From The Living Church <[email protected]>
Subject TLC Book Club -- A Practical, Readable Manual for Planned Giving Efforts; Hildegard, a Profound Thinker and Artist of the Middle Ages
Date September 5, 2023 10:00 AM
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The latest book reviews from The Living Church, with a library sortable by author, publisher, and topic 

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** Generosity's
Future Effect
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Review by Kristina Rake

I once thought "planned giving" was an oxymoron. Wasn't all giving planned? James W. Murphy has made the concept — once as frightening to this liberal arts major as algebra — accessible, interesting, and easy to implement. I cannot give it a higher recommendation. Read the review ([link removed]) .

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** Putting Treasure Where the Heart Is
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Review by Kirstin Snow Spalding

From the TLC Book Club archives ([link removed]) , James W. Murphy's previous "faithful-branded" volume explores socially responsible investing. While some people may consider investment the realm of worldly practices that keep us from God, Faithful Investing breaks open the possibility that God’s work in the world requires us to engage with money in new ways. Read the review ([link removed]) .
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** Hildegard's Complex Visions
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Review by Phoebe Pettingell

A richly illustrated study of one of the most talented and profound thinkers and artists of the High Middle Ages. This book explains the way she saw the interrelation of Creation, the universe, and liturgy. Read the review ([link removed]) .

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** Priesthood for All?
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Review by Garwood Anderson

The Priesthood for All Believers offers an extended remedy for clericalism, but it is not a prescription for lay ministry. This is a book primarily addressed to ordained persons and about ordained ministry. Cuff believes clericalism is subverted when each order is given its due in its particularity as a vocation in the larger ecclesial ecosystem Read the review ([link removed]) .
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** The Church
and the 12 Steps
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Review by Chilton R. Knudsen

From the archives ([link removed]) : People feel safe to be authentic and vulnerable in Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, and leave feeling accepted, hopeful, connected, and inspired. By contrast, faith communities are often linked with judgmentalism, rivalry, and shame. The last place to be candid about one’s faults is in church. Read the review ([link removed]) .

For more than 14 decades, The Living Church has published thoughtful reviews of thoughtful books. TLC Book Club and this monthly newsletter now give you access to a sortable, growing library of recent reviews.
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