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9780385531610: Fifteen Faces of God: A Quest to Know God Through the Parables of Jesus
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Fifteen Faces of God With a writing style reminiscent of Henri Nouwen, television host Father Manning takes the reader on an exploration of 15 of Jesus' parables and along the way shows the multifaceted nature of God. Full description

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Extrait :
Chapter One:
Searching

    
Matthew 18:12-14  
"What is your opinion? If a man has a hundred sheep and one of them goes astray, will he not leave the ninety-nine in the hills and go in search of the stray? And if he finds it, amen, I say to you, he rejoices more over it than over the ninety-nine thatdid not stray. In just the same way, it is not the will of your heavenly Father that one of these little ones be lost."    

God Seeks and We Resist  
This parable surprises me. How many of us have spent most of our lives seeking God? I have. I'm sure many of you have too in one way or another. But what do we see here? We have God seeking us with abandon! To our human eyes and ears, this shepherd seemsto do a foolish thing. He has a hundred sheep. When one of them is missing, he leaves the ninety-nine and goes in search of the lost one. And what does he do when he finds it? He puts it on his shoulders, and, rejoicing, he brings the sheep home.  

Strange? Disarming? What would happen if we stopped the intensity of our searching every once in a while and looked over our shoulder? What would we see? Would we be surprised to see God searching for us with more intensity than we could ever muster inour search for him? Ah, but how many of us truly want God to find us?   God is in constant pursuit of our hearts, but we are afraid of God finding us. At times, we feel his breath on our necks, and even though we know we can't escape, we still flee. As Saint Ignatius has said, God is everywhere and if we listen closely wecan hear his call the way that lost sheep must have heard the call of his shepherd. God is in all things, in nature, in paintings, in motion pictures. He's also in people. Not just those whom we know in our lives--our family, our friends, the people we workwith in the office--but in the strangers we read about in newspaper accounts when we're eating our breakfast. He's also present in the CNN Headline News we catch in the evening. He's in the eyes of billions of people around the world.  

Why are many of us reluctant to be found, to be known and loved by this pervasive and searching God? Maybe we don't want to lose our freedom to God, the "tremendous lover." Maybe we think God will be angry at us for having left the flock. Maybe it's amatter of being afraid of responsibilities. Another reason for our wanting to flee God may be feelings of unworthiness. How many of us spend countless hours trying to impress people with our virtue without realizing that our so-called acts of niceness are waysof covering up the reality of our brokenness, our failures, our weakness? We don't want to surrender to God because we're afraid of being exposed for who we are. We build a castle around our inner, sinful, vulnerable self. We make a fort of walls and turrets.Our moats, arrows, and hot oil are ready for anyone who wants to get inside! At the center of the castle is a specially fortified room to which we will not grant access--not even to a most trusted lover. We're even reluctant to give access to God.  

Some or all of these things may be true for us, but there is a depth of love that God the Father is hungering for us to enter into. A love that transcends the frailties of human love. In order to jump in, we need to surrender our fears. God is always seekingus, and we must turn and let him embrace us. We must acknowledge his love. Only when we stop, admit that the Father loves us, and then accept his love will we ever be free from the plight of having to prove our worthiness. Only when we turn and acknowledgeour pursuer will we know God. Only then will we truly know ourselves.    
Francis Thompson  
The poet Francis Thompson (1859-1907) focused on this aspect of God the searcher in his poem "The Hound of Heaven." Thompson aspired to be a priest, but it was not to be. After a few months in the seminary he was asked to leave, and he went on to studyto become a doctor. He failed three final examinations in medical school. Struggling with depression, he turned to morphine and was soon living in the crowded dirty back alleys of Victorian London. During one of his many failed attempts to rid himself of hisaddiction, he wrote "The Hound of Heaven." The poem tells of how he fled from God, of all the ways he tried to escape his Maker.    

     I fled Him down the nights and down the days;
     I fled Him, down the arches of the years;
     I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways
     Of my own mind; and in the midst of tears
     I hid from Him, and under running laughter.
          Up vistaed hopes I sped;
          And shot, precipitated,
     Adown Titanic glooms of chasmed fears,
     From those strong Feet that followed, followed after.
          But with unhurried chase,
          And unperturbed pace,
          Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
          They beat--and a Voice beat
          More constant than the Feet--
     "All things betray thee who betrayest Me."
    

Feeling tired and knowing there is no escape, Thompson surrenders to the chasing hound:    

          Now of that long pursuit
          Comes at hand the bruit;
     That Voice is round me like a bursting sea:
          "And is thy earth so marred,
          Shattered in shard on shard?
          Lo, all things fly thee, for thou fliest Me!
          Strange, piteous, futile thing!
     Wherefore should any set thee love apart?
     Seeing none but I makes much of naught." (He said),
     "And human love needs human meriting:
          How hast thou merited--
     Of all man's clotted clay the dingiest clot?
          Alack, thou knowest not
     How little worthy of any love thou art!
     Whom will thou find to love ignoble thee,
     Save Me, save only Me?"
    

All attempts to run away failed him. God was relentlessly, steadily, seeking him out, like a hound dog pursuing its prey. Through divine grace, coming out of deep depression and even despair, he admitted that God loved him. He surrendered himself, mind,body, and spirit. The poem's message to us is that by allowing ourselves to be captured, we gain the freedom of salvation.    

