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How to Inhabit Time

Understanding the Past, Facing the Future, Living Faithfully Now

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Many Christians are disconnected from the past or imagine they are "above" history, immune to it, as if self-starters from clean slates in every generation. They suffer from a lack of awareness of time and the effects of history-both personal and collective-and thus are naive about current issues and fixated on the end times. Popular speaker and award-winning author James K. A. Smith shows that awakening to the spiritual significance of time is crucial for orienting faith in the twenty-first century. He encourages us to cultivate the spiritual discipline of memento tempori, a temporal awareness of the Spirit's presence-indebted to a past, oriented toward the future, and faithful in the present. To gain spiritual appreciation for our mortality. To synchronize our heart-clocks with the tempo of the Spirit, which changes in the different seasons of life. Integrating popular culture, biblical exposition, and meditation, Smith provides insights for pastoring, counseling, spiritual formation, politics, and public life.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 18, 2022
      Smith (On the Road with Saint Augustine), a philosophy professor at Calvin University, delivers a lyrical exploration of how faith intersects with history and time. He posits that many Christians live “nowhen” and “imagine themselves wholly governed by timeless principles, unchanging convictions, expressing an idealism that assumes they are wholly governed by eternal ideas untainted by history.” This denial of time’s influence, Smith contends, ignores history’s role in shaping the present and blinkers Christians’ “sense of place in God’s story.” The author suggests that history is inescapable, but not predetermined, and that it’s rife with possibilities because there are always aspects of the past that provide “fertile soil for a different future.” He notes that Christians have a distinct way of keeping time because they “are citizens of a kingdom that will arrive from the future,” and he urges them to “inhabit the present” while looking ahead and preparing for the kingdom. The theology’s focus on the temporal dimension of Christianity yields novel insights, and the prose is elegant and lucid. This incisive and eloquent volume will expand readers’ minds.

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  • English

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