

Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places reunites spirituality and theology in a cultural context where these two vital facets of Christian faith have been rent asunder. Lamenting the vacuous, often pagan nature of contemporary American spirituality, Eugene Peterson here firmly grounds spirituality once more in Trinitarian theology and offers a clear, practical statement of what it means to actually live out the Christian life.
Writing in the conversational style that he is well known for, Peterson boldly sweeps out the misunderstandings that clutter conversations on spiritual theology and refurnishes the subject only with what is essential. As Peterson shows, spiritual theology, in order to be at once biblical and meaningful, must remain sensitive to ordinary life, present the Christian gospel, follow the narrative of Scripture, and be rooted in the fear of the Lord -- in short, spiritual theology must be about God and not about us. The foundational book in a five-volume series on spiritual theology emerging from Peterson's pen, Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places provides the conceptual and directional help we all need to live the Christian gospel well and maturely in the conditions that prevail in the church and world today.It takes about 9 Hours and 24 minutes on average for a reader to read Christ Plays In Ten Thousand Places: A Conversation In Spiritual Theology. This is based on the average reading speed of 250 Words per minute.
Christ Plays In Ten Thousand Places: A Conversation In Spiritual Theology is 380 pages long.
Christ Plays In Ten Thousand Places: A Conversation In Spiritual Theology is book #1 in the Spiritual Theology Book Series and comes before Eat This Book: A Conversation In The Art Of Spiritual Reading
Christ Plays In Ten Thousand Places: A Conversation In Spiritual Theology won the following awards:
in 2006 Christ Plays In Ten Thousand Places: A Conversation In Spiritual Theology won the Book of the Year in category .
in 2006 Christ Plays In Ten Thousand Places: A Conversation In Spiritual Theology won the Christianity Today Book Award in category .
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