Friday, October 7, 2011

A Believer in Waiting's First Encounters with God

Finally, A Believer in Waiting's First Encounters with God (available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other online bookstores) is out. I held the first copy in my hand on September 30. Like Blest Atheist, it seemed to take twice as long to write as I thought it would, but it has been seriously redacted from manuscript days, and so I think the extra time was worthwhile.

Here is the publisher's description: A Believer in Waiting's First Encounters with God allows readers an entree into the world of what might be called a modern-day mystic, a world where spirituality, contemplation, hierophany, and miracles unite. Good, evil, suffering, darkness, unknowing, and the unconditional love of God are the leitmotifs that bind the author's experiences from the physical world to the spiritual realm.

Here is a part of the introduction that perhaps adds a little more information to the publisher's description: It is with some reluctance that I pen this book for I am certain there are readers who will consider my tales tall and my experiences outlandish. They sometimes seem that way to me, too. Yet, I must assume that if these kinds of things happen to me, then they probably also happen to other people, who may be even more reluctant than I to share them. I understand their reluctance. After all, William James called the great Catholic mystics psychopaths. What equally unpleasant labels might be applied to us lesser souls who today experience supernatural phenomena? Equally disturbing is the tendency of some fundamentalists to attribute all mysticism to evil spirits, which baffles me: if they consider demons capable of communicating with us directly, why would God not be able to do the same? Do they really consider God less powerful than Satan? "It is a terrible evil," says St. Teresa of Avila, "to doubt that God has the power to work in a way far beyond our understanding." Although often unbelievable to those who yearn for something that fits human reasoning, our relationship with God is a simple matter if we let God direct it.

As I did with Blest Atheist, I will post a few pertinent passages on my blogs from time to time. (A few, in draft form, have already appeared: see these posts.) I hope that you will enjoy them.

5 comments:

  1. I've never quite understood why people have trouble believing in miracles or mystical phenomena...if God is God, what difficulty is there? It seems to me that it stems from a lack of faith and trust in God's omnipotence. Congratulations on your new book, Elizabeth! I loved Blest Atheist and I'm sure that I will love this one too.

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  2. Me, neither, Mary. Thanks for your kind words.

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  3. Ahhhh... at last! My appetite is whetted and I look forward to receiving my review copy from LibraryThing. Congrats on finishing and now the publication. I look forward to the "tall tales" and "outlandish experiences".
    The demeaning of God by our modern world is very sad. What hope do we have if the only "power" is in the hands of the evil one? I'm always reminded of Psalm 2... "Why do the heathen rage? Why do the people waste their time with futile plans?" The kings of the earth prepare for battle; the rules plot together against the LORD and against his anointed one. 'Let us break their chains,' they cry, 'and free ourselves from this slavery.' But the one who rules in heaven laughs. The Lord scoffs at them." He's God and all our flag waving does not diminish Him!
    Blessings!

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  5. Thanks, Fran. I found a lot of heathens railing at Blest Atheist. (The book has found its way onto bookstore shelves for atheists -- and they react in strong ways sometimes!)

    I look forward to your comments and opinion of the book. It was a difficult one to write in that some of the topics just aren't popular today. We like to think everything is good, and that is just not the case.

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