About this item
Highlights
- Explore how Anglican traditions enrich Episcopal worship.
- Author(s): Julia Gatta
- 224 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Spirituality
Description
About the Book
- Background on spiritual practices for Episcopalians - Noted spiritual director shares wisdom from Anglican traditionBook Synopsis
Explore how Anglican traditions enrich Episcopal worship.
With its great heritage from English mystics, the Episcopal Church has been "spiritual" since before it was trendy, and modern Episcopalians have been in the forefront of exploring practices beyond Anglican boundaries. Yet, perhaps only rarely do they grasp the implications of the theology embedded in these practices or in the liturgies of the 1979 Book of Common Prayer, which has shaped Episcopalians in this country with its emphasis on baptismal spirituality and the centrality of the Eucharist. Julia Gatta wants to change that with her book, Life in Christ. Applying her years of experience as pastor and spiritual director combined with her study of the spiritual wisdom of the past, she explores common Christian practices and their underlying theology through an Episcopal lens. In the tradition of Esther de Waal, Martin Smith, and Martin Thornton, with particular reference to scripture, the Book of Common Prayer, and the wisdom of the Christian spiritual tradition, she illuminates methods readers may already be practicing and provides insight and guidance to ones that may be new to them.Review Quotes
"This beautiful book will draw you into the spiritual depths of the sacraments. It will reveal Christ in the midst of your community. It will transform your experience of Sunday morning. A must-read."
-Margaret Benefiel, author, Soul at Work and The Soul of a Leader
-The Rev. Martin L. Smith, retreat leader and author
"Life in Christ is a wonderful and wise introduction to the spirituality of worship, centered on the Paschal Mystery, our immersion in it in Baptism, and our week-by-week celebration of it at Eucharist throughout the liturgical year. Throughout, it examines the connection between the dominical sacraments and our spiritual lives as Christians."
-Juan M.C. Oliver, Custodian of the Book of Common Prayer