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Pre-order It's a Dance: Moving with the Holy Spirit from Amazon |
Luke is a journalist at a local newspaper in Southern California doing a series of articles on churches in the area. As he interviews Nate, pastor of a nontraditional church that operates a pub, he learns more why than who, what, when, and where. Patrick Oden uses a fictitious church and fictitious people to write a nonfiction book about the Holy Spirit. Oden destroys the myth that solid Christian doctrine is only communicated in a didactic style. The personalities of the people and the conversational style turn theology into an enlightening, fascinating read. Published by Barclay Press On Sale November 1, 2007
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What people are saying |
A book written with the artful grace and subtle mystique the Spirit deserves... like a refreshing ballet amid the hustle and bustle of postmodern theologizing.
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There is music everywhere if you stop and listen. Oden has heard the beat and started into the dance. In this book, Oden has truth and fiction twirling together in a beautiful waltz. Once you hear the music, you can never go without it. Join the dance. |
What a great idea: theology through table talk! Patrick Oden invites the reader to listen in on a series of fictional conversations about the life of the Holy Spirit. The result is an invitation to focus on Jesus and to follow him by participating, and inviting others to participate, in the creative dance of the Holy Trinity. There is no dry or abstract theologizing here, only a highly-readable guide to the Holy Spirit that everyone will truly enjoy, from the seasoned pastor to the new Christian. |
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Among the myriad new books on the “emergent” church that have appeared lately, Patrick Oden’s book is different. It’s a compelling dialogue, solid theology, and insightful biblical studies all rolled into one. Oden’s book is an amazing combination of a Quaker understanding of the Holy Spirit with revolutionary insight for the renewal of the church in our time. This book is a great gift to the Friends Church and beyond. I plan to use this book as one of the required texts in my Theology and Culture class because it provides ready access to how critical thinking about the doctrine of the Holy Spirit interfaces with the role and function of the church in a missional context. |
The theoretical principles of the emerging church phenomena only reach a limited audience of pastors and students. Patrick Oden’s storytelling approach makes those insights far more attractive and accessible to a wider audience, which needs to be part of the conversation. He has done an excellent job not only of popularizing the key concepts but of adding insights of his own. |
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What an encouraging, inspiring and refreshing book to read! Often we forget the critical importance of acknowledging the role of the Holy Spirit in our lives that this book strongly reminds us of. |
While books on pneumatology, the doctrine and spirituality of the Holy Spirit, abound in these days, there is no work comparable to that of It’s a Dance: Moving with the Holy Spirit. This pneumatological narrative indeed is a dance with the Spirit, an invitation to the Divine Ball, a feast of pneumatology. It not only breaks new ground in combining creatively biblical, pastoral, theological, and literary elements. It also points to the future of doing theology in a postmodern world, consulting spiritual experiences in the community and everyday life along with best insights of theological tradition and contemporary constructive thinking. |
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An imaginative book for people who have been touched by the Spirit of God and want to know more. It introduces key biblical passages and doctrines on the Holy Spirit in a painless way, and gently widens perceptions of where and how the Spirit is at work. |
It's a Dance is a conversation more than a book. It's a lively discussion through which we develop a fluid, organic, shifting, growing awareness of the unmistakable and missional work of the Holy Spirit. It's a conversation that the emerging church definitely needs to have and we are indebted to Patrick Oden for starting it. |
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