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A Curious Faith: The Questions God Asks, We Ask, and We Wish Someone Would Ask Us

di Lore Ferguson Wilbert

Altri autori: Seth Haines (Prefazione)

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God created us curious. We innately wonder about the world, one another, ourselves, and God. But technology, fear of the unknown, cultural taboos, or even church leaders can smother our curiosity. Popular writer Lore Ferguson Wilbert has belonged to Christian communities that discouraged curiosity. The point of the Christian life was to have the right answers, and asking questions reflected a wavering faith. But Wilbert came to discover that the Bible is a permission slip to anyone who wants to ask questions. Reflecting her own theological trajectory toward a more contemplative, expansive faith, Wilbert invites listeners to foster curiosity as a spiritual habit. This book explores questions God asks us, questions we ask God, and questions we ask each other. Christianity is not about knowing good answers, says Wilbert, but about asking good questions-ones that foster deeper intimacy with God and others. A Curious Faith invites listeners to go beyond pat answers and embrace curiosity, rather than certainty, as a hallmark of authentic faith. Foreword by Seth Haines.… (altro)
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Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
There are many books out there that could be considered apologetic. Those books will answer many questions, but this book will dive into those questions and bring out the deeply thought out answers

Whether you are searching for answers or seeking to deepen your understanding, this will be an informative read. ( )
  Capt.Geech | Dec 30, 2023 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Summary: A book about the questions God asks, we ask, and those we wish we were asked, all with the message of living the questions and not hastily grasping for answers.

There is a strong and deeply embedded streak within me to want to have the answer to any question. Perhaps it came from being the class nerd, somewhat overweight, who compensated for his lack of athleticism with being a good student. Later, as a young follower of Christ, it seemed to be important to answer the questions my friends who didn’t believe would ask. Yet I began to notice that my “answers” didn’t reach to the heart of my friends’ questions. Then midlife hit, and deeply painful life junctures and I became aware that the answers weren’t reaching to the heart of my questions. And because the questions were existential ones like, “does my life really matter?” and “does God really care?”, they mattered, and I began to learn that living the questions rather than hastening to answers that really didn’t work was vital. Those questions laid bare what was in me and awakened in me my longing for God, not as an answer, but One to be known.

That journey is one Lore Ferguson Wilbert traces in her own life. The book opens with epigraphs from Madeleine L’Engle and Rainer Maria Wilke about living the questions. Wilbert traces her own journey from certitudes to questions, finding a church that loved her despite all her questions, living them with her. What is most striking though is that in three parts she explores the questions we find in scripture: The questions God asks of people, the questions we ask of God, and the questions we wish someone would ask of us, the questions asked by Jesus during his ministry.

The chapters (32 in all) are short, allowing readers to pause and sit with the questions and reflections and consider where these might connect with the questions they are living in their own lives. One chapter I appreciated was God’s question to Moses: “What is in your hand?” Wilbert observes: “When God asks what is in Moses’s hand, the staff in his hand is there because so many things have just gone wrong in Moses life.” She sees in that staff all our failures in life and then moves to consider what that staff in his hand came to mean as Moses shepherded God’s people. She considers the question Jesus asks the woman caught in adultery, “Who condemns you?”, and reflects on how often we have a condemning voice in our head and think ourselves utter failures at being good Christians when Jesus’ first concern for the woman is that she be safe and know that no one condemns her–only then is she or any of us free to refrain from sinning.

The invitation throughout is to be curious. To sit with questions, to keep questioning, to bring our questions to God, opening ourselves to God. Her curiosity sometimes leads her to ask a raft of questions in some of the chapters and this perhaps can be overwhelming. Sometimes, a single good question is enough. She urges us to not be hasty to grasp at answers that are too small for our questions. In various ways she holds out the hope that there is really one Answer, and to wait for Him and to allow his questions and ours to take us on that journey to Him, however that comes to pass.

I thought her most profound chapter the one on “The Unasked Questions” where she describes the Tenebrae service that ends with the cry, “My God, my God! Why have you forsaken me?” followed by all lights extinguished. Sometimes we don’t even know the questions to ask, we live a kind of death, as we await the coming of light, and life. Only what has died may be raised.

This is an uncomfortable book. But there are many living with uncomfortable questions. To them, this book is a kind of balm, that encourages them to keep living them. They are questions that matter, questions that break us open to God, questions that lead us to far more than just “answers.” Often such people are thought to have lost their way. This book proposes that a curious faith that lives the questions is the only way to find one’s way.

____________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary review copy of this book from the publisher. ( )
  BobonBooks | Oct 6, 2022 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Frank and refreshing are two words that summarize my opinion of this book.
Persons who are assumed to already have knowledge of material being presented are generally reluctant to ask questions even when they have a need for clarification. It is probably due to a fear they will be exposed as having less knowledge than they are touted to possess. Over my non-technical career in a high-tech industry, I have seen the reluctance first hand. It is also common when the topic includes topics of faith and the bible. The author of this book refutes that fear by illustrating that there are multiple reasons to ask questions other than seeking knowledge. Rather than presenting technical data regarding the art of asking questions, Wilbert cites examples from the Bible where questions are asked for other purposes.
The most important reason for asking questions is to establish a relationship. That relationship enables the passage of information but, more important, it provides the conditions necessary to grow together. Wilbert first focuses on the questions God asks us and then the questions we ask God citing applicable Bible verses as examples. She then turns to questions we should ask of each other. The author approaches the issue of Christian relationships from an interesting perspective and, in the process, teaches us how to be better Christians. It is well worth the read. ( )
  WCHagen | Sep 12, 2022 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
A great book for anyone who has deep-seeded questions about faith and God. Questions do not imply a weakness of faith but the capability to deepen relationship and understanding. Good read! ( )
  Lindsayshodgson | Sep 2, 2022 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
This book poses some questions the typical person would not consider. The author does a good of using the Bible to determine what questions we should be asking ourselves and also showing that sometimes the right question is more important than knowing an answer ( )
  Crystal199 | Jul 18, 2022 |
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Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Wilbert, Lore Fergusonautore primariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Haines, SethPrefazioneautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
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God created us curious. We innately wonder about the world, one another, ourselves, and God. But technology, fear of the unknown, cultural taboos, or even church leaders can smother our curiosity. Popular writer Lore Ferguson Wilbert has belonged to Christian communities that discouraged curiosity. The point of the Christian life was to have the right answers, and asking questions reflected a wavering faith. But Wilbert came to discover that the Bible is a permission slip to anyone who wants to ask questions. Reflecting her own theological trajectory toward a more contemplative, expansive faith, Wilbert invites listeners to foster curiosity as a spiritual habit. This book explores questions God asks us, questions we ask God, and questions we ask each other. Christianity is not about knowing good answers, says Wilbert, but about asking good questions-ones that foster deeper intimacy with God and others. A Curious Faith invites listeners to go beyond pat answers and embrace curiosity, rather than certainty, as a hallmark of authentic faith. Foreword by Seth Haines.

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