Secular Saints

Secular Saints
Author :
Publisher : Tan Books
Total Pages : 0
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0895556588
ISBN-13 : 9780895556585
Rating : 4/5 (88 Downloads)

Synopsis Secular Saints by : Joan Carroll Cruz

A monumental Lives of the Saints: people who lived and died as laymen and laywomen. No priests, nuns or monks here--people who often had to overcome incredible difficulties to achieve holiness or who had committed outrageous sins prior to their conversions. Fully indexed by topic. Purposely written to inspire and encourage lay people today. Unique in Catholic literature! 800 pgs 192 Illus, PB

The Secular Saints

The Secular Saints
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 435
Release :
ISBN-10 : 160419118X
ISBN-13 : 9781604191189
Rating : 4/5 (8X Downloads)

Synopsis The Secular Saints by : Hunter Lewis

This book provides "brief lives" and thoughts of some leading candidates for the term secular saint. All of them have much to teach us about how we lead our lives and think about the fundamental questions we all face. This book also offers a conclusion: that morals and ethics are not just subjective, that they are grounded in very objective realities.

Stoics and Saints

Stoics and Saints
Author :
Publisher : New York : Macmillan
Total Pages : 312
Release :
ISBN-10 : UCAL:B3928193
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (93 Downloads)

Synopsis Stoics and Saints by : James Baldwin Brown

Borderlands Saints

Borderlands Saints
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 268
Release :
ISBN-10 : OCLC:1300636568
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (68 Downloads)

Synopsis Borderlands Saints by : Desirée A. Martín

In Borderlands Saints, Desirée A. Martín examines the rise and fall of popular saints and saint-like figures in the borderlands of the United States and Mexico. Focusing specifically on Teresa Urrea (La Santa de Cabora), Pancho Villa, César Chávez, Subcomandante Marcos, and Santa Muerte, she traces the intersections of these figures, their devotees, artistic representations, and dominant institutions with an eye for the ways in which such unofficial saints mirror traditional spiritual practices and serve specific cultural needs. Popular spirituality of this kind engages the use and exchange of relics, faith healing, pilgrimages, and spirit possession, exemplifying the contradictions between high and popular culture, human and divine, and secular and sacred. Martín focuses upon a wide range of Mexican and Chicano/a cultural works drawn from the nineteenth century to the present, covering such diverse genres as the novel, the communiqué, drama, the essay or crónica, film, and contemporary digital media. She argues that spiritual practice is often represented as narrative, while narrative-whether literary, historical, visual, or oral-may modify or even function as devotional practice.

Saints

Saints
Author :
Publisher : University of Chicago Press
Total Pages : 423
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780226519937
ISBN-13 : 0226519937
Rating : 4/5 (37 Downloads)

Synopsis Saints by : Françoise Meltzer

While the modern world has largely dismissed the figure of the saint as a throwback, we remain fascinated by excess, marginality, transgression, and porous subjectivity—categories that define the saint. In this collection, Françoise Meltzer and Jas Elsner bring together top scholars from across the humanities to reconsider our denial of saintliness and examine how modernity returns to the lure of saintly grace, energy, and charisma. Addressing such problems as how saints are made, the use of saints by political and secular orders, and how holiness is personified, Saints takes us on a photo tour of Graceland and the cult of Elvis and explores the changing political takes on Joan of Arc in France. It shows us the self-fashioning of culture through the reevaluation of saints in late-antique Judaism and Counter-Reformation Rome, and it questions the political intent of underlying claims to spiritual attainment of a Muslim sheikh in Morocco and of Sephardism in Israel. Populated with the likes of Francis of Assisi, Teresa of Avila, and Padre Pio, this book is a fascinating inquiry into the status of saints in the modern world.

