Review:
Jon M. Sweeney's is a bridge-building volume. We live in times of great religious divisiveness. . . Although Sweeney has moved away from his fundamentalist upbringing, he refuses to give up the idea that we are all born again . . . and again. His practice of openness and hospitality make this autobiographical journey something special. His respect for his fellow Christians, even those with different beliefs, is something we should all emulate in our own spiritual journeys. The Lutheran: The Magazine of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America November 1, 2005 Born Again and Again is Jon M. Sweeney's personal story of how the doubts he had about his fundamentalist upbringing led him down a stronger path in his relationship with God. Using his life as a guide, Sweeney discussest he cycle of birth and rebirth that every Christian experiences and the ultimate discovery of a personal belief system. Sweeney attended Bible college and at one point considered becoming a monk, but ended up abandoning fundamentalism and finding peace and balance in his faith. Relevant November 1, 2005 Toward the end of his lovely new memoir, Jon Sweeney-writes that you cannot be fully alive in your religion until you learn to question the faith of your childhood.. Sweeney writes affectionately about the ways in which Evangelicalism shaped his relationship with God, inscribing faith so deeply in his being that he cannot imagine giving it up. John Tintera explorefaith.org Born Again and Again: The Surprising Gifts of a Fundamentalist Childhood by Jon Sweeney explores aspects of Christian fundamentalism not usually seen: the mysticism of God indwelling the body, religious certainty and its positive and negative effects; powerful experiences of worship, community and trust, and the importance of struggling with matters of faith until they are one's own. The Mennonite October 4, 2005 Wait a moment. Take a pen and cross out the word "fundamentalist" in Jon Sweeney's subtitle. In its place, write "evangelical." Now we can begin. Born in 1967, raised in Wheaton, Illinois, and educated at Moody Bible Institute and Wheaton College, Sweeney might have been specially treated to represent the changing face of American evangelicalism, evolving from the fundamentalist faith of his grandfathers-both of whom were Independent Baptist preachers-to the expansive movement whose most prominent spokesman was Billy Graham. In his growing-up years, Sweeney seems to have experienced almost every distinctive of evangelical culture, including the ritual destruction of some of his favorite cassette tapes (the Eagles) after a visiting speaker explained that they contained subliminal satanic messages. It figures that by the time he was at Wheaton College, Sweeney and some of his fellow students were checking out a church that didn't look like a church, a place called Willow Creek. But Sweeney's evolution didn't end there, and while he still defines himself as a Christian, he has departed on many points from the teachings of his childhood. His memoir-remarkably free of bitterness-will be particularly valuable to readers who have traveled part of the way with him (in their changing attitudes toward Roman Catholicism, for instance), but who remain evangelical, as an invitation to clarify their own convictions. Christianity Today January 1, 2006
About the Author:
Jon M. Sweeney is recognized for his ability to communicate religious ideas and history in uncomplicated language. He is also the author of The Lure of Saints: A Protestant Experience of Catholic Tradition and The St. Francis Prayer Book, and editor of The Road to Assisi, a biography of St. Francis and a Book-of-the-Month Club/Crossings Book Club/History Book Club selection. He lives in Vermont with his wife and their two children.
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