Why Does God Seek Us?  
These words are all fine and well, but many of us may not understand: Why exactly does God seek us like the shepherd seeks the lost sheep in the parable? What is it about us that God finds so attractive? Why risk abandoning the ninety-nine to find theone? When we're honest with ourselves--when we look at the wars around us, at our weaknesses, our repeated sins, our addictions, our fears, our failures, and our pride, our selfishness--why would God want to search for us?  

Very mysterious!  

But not so mysterious if we think of God as an artist. Unlike earthly artists who use paints and clay and music and dance to create their masterpieces, God's work is ongoing creations: the galaxy, a planet, a mountain, the wind, a lake, a flower. You andme. All are evolving, all are ever changing. And what is an artist looking for in his creation? Beauty. God as well is searching for the beauty in his creation. Certainly we are always evolving. Beauty seems to fade outwardly. Our body's cells are constantlychanging, our skin and muscles move from firm to flabby, our hair changes color or falls out. But God sees past the surface of his paintings and sculptures; he sees the inner life of the creation. It's like going to a museum and looking at a painting. Thereis the surface experience. You see the colors and the shape of the subject, but there is an inner life to the picture in front of you, the life of the artist, the love of the artist that is bubbling below the surface. In many ways God's search for us is God'ssearch for himself.    

The Power of Freedom  
Freedom is a significant part of what God has given us. It's the freedom of the lamb to wander off and get lost. God could have created us without this power. We could have lived lives that were forever unchanging, lives in which straying from the flockwas never an option. Our freedom makes us exciting to God. He doesn't want his sheep to get lost. But if they do stray, he goes looking. The problem arises when we forget that God is ever seeking us! Oh, this forgetting that gets us into so much trouble.  

God has given us freedom, and freedom by its very nature can bring unpredictable results. Will Adam and Eve eat the apple? Will the apostles ever leave the upper room? Will you and I turn and face God or will we turn away? Sure, God has a plan, a dreamof what we should do, but he has surrendered the outcome to us. It's akin, in some ways, to listening to jazz musicians jamming in a nightclub. Freedom, like jazz, is unpredictable....
Revue de presse :
Praise for Fifteen Faces of God
 
“There are times in our lives, and especially in the life of our country, when we are all enduring unusual stress.  At such times, there are special gifts that come along which provide a glimmer of hope, of comfort, of strength, in the realization that, even though times are bleak, there is reason to hope.  One of those gifts is a little book entitled, Fifteen Faces of God, by Michael Manning.  He is a gifted writer and has the gentle ability to reach into the human heart, especially the hurting heart, and bring comfort and healing and hope, a hope that comes from the reality that God is nearby.”
– Father Joseph F. Girzone, author of Joshua: A Parable for Today and Jesus: A New Understanding of God’s Love

“Michael Manning reveals the stories of Jesus as ones which highlight the activity of God in our everyday lives.  Through Manning's expert guidance we see the many faces of God that we encounter each day but sometimes miss.  We are in Manning's debt for lowering the Divine veil and making God's presence more accessible.”      
– Father Edward L. Beck, author of God Underneath, ABC News Contributor   

“Jesus is the face of God turned toward us. In these reflections on fifteen Gospel parables, Michael Manning gives us a glimpse of how Jesus himself saw the face of the One he called Father. Ponder these pages and behold the luminous traces of the God who is toward us, for us, with us, and in us.”
– His Eminence Cardinal Roger Mahony, Archbishop of Los Angeles 

“In Michael Manning's Fifteen Faces of God, I had hoped to see Christ's parables in new, challenging, encouraging ways and I did.  But then something even more wonderful happened: as I reflected on each brief chapter's questions, I found that as I was seeking to better know God, He was asking me if I really knew who I was eyes and what would be possible if I embraced His parables more fully.  This book is a gentle companion in tough world.”
– Robert J. Wicks, Psy.D., author of Prayerfulness: Awakening to the Fullness of Life
 
“Just as Jesus was a master storyteller, Father Michael Manning is a skilled interpretor of the parables, adept at translating the wisdom, insight, and love that lives at their core.”
– Therese Borchard, author of Beyond Blue on Beliefnet.com
 
“What a gift Father Manning gives us in his book Fifteen Faces of God. This is a book for everyone who wants to hear and see the parables in a fresh way and so recapture who God can be for them on their journey of faith.”
– Father Dominic G. Grassi, co-author of Living the Mass: How One Hour a Week Can Change Your Life
 
“In Fifteen Faces of God, Father Michael Manning interprets key parables of Jesus for contemporary readers. By bringing these ancient stories to new life, Manning invites us to recognize God as ever-loving and ever-present – here and now. His engaging commentary, prayers for reflection and questions for discussion are firmly grounded in today’s realities. Great for individuals as well as scripture study groups.”
– Meredith Gould, Ph.D., author of The Catholic Home and Why Is There a Menorah on the Altar?
 

Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.

  • ÉditeurDoubleday
  • Date d'édition2010
  • ISBN 10 0385531613
  • ISBN 13 9780385531610
  • ReliureRelié
  • Numéro d'édition1
  • Nombre de pages190
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