The Christian Century

Content on this page requires a newer version of Adobe Flash Player.

Get Adobe Flash player

Theolog Shop Amazon CCBlogs Subscribe to the Century ATLA
In This Issue

Features

Living by the Word

Faith Matters

Books

Film

Century Marks

Editor's Desk

News

Music / Video

Notes from the Global Church

Real Live Preacher

American Soundings

Classifieds

About Us

Mission

Masthead

Rights and Permissions

Submission Guidelines

Advertising

Milestones

Privacy Policy

Subscription Help

Subscribe

Renew Subscription

Change Your Address

Report Missing/Damaged Copy

Contact Subscription Services

Contact Us
September 04, 2007
Print This Article
BookMarks
Praying at Burger King
by Richard J. Mouw
Eerdmans, 144 pp., $10.00 paperback
The noise, impersonality and grease of Burger King are, "properly understood, gifts from the Lord," writes Mouw.
click here to buy from amazon.com
"And now a few words from our president." The countless opportunities that the president of a seminary has to make himself heard could produce nothing more than pleasant chatter. But in the hands of Mouw, an accomplished philosopher and theologian and president of Fuller Theological Seminary, these short reflections are chewy rather than soft, and they stick to one's bones. The title essay explains why the author prays in fast food restaurants: "If I am hurrying through a crowded mall and suddenly meet someone I know, I greet the person, even though I haven't had time to get into an especially friendly mood." The noise, impersonality and grease of Burger King are actually, "properly understood, gifts from the Lord."

A Dynamic God: Living an Unconventional Catholic Faith
by Nancy Mairs
Beacon, 160 pp., $23.95
Mairs has lived much of her life in the Southwest as a "cafeteria Catholic," or what she sometimes refers to as a Zen Catholic.
click here to buy from amazon.com
A Dynamic God is a continuation of Mairs's acclaimed "spiritual autobiography," Ordinary Time, and of her book Waist-High in the World. The subtitle of this book says it all: Mairs, who was raised a Congregationalist in New England, has lived much of her life in the Southwest as a "cafeteria Catholic," or what she sometimes refers to as a Zen Catholic. She doesn't attend a conventional Catholic church but instead participates in a house church that is committed to inclusion and politically progressive causes. Despite the fact that she lives with the limitations of multiple sclerosis, she is committed to "the daily discipline of repairing the world, about which the Jewish Mishnah instructs that we are neither required to complete the task nor permitted to desist from it." For Mairs, this world is all there is—there is no expectation of an afterlife.
by the Century editors
Print This Article
Subscribe now and receive 2 free issues
Copyright 2006 Privacy Policy About Us Contact Us Classified Ads Advertising Submission Guidelines