What I am reading and writing: PART II

January 2020

Same study group, all ages welcome; however, most of us have graying hair as well as lively curiosity and diverse faith heritages. 

We are now tackling Dorothee Soelle’s seminal book The Silent Cry: Mysticism and Resistance. Dorothee, who died in 2003, was a German feminist liberation theologian. She believed theology must speak for the oppressed, not only the privileged. 

I was enthralled when I read the Introduction and Chapter 1: We are all mystics. Chapter 2: Ecstasy slowed me down to a crawl. This book could be required reading in a seminary course although its meatiness encourages me to reflect on my own mystical moments and awarenesses. 

I am learning, the history of mysticism as it stands over against the traditional, patriarchal, limiting teachings and liturgies of religious institutions. As I listen to the group’s conversations, I jot down my mystical moments and awarenesses, surprised how many come to mind. Rather than thinking how great these remembrances are, I am wondering how each has impacted my life and the contours of my faith.  

Rather than doing crossword puzzles to keep my mind active and supple, I climb the steep stairs to my nest under the eaves and write. Remembering and reflecting is a sacred experience which takes time and effort…and I am easily distracted. I turn on the computer, I am pulled into emails, news and weather, or other Internet magnets. When I begin the hard work of writing, I am pushed to focus sharply as I seek words to express my understanding of my experiences and faith. 

MY READING, EARLY 2020

As we begin 2020, the books I am reading gives a clue to the shifting concerns that push and pull me. Annotations as I am inspired. Please be patient re line spacing. I am trying to understand new wordpress blocks.


Congress of Women: Religion, Gender and Kyriarchal Power by Elisabeth Schussler Fiorenza who was my tutor and advisor during seminary at the Episcopal Divinity School. Her profound analysis of the interface between theology and political culture remains cutting edge and her nurturing of the next generation of theologians is hope-filled. I am reading her current work in order to sharpen my thinking as I seek to write an Op-ed piece which asks us to think about the complex and negative impact of naming God as male, King, Master, Lord, Father, on the wellbeing of all women and children as well as on men without power. The other side of my thinking champions the life giving impact of the Great Mystery of being human in an infinite Universe.
The Silent Cry: Mysticism and Resistance by Dorothee Soelle

Sounds of the Eternal: Morning and Evening Prayer by John Phillip Newell

Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer by Siddhartha Mukherjee 

Writing Hard Stories: by celebrated memoirists who shaped art from trauma by Melanie Brooks

The Yellow House: A Memoir by Sarah Broom