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Everyone Belongs to God
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Badshah Khan
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Readers Respond: Issue 5
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Crossing a New Rubicon
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Family and Friends: Issue 5
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Featured Books Summer 2015
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Jesus Abbey
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Lessons from a Village Cow
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Waging Peace in the Culture Wars
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Insights on Peacemaking
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Forgiveness Is Not Fair
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The First Need of the Church
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Poem: Errand
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The Children of War
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Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis: The Hymn
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What Gandhi Taught Me about Jesus
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The Future of Christian Nonviolence
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Nonviolence: An Impossible Ideal?
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Is Pacifism Enough?
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Disruptive Peacemaking: Living Out God’s Impossible Standard
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Poems: Damascus Plumbed, Fiddlesticks
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The Blessings of Conflict
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From Small Seeds, Great Things Grow
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The Legend of Heliopher
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The Face of Nonviolence in a Violent Century: A Review Essay
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What do you have on your reading list for 2015? Consider adding these recently published books reviewed in Plough Quarterly.
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The Buried Giant: A Novel
Kazuo Ishiguro
(Knopf)
In the Britain of Ishiguro’s mythic tale, grass grows on Roman ruins, Britons and Saxons share an uneasy peace, and a wanderer might still cross paths with an ogre or dragon. A spell of forgetfulness seems to envelop the country like fog. An elderly couple, Axl and Beatrice, set out from their village to find their son and recover their lost memories. Will they break the spell, or are some things best left unremembered – especially in the wake of wholesale slaughter? Throughout the ensuing drama, the tender love Axl and Beatrice share shines like a jewel. Can it survive if the buried giant of their forgotten past reawakens?
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Ancient Christian Worship: Early Church Practices in Social, Historical, and Theological Perspective
Andrew B. McGowan
(Baker)
How did the first Christians worship? The New Testament tells us they gathered daily to pray, sing, and share meals. McGowan fleshes out this picture using other early sources to show how much of the rich diversity of Christian worship today – singing, dancing, praying, baptizing, anointing, teaching, preaching, prophesying, feasting, and fasting – has its roots in the first through fourth centuries. When did Sunday church services start? What about Christmas? Why did many early Christians pray five times a day? This thorough, authoritative work gives a challenging glimpse into the lives of our forerunners in the faith.
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Scavenger Loop: Poems
David Baker
(Norton)
The masterful thirty-page title poem has it all: a whirlwind of poetic forms, our tempestuous love affair with nature, lost innocence, a dying mother, materialism, GM corn, trash pickers, and our inevitable return to dust. Baker, poetry editor of the Kenyon Review, rarely fails to bring us back down to earth: “. . . I’ve read / the dust of long-blown stars seeds empty / space. / Go get your saw, he says. I’ll grab my gloves.” Though the shadow of loss, absence, and regret falls across many of these poems, it doesn’t dampen the poet’s obvious love for his language and his land. In “Heaven” all it takes is a cicada:
I don’t know what has shocked me more,
that you are gone, that I am still here,
that there is music after the end.
See the author’s poem “Errand”
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Where the Cross Meets the Street: What Happens to the Neighborhood When God Is at the Center
Noel Castellanos
(IVP Books)
In this spiritual memoir, Castellanos, who leads the Christian Community Development Association and has written on immigration for Plough, takes us back to his roots in a Mexican farmworker family in Texas. He honors those who helped form him– a fifth grade teacher who believed in him, a football coach who brought him to Jesus – and describes landing in the white, evangelical world of Christian college. Inspired by his mentor John Perkins and by Latin American liberation theologians, he moved to a Chicago barrio with his young family to found a church that confronts injustice and restores community. In his candid description of both the rewards and failures he’s experienced, Castellanos shows us why God’s love for those at the margins – a love demonstrated on the cross – should be the center of every Christian’s life.
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The Road to Character
David Brooks
(Random House)
A leading pundit, Brooks confesses that in his rise to fame he’s neglected certain fundamentals. Like many ambitious souls, he has focused on “resumé virtues” instead of “eulogy virtues”: courage, kindness, honesty, generosity, depth of character. These are traits shared by the “deeply good” people whom we all want to resemble. Though Brooks’s moral vision blurs at times (don’t “follow your heart” into adultery, for instance), we’re heartened that a bestseller is pointing so many people in the right direction.
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