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Kenneth Leech (1939–2015)

Autor von Soul friend: The practice of Christian spirituality

43 Werke 1,272 Mitglieder 9 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Kenneth Leech is M. B. Reckitt Urban Fellow at Saint Botolph's Church, Aldgate, London. He is an Anglican priest, community theologian, and author

Beinhaltet die Namen: Leech Kenneth, ed. Kenneth Leech

Werke von Kenneth Leech

We Preach Christ Crucified (1994) 104 Exemplare
Spirituality and Pastoral Care (1986) 99 Exemplare
Social God (1981) 35 Exemplare
Prayer and Prophecy: The Essential Kenneth Leech (1707) — Autor — 18 Exemplare
Subversive Orthodoxy (1992) 16 Exemplare
Through Our Long Exile (2001) 14 Exemplare
Race (2005) 10 Exemplare
Drugs and Pastoral Care (1998) 7 Exemplare
Beyond Gin and Lace 2 Exemplare
Action for revival (2002) 2 Exemplare
Guidance in prayer 1 Exemplar

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Exhibition catalogue for a show at the Guggenheim Museum that ran March 25 through June 8, 2005. A highly inventive catalog that resembles the New York Times and features 8 folded sections with text and numerous illustrations and with the final section featuring an extensive artist chronology. Text by Lisa Dennison, Susan Cross, and Alison M Gingeras. Copy in wrappers in a plastic slipcase with printed green label.
 
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petervanbeveren | Jan 14, 2024 |
Sol Friend examines the concept of spiritual guidance in the Christian tradition from the Desert Fathers to the more recent thinking of the Roman Catholic Church, and relates it to the contemporary quest for spirituality. This superbly unitive study, which is sympathetic to all traditions, aware of psychology without making theology a slave, strikes a proper balance between the mystical and the prophetic, and above all, his radiant with the gentleness of Christ.
 
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PendleHillLibrary | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 2, 2023 |
This book is a true treasure. In a clear and well-documented way, the author presents the rich tradition of Christian prayer. Solidly based on Scripture and richly illustrated with the best scriptural writings through the centuries, the book convincingly shows the central place of prayer in the life of the contemporary Christian. It is an ideal introduction to the spiritual life. It not only speaks about prayer, but it creates the space in the reader where prayer can grow and mature. In this sense, it really introduces us into the realities about which it speaks. It creates a desire to live a life of true prayer. It is a book that truly forms heart and mind - Henri J. M. Nouwen (slightly paraphrased).… (mehr)
 
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PendleHillLibrary | 1 weitere Rezension | Sep 28, 2022 |
I retrieved from an inconspicuous corner of my library Kenneth Leech’s “Soul Friend”, a book purchased some 30 years ago. Its title suddenly became captivating, although it might well be the same captivation that prompted my initial acquisition. I mean, who doesn’t yearn for a friend that touches the soul, or belongs to that intimate part of oneself?

The subtitle of Leech book says “The Practice of Christian Spirituality”, a subject so vast and the practice so diverse that one wonders how the author can give them justice in barely over 200 pages. It turns out Leech focuses only on some specific areas of Christian spirituality, namely, spiritual direction, prayer, and an interesting appendix on the sacrament of reconciliation or confession.

Given my background as an evangelical Protestant living in 21st century North America, these topics sound immediately as rarity in our vernacular. Of course, one hears of the admonition to pray every now and then in our Christian circles, maybe even some quasi-theologies on reconciliation are propounded from time to time. But the deep spiritual disciplines Leech refers to in this book has long been abandoned practically by our “hot-tub” religion, to use J.I. Packer’s term. In our eagerness to maintain a “theological purity”, many evangelical Christians have repudiated the richness and learning of 20 centuries’ Church history and traditions. Such shallowness pervades in our worship (few refers to liturgy anymore), arts, conversations, and, yes, spirituality.

Leech covers in the initial chapters the practices of spiritual direction in various traditions; from the Desert fathers, monastics, to some modern practitioners. The vastness of the topic has probably prevented Leech from going into details of each tradition; the mere telling of the history seems monotonous at times to this reader. The contents get distinctly livelier in Chapter 5 when Leech embarks on the practice of the life of prayer. Here the readers may get practical advices on overcoming some barriers in prayer.

It is the appendix on the sacrament of reconciliation that left me an indelible notion with the book. Although theologically the confessional as a sacrament to me remains disagreeable, the social dimension and psychological impact of Christians confessing in private and in the congregation cannot be gainsaid. One could only bemoan with those Christians who in their gatherings have lost the authenticity and healing that can only be obtained in publicly confessing to each other and by receiving the absolution from Christ whose propitiatory death grants us peace.
… (mehr)
 
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Laurence.Lai | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 9, 2020 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
43
Mitglieder
1,272
Beliebtheit
#20,158
Bewertung
½ 3.6
Rezensionen
9
ISBNs
69
Sprachen
2

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