The Political Lives of Saints

The Political Lives of Saints
Author :
Publisher : University of California Press
Total Pages : 314
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780520297982
ISBN-13 : 0520297989
Rating : 4/5 (82 Downloads)

Synopsis The Political Lives of Saints by : Angie Heo

Since the Arab Spring in 2011 and ISIS’s rise in 2014, Egypt’s Copts have attracted attention worldwide as the collateral damage of revolution and as victims of sectarian strife. Countering the din of persecution rhetoric and Islamophobia, The Political Lives of Saints journeys into the quieter corners of divine intercession to consider what martyrs, miracles, and mysteries have to do with the routine challenges faced by Christians and Muslims living together under the modern nation-state. Drawing on years of extensive fieldwork, Angie Heo argues for understanding popular saints as material media that organize social relations between Christians and Muslims in Egypt toward varying political ends. With an ethnographer’s eye for traces of antiquity, she deciphers how long-cherished imaginaries of holiness broker bonds of revolutionary sacrifice, reconfigure national sites of sacred territory, and pose sectarian threats to security and order. A study of tradition and nationhood at their limits, The Political Lives of Saints shows that Coptic Orthodoxy is a core domain of minoritarian regulation and authoritarian rule, powerfully reversing the recurrent thesis of its impending extinction in the Arab Muslim world.

Suspect Saints and Holy Heretics

Suspect Saints and Holy Heretics
Author :
Publisher : Cornell University Press
Total Pages : 270
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781501742354
ISBN-13 : 1501742353
Rating : 4/5 (54 Downloads)

Synopsis Suspect Saints and Holy Heretics by : Janine Larmon Peterson

In Suspect Saints and Holy Heretics Janine Larmon Peterson investigates regional saints whose holiness was contested. She scrutinizes the papacy's toleration of unofficial saints' cults and its response when their devotees challenged church authority about a cult's merits or the saint's orthodoxy. As she demonstrates, communities that venerated saints increasingly clashed with popes and inquisitors determined to erode any local claims of religious authority. Local and unsanctioned saints were spiritual and social fixtures in the towns of northern and central Italy in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. In some cases, popes allowed these saints' cults; in others, church officials condemned the saint and/or their followers as heretics. Using a wide range of secular and clerical sources—including vitae, inquisitorial and canonization records, chronicles, and civic statutes—Peterson explores who these unofficial saints were, how the phenomenon of disputed sanctity arose, and why communities would be willing to risk punishment by continuing to venerate a local holy man or woman. She argues that the Church increasingly restricted sanctification in the later Middle Ages, which precipitated new debates over who had the authority to recognize sainthood and what evidence should be used to identify holiness and heterodoxy. The case studies she presents detail how the political climate of the Italian peninsula allowed Italian communities to use saints' cults as a tool to negotiate religious and political autonomy in opposition to growing papal bureaucratization. Open Access edition funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities

Dominion

Dominion
Author :
Publisher : Basic Books
Total Pages : 624
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780465093526
ISBN-13 : 0465093523
Rating : 4/5 (26 Downloads)

Synopsis Dominion by : Tom Holland

A "marvelous" (Economist) account of how the Christian Revolution forged the Western imagination. Crucifixion, the Romans believed, was the worst fate imaginable, a punishment reserved for slaves. How astonishing it was, then, that people should have come to believe that one particular victim of crucifixion-an obscure provincial by the name of Jesus-was to be worshipped as a god. Dominion explores the implications of this shocking conviction as they have reverberated throughout history. Today, the West remains utterly saturated by Christian assumptions. As Tom Holland demonstrates, our morals and ethics are not universal but are instead the fruits of a very distinctive civilization. Concepts such as secularism, liberalism, science, and homosexuality are deeply rooted in a Christian seedbed. From Babylon to the Beatles, Saint Michael to #MeToo, Dominion tells the story of how Christianity transformed the modern world.

Charisma, Medieval and Modern

Charisma, Medieval and Modern
Author :
Publisher : MDPI
Total Pages : 161
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9783038420002
ISBN-13 : 303842000X
Rating : 4/5 (02 Downloads)

Synopsis Charisma, Medieval and Modern by : Peter Iver Kaufman

This book is a printed edition of the Special Issue "Charisma, Medieval and Modern" that was published in Religions