Bill Briggs
Autor von The Third Miracle: An Ordinary Man, a Medical Mystery, and a Trial of Faith
Über den Autor
Bill Briggs writes for MSNBC.com, covering business, travel, and health. He is the coauthor or Amped: A Soldier's Race for Gold in the Shadow of War. He earned seven national writing awards for the Denver Post, from investigative journalism to humor pieces. He lives in Denver, Colorado.
Werke von Bill Briggs
Student Solutions Manual, Multivariable for Calculus and Calculus: Early Transcendentals (2010) 3 Exemplare
New winds of the spirit 1 Exemplar
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As an attorney, I found it really fascinating that one of the key players in assisting the Indiana order of nuns get their founding member through the steps of canonization was an Italian attorney who devoted his entire practice to assisting congregations in this way. I always thought of the process of being canonized as being very mysterious and other-worldly and the idea that there is a lawyer you go to to help you with it, just like you would if you were having a will made or getting a divorce, was really interesting.
I also really appreciated the author's subtle critique of the subservient position in which the Catholic church has insisted on keeping women. The author does not present a feminist diatribe, but he definitely raises questions by pointing out that female nuns are the ones who are doing much of the actual in the trenches work of spreading the faith and are not being properly respected. In addition, the subject of canonization, Mother Theodore, is in herself something of a feminist icon because she was dispatched from her home in France in the middle of the nineteenth century to start a new Catholic order in what was then the wilderness of Indiana.
My only negative comments about this book are the lengthy and overly dry descriptions of the biology of the eye. Some of this is necessary because the miracle which ultimately leads to Mother Theodore's canonization is a healing of a diseased eye and there is a great deal of medical scrutiny that is required before it can be declared a miracle. However, because the descriptions were often repetitive and sometimes unnecessarily long I could have done without a lot of them.… (mehr)