but the banality of contemporary culture what could be called `the globalisation of superficiality'. We need the help of creative people to open up our minds to the transcendent. We will only excite people about our faith if we show that it is the response to an invitation to live fully. 'The glory of God is a human being fully alive' (St Irenaeus) Christianity is an adventure which takes the puzzled disciples to Jerusalem. Radcliffe describes aspects of being alive that the disciples encounter along the way: healing, struggling with negativity, growing up and forgiveness. These all relate to our coming alive in Christ. Radcliffe shows how thinking and study relate to our human and more than human flourishing. Doctrine is not indoctrination but the liberation of the heart and mind. A chapter called 'Affliction' explores the utter negation of life on Good Friday, embraced and overcome. The last section of the book called 'The Risen Life' explores what it means to be alive spiritually, physically, justly through liturgy and prayer.
This is a book that contains all the wonder, beauty, mess and agony of being alive today. * SLG Press *
Timothy Radcliffe is a former Master of the Dominican Order in Rome. Educated at Downside and St John's College, Oxford, he then joined the Dominican Order in 1968. He has written a string of bestselling books for Bloomsbury Continuum over the past 15 years most notably What's The Point of Being a Christian; Why Go to Church and I Call You Friends. He was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Oxford, a city in which he now lives with his Community.