av Joy Ibsen
199,-
The opposite of fear is love. Part 1 ("e;Pulpit to Pew"e;) includes twenty-five selections from candid sermons (reconstituted from his notes) by Joy Ibsen's father, Harald Ibsen, as presented to listeners in rural Midwestern congregations. Organized according to the church year rather in time sequence (Advent, Christmas, Epiphany, Lent, Easter, Pentecost), beginning with Christmas 1939, each sermon brief is followed by a listener's story (fictional except for a few autobiographical) showing how the listener(s) are affected by fear (i.e., war, death, crops, loneliness, disappointments, disability, prejudice) and how their lives are transformed. In the new section, part 2 ("e;Parables and Pandemic"e;), Joy again uses her father's sermon notes to interpret biblical parables, relating them to our present era. Timeless but timely messages arepresented by a(fictional) woman pastor to an urban New Mexico congregation who are challenged by fear of COVID-19, social isolation, economic loss, and the unknown. Each chapter shows the power ofhow spiritual truths, community support, andnew insights enable us to live unafraid in current realities. The sermons and stories are very powerful because they reflect the community-centered philosophy theologyof N. F. S. Grundtvig ("e;Human First, then Christian"e; and "e;Freedom for Loki as well as for Thor"e;), a nineteenth-century philosopher-theologian with amazing relevance to twenty-first century issues and whose teachings are well known to the Ibsens but not well known in the United States. Becoming unafraid is an incredibly helpful path to spiritual renewal which is necessary for handling both existing and upcoming worldwide changes.