Preface
1. Immersion in the Larger Whole: Toward a Contemplative
Ecology
2. Contact, or the Blue Sapphire of the Mind
3. Penthos: The Gift of Tears
4. Topos: At Home, Always a Stranger
5. Prosoche: The Art of Attention
6. Logos: The Song of the World
7. Eros: Exchange, Intimacy, Reciprocity
8. Kenosis: Empty, Emptied
9. Telos: Practicing Paradise
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
Douglas E. Christie is Professor of Theological Studies, Loyola Marymount University, and the author of The Word in the Desert: Scripture and the Quest for Holiness in Early Christian Monasticism.
"This beautifully written book will be of great value to scholars
and is suitable for graduate courses on contemplative traditions
and on religion and ecology."--Religious Studies Review
"At once a personal journey, a scholarly treatise and a heartfelt
plea, Douglas E. Christie draws on personal vignettes, his command
of early Christian resources and his wide ranging study of
contemporary nature to compose a dense yet beautifully crafted
scholarly treatise that manages at the same time to be intensely
personal. . . He wants to lift up the significance of spirituality
in helping us to think about the meaning and significance of the
natural world
in our own lives and to formulate a meaningful response to the
growing erosion of the natural world. Much will depend on our
willingness to risk the kind of relinquishment that the
contemplative
traditions claim is essential for real and lasting personal and
social transformation."--Spiritus
"This book is a remarkable and profound effort to bring into
conversation and correlation the modern ecological consciousness
together with the wisdom and practice embodied in the Christian
contemplative tradition."--Cistercian Studies Quarterly
"An excellent guide for those wishing to carry forward their Advent
and Christmas reflections on the relationship between the
Logos&R and our material world. It presents a helpful
collection of ancient and modern contemplative thought that can
help bring us to an integrated view of nature and ourselves."
--National Catholic Reporter
"The book is a veritable feast of wisdom... With consummate
intelligence and probing imagination Christie lures us into seeing
the beauty that lies at the heart of our broken world... The Blue
Sapphire of the Mind is a beautiful and important book, evocative
and alluring, creative and often subtle as it leads us to encounter
theological themes in fresh ways." --Christian Century
"Christie has written a book that is at once beautiful and
scholarly, both lyrical in its prose and impressive in its
erudition...The Blue Sapphire of the Mind is a book to savor, a
book full of surprising connections and beautiful images, and
absolutely a book that leaves the reader with newfound hope about
the future of our broken, beloved Earth."--Journal of the American
Academy of Religion
"Christie has created an important work, well worth the effort of
reading...Christie has produced a welcome addition to an
underdeveloped but sorely needed topic."--Parabola
"[A] profound and profoundly important book...Those who desire to
live in touch with and to participate in the restoration of this
luminous and possibly numinous earth will deeply appreciate The
Blue Sapphire of the Mind."--Interdisciplinary Studies in
Literature and Environment
"Those in search of relevant and in-depth bibliography for thinking
about the past, present, and future of the human spiritual
relationship to the natural world will be turning to this book for
many years to come...Libraries should have this book. General
readers will be fascinated by its timely topic, spiritual depth,
and engaging style, while researchers will be attracted by its
intellectual breadth and extensive bibliography. While its use as a
main class
text may be limited to courses with ecospirituality as their
primary theme, it could easily appear as a recommended text in a
wide range of courses in theology, ethics, and
spirituality."--Horizons
"In this remarkable book, Douglas Christie, a theologian and
academic, sets out to explore the concept of contemplative ecology
... The writing is sparse and deep, clear and beckoning. " --Times
Higher Education
"With this book Douglas E. Christie joins the ranks of Annie
Dillard and Wendell Berry in their explorations of the challenge of
spirituality to awaken and us to attend to the environment. Yet
with Christie there is something quite unique in his contribution.
He brings to bear his intimate and scholarly knowledge of the
Christian contemplative tradition on the most urgent ecological
matters on our time."--Martin Laird, O.S.A., author of Into the
Silent
Land and A Sunlit Absence
"There is no one as qualified as Douglas Christie to write a book
such as this. Along with impeccable scholarship, he brings
eloquence, passion, depth, and experience to the discussion. Surely
we need a contemplative ecology and this is a masterful work that
shows us the path."--Mary Evelyn Tucker, Forum on Religion and
Ecology at Yale
"This movingly autobiographical and deeply interdisciplinary book
links ancient monastic practices of contemplation to modern
environmental ideas, especially as they are reflected in works of
modern and contemporary American literature. In emphasizing acts of
creative attention and the spiritual necessity of mourning our lost
sacred places, Christie gives the humanities a central role in
addressing the environmental crisis of our time."--H. Daniel Peck,
author
of Thoreau's Morning Work
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