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Broken Body, Healing Spirit
Lectio Divina and Living with Illness
List Price: $13.00
PAPERBACK , 128 , 5 1/2 x 8 1/2
- Morehouse Publishing
- Jul/2003
- ISBN-13: 978-0-8192-1928-2
- BRBO
In the summer of 1995 Mary Earle returned from a vacation feeling refreshed and restored from her time away. A few days later, all that changed, when she was rushed to the emergency room with a case of acute and life-threatening pancreatitis. Being ill, she discovered, forces you to learn to live in whole new ways, ones often marked by limitation and fragility.
As a priest and spiritual director, Earle began to explore ways in which her own prayer life might help her build a different relationship with her illness. Using the Benedictine practice of lectio divina, or sacred reading, she began to "read" her own illness, and discovered a way of befriending and helping to heal--if not cure--her body and her life.
In Broken Body, Healing Spirit, Earle introduces this strategy to others who are hungry to find ways of living more fully despite chronic or serious illness or pain. Her practical, step-by-step approach to "reading the text of our illnesses," and learning to listen to what our bodies are trying to tell us will be of help to those who are currently suffering with disease or limitations, as well as to those who are caregivers and counselors.
Visit the author at her website www.marycearle.org
Mary Earle is a spiritual director, retreat leader, writer, and Episcopal priest. She is the author of Broken Body, Healing Spirit: Lectio Divina and Living with Illness, and the co-author of Holy Companions: Spiritual Practices from the Celtic Saints. She lives in San Antonio, Texas.
"Writing with the authenticity of one who has 'been there,' Mary Earle offers compassionate and practical guidance to those suffering from serious, chronic, and terminal illness. Her adaptation of the ancient Benedictine practice of lectio divina is creative and inviting: through carefully structured exercises the sufferer is led to 'read' not only Scripture but her body and her illness prayerfully. The tone of the book is warm and supportive, always aware of the physical and emotional limitations of the reader. Although it is intended primarily for the person living with illness, Broken Body, Healing Spirit is also a valuable resource for anyone ministering pastorally to the sick."--Margaret Guenther
"Mary Earle's creative use of the spiritual practice of lectio divina invites readers to seek God in times of illness through a careful process of listening that resists easy answers and yet offers life-giving hope. Wise and gentle, this book offers practical guidance to a generation of Christians who live at some distance from both their bodies and their souls."--Frederick W. Schmidt, author of When Suffering Persists
"Mary Earle brings her fine qualities to this book - clarity of mind, depth of spirit and an integrated experience of brokenness. She does all of this with passion, imagination and rare sensitivity.--Philip Newell, author of Echo of the Soul: The Sacredness of the Human Body
"The anecdotes relating to the personal experience of people with debilitating conditions, and the practical exercises, illustrate in a tangible way how to read the text of one's body with scripture, imagery and art and how to build hope when faced with life's challenges...Mary Earle offers hope and healing to sick people, even in the absence of a cure. The application of this non-conventional process might best serve the sick person if practiced as a way of life for Christians whose bodies and souls are fragmented. A valuable resource for counselors and those ministering to the sick."--Bev Harvey, for Anglican Journal, November 2003.
...Providing practical tips for implementing the discipline's practices of silencio, lectio, meditatio, and oratio, she describes a process by which the afflicted person may move beyond explanation for illness to divine encounter, an opportunity to know Christ and the power of his ressurrection in the bodily suffering an illness. Earle effectively provides an antidote to the modern tendency to think that being spiritual requires experiences of happiness, peace, prosperity, and good health.--The Rev. John G. Lewis
With passion Earle reflects on the damage caused by we friends who view illness from the perspective that Joan Borynsenko has called "Fundamentalism" - equation each malady or each organ with a particular affliction. The book is directed to persons living with illness, and to their family and friends. Staff in hospitals and other medical settings will also find this approach inspiring and reassuring.
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