It’s always nice to get an inspiring email. This email is from a Friend at Quaker Books that I have not met yet but the sentiment in the text rings true to me. I also want to put in a plug for my friend Steve’s book (bottom,left, “Letters to a Fellow Seeker”) that will be coming out shortly. I had a small part in helping Steve’s project come to life and I can recommend it highly!
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In This Issue
Book Musings from QuakerBooks is an occasional email that highlights interesting books and provides limited-time-only discounts. Interviews with authors and book guides are also featured in these emails. If you would like to receive additional eNewsletters from FGC, sign up here. |
from Chel Avery Dear Roger,
On the last day, as we closed with an hour of worship, someone offered a bit of ministry that has been working on me. I can’t reproduce that message here, but I can describe the thoughts it has inspired since. Quakers have sometimes called ourselves “Publishers of Truth.” But how can truth be published? On those rare, precious occasions when we apprehend Perfect Truth, it is gone again in a flash. Undiluted truth has a life span in our awareness like one of those subatomic particles that vanishes in the same second that it is created—too immediate, too here-and-now to last longer than an instant. But we hold fast to whatever reminds us of those encounters with pure truth. We hold on to the imperfect words, the thoughts we had after the recognition, the splinters that point back to what we knew was there, or what we may encounter again if we try hard enough. We mark passages in our books, we publish quotations in our books of Faith and Practice, we talk to each other about what we’ve heard and seen and dreamed about. “Here,” we say to one another (but in other words than these). “Look! Truth passed this way and left a mark. Watch with me—it may return!” Occasionally, I will be reading a book and I will come upon a passage that lights a fire inside me, a passage that points so powerfully to something thrilling that I can’t keep it to myself. And if I happen to be alone when this happens, I have been known to jump to my feet and read the passage to the wall, then turn and read it to all the other walls in succession. (Let’s face it, the walls are more attentive than the cats.) I may sound crazy, but I tell you this on the assumption that you would have similar stories to tell. I have been thinking of those moments, and I realize that as well expressed as those passages may be, it is not just their own power that ignites the fire—it is the hint of what lies beyond. The universe out of which these words came must contain wonders! The remainder of this letter is focused on a few favorite short passages. Out of context, they are just good quotations, but even in that diminished form, they are can still be keys. They remind me that there is Something to be understood, just beyond my grasp. May one of them open a door for you. ***
Oxford Study Bible (1 Cor. 13:1) I have two degrees in communications and have studied three languages, but this verse is the most important thing I know about communication. When I read it, I sometimes wonder why I went to graduate school, where it was definitely not part of the curriculum. ***
The Barn at the End of the World: The Apprenticeship of a Quaker Buddhist Shepherd (p. 95), by Mary Rose O’Reilley O’Reilley is both a poet and a philosopher. She writes the most amazing things! ***
A Testament of Devotion (p. 123) by Thomas R. Kelly Has any Quaker ever written a more underlinable book than this one? ***
From Parsonage to Prison: Collected Poems (p. 14) by Janeal Turnbull Ravndal Such human, compassionate, sometimes gritty, sometimes hilarious poems! ***
The Promise of Paradox: A Celebration of Contradiction in the Christian Life (p. xxxiii) by Parker J. Palmer So many of us have benefited richly from Parker Palmer’s perplexity! ***
I admit to having seen little of this world. Yet the sights and smells of each place I visit show me dimensions of God that I could not have apprehended anywhere else. “All the way to heaven is heaven,” said Catherine Sienna. My travels show me that Catherine was right. Awaken Your Senses: Exercises for Exploring the Wonder of God (p. 172) by J. Brent Bill and Beth A. Booram This passage was suggested to me by Joe Paluck, our intern from Drexel University. Read Joe’s interview with J. Brent Bill, co-author of the book. QuakerBooks of FGC will offer a 15% discount on each of these books until June 10. If you attend the FGC Gathering in Kingston Rhode Island during the first week of July, please come see us at the Gathering Store, or drop into various author and book club events we will be hosting throughout the week. Peace to you, |
Preorder now at a discount! We will ship by mid-July, or save postage and pick up your copy at the FGC Gathering. |
“A carefully researched and quietly brilliant work that provides a genuinely new perspective on a familiar figure in the history of antislavery.” – Christopher Brown, Columbia University |
Steve’s book looks interesting. Love some of the thought-provoking quotes in your posting..
BTW, Roger and the rest of my Ministery Oversight Committee had an enormous impact from the early draft to the final text of the book. Roger, thanks too for now promoting the book too. I so appreciate your support and contribution.
—it is the hint of what lies beyond.
Enjoyed all the quotes provided but the above from the letter to you really stuck with me.
Thank you