Can art change behavior in dangerous ways? | |
The Thread's Must Read | “Shame-Less” by Nadia Bolz Weber Buy this book The tattoo on Nadia Bolz-Weber’s left arm says “wild and holy.” Her other arm reveals a rendering of Saint Mary Magdalene announcing the resurrection to a group of startled male disciples. Bolz-Weber got the tattoo when she was training to become a Lutheran pastor. Back then, it would’ve seemed rebellious: sleeves of vivid art from her shoulders to her wrist. But as Bolz-Weber noted a few years ago, what was unsettling and mutinous back then has become mainstream today. And so it is with Bolz-Weber’s new crusade. The pastrix — as she calls herself — has exhorted faith communities to lead with acceptance, grace and mercy. She jokes that the church she founded — House for All Saints & Sinners — “is a bunch of people who really don’t belong in church.” Neither — for too long — did the idea that human wholeness must include sexual health. Church hierarchies used chastity, denial, purity pledges, shunning, ignorance and manipulation to push healthy sexuality into the shadows. Bolz-Weber is calling for nothing less than a “sexual reformation” free of shame and judgment and retribution. She writes in her new book, “Shame-Less” — with a well-placed hyphen between the words: “We deny our natures, identities and desires in order not to anger an easily disappointed God. The result is suffering — outer darkness — and it’s not of God’s making.” This spring and summer, I’m diving into several books on women of faith, and this is a great place to begin. — Kerri Miller |
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| | The art of dying -- and living -- well | "That Good Night: Life and Medicine in the Eleventh Hour" by Sunita Puri |
| Buy this book Modern medicine can help us live longer. But can it help us die well? That's the subject of Sunita Puri's poetic and practical new book, "That Good Night: Life and Medicine in the Eleventh Hour." More | |
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| | 'Sing to It' is worth the wait | "Sing to It" New stories by Amy Hempel |
| Buy this book Amy Hempel's first book of new material in 14 years showcases her immense talents as a fiction writer. It's a powerful collection of stories about uneasy, unmoored, even desperate people. More | |
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| | 'Miranda in Milan:' No woman is an island | "Miranda in Milan" by Katharine Duckett |
| Buy this book Katharine Duckett's new novel picks up where Shakespeare's "Tempest" left off, following sorcerer's daughter Miranda to her new life as a court lady — a life that proves darker than she'd hoped. More | |
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