Foreword; explorefaith.org books: An Introduction; Chapter One: Doing Prayer; Chapter Two: Walking into the Fire of Prayer; Chapter Three: Walking the Sacred Circle; Chapter Four: A Prayer the Dancer Does; Chapter Five: Sacred Hearing; Chapter Six: Making Music, Making Prayer; Chapter Seven: The Prayer of the Eye; Chapter Eight: Gazing into Mystery; Chapter Nine: Making Art, Doing Prayer; Chapter Ten: Hands in the Earth: The Prayer of Planting; Chapter Eleven: Hearth Prayers; Chapter Twelve: Holy Food; Chapter Thirteen: The Wedding Banquet; Chapter Fourteen: Sacred and Secret; Chapter Fifteen: Beyond Doing
Kristen Johnson Ingram is the author of more than twenty books, including Wine at the End of the Feast: Embracing Spiritual Change as We Age. She is also a writing instructor and a licensed preacher in the Episcopal Church.
"This gem of a book invites the reader to pray in ways old and new,
including everything from music and gardening to television shows.
The foundational unity of Kristen Johnson Ingram's vision expresses
itself in a wondrous diversity of practice that invites us to savor
prayer, and life, in all its variety."
--Mary Earle, author of Beginning Again
"For years, Kristen Ingram has been a thoughtful, imaginative, and
faithful guide to the life of the Spirit. Here once again she
invites us into the adventure of prayer with the wisdom of a true
elder. She is the best spiritual director, for she knows that it is
in the dirt of our daily life that we discover the dust of God's
glory."
--The Very Rev. Peter Eaton, dean, St. John's Cathedral, Denver,
Colorado
"Such fun! Such wisdom! Such holiness! This book is a prayer. Read
it, pray it, live it. Your life can become a prayer."
–Donna Fletcher Crow, author Seasons of Prayer: Rediscovering
Classic Prayers Through the Christian Calendar
"Making contact with the Creator of the universe is no small thing.
But for Kristen Ingram, who has the audacity to believe,
experiencing God through prayer is as natural as breathing. And in
this book, she's shown the rest of us how it's done."
--Kathleen Stephens editor, Upper Room Resource Development
"Kristen Ingram is an incarnational contemplative after my own
heart. She expands our understanding of prayer and grounds it in
the human body and the body of the earth where the Word Made Flesh
mercifully chose to dwell among us."
-- Mother Tessa Bielecki, director of the Spiritual Life Institute,
Crestone, Colorado, and author of Teresa of Avila: Ecstasy and
Common Sense
"Ingram's book is one of the best books on prayer that I have ever
read . . . [It] is not so much about choice as it is about
abandonment-abandoning oneself to God through prayer, not by
speaking, but by walking (with suggestions for those who cannot
walk), dancing, listening to music and nature, gardening, eating,
even watching television. If you want something richer than words
in your prayer life, this is a wonderful place to start. Ingram
made me want to try things I have tried before in the expectation
that this time I would figure out how to make them prayer. I love
Henri Nouwen's and Jane Vennard's books on prayer, but if you are
going to buy just one, buy Ingram's."
--Lutheran Woman Today
"Ingram writes about ways to transform aspects of daily life into
acts of prayer . . . Those open to the possibilities of ‘doing
prayer' will find their lives enriched."
--Good News, Diocese of Connecticut
Ask a Question About this Product More... |