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Our Unforming: De-Westernizing Spiritual Formation
Barnes and Noble
Our Unforming: De-Westernizing Spiritual Formation
Current price: $23.99
Barnes and Noble
Our Unforming: De-Westernizing Spiritual Formation
Current price: $23.99
Size: Paperback
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Christian spiritual formation resources and teachings have primarily come from Western spiritual traditions. Our current approach to formation comes out of that way of thinking and being, communicating that the white experience of God is the norm and authority.
In
Our Unforming: De-Westernizing Spiritual Formation
, Cindy S. Lee proposes that we as the church need a new way to engage in spiritual formation. To thrive in our increasingly diverse contexts, we need an unforming and a reforming of our souls. We need to unform the ways Western-dominated church leaders have understood formation. We need to reformto imagine and create a more intricate spirituality that includes diverse experiences of God.
Our Unforming
is organized into three cultural orientations and eight postures. Lee proposes that when we consider non-Western cultural ways of beingturning from linear to cyclical, from cerebral to experiential, and from individual to collectivethe formation journey shifts. We live out these movements through postures, ways of entering into deeper spiritual transformation. The eight postures reflect our experience of
time, generations, imagination, uncertainty, language, work, dependence, elders, and harmony.
Lee offers a more robust spirituality to hold the complexities of a multicultural God and the God-human relationship.
is sure to inspire further conversation as it shifts how we approach formation in our diverse communities.
In
Our Unforming: De-Westernizing Spiritual Formation
, Cindy S. Lee proposes that we as the church need a new way to engage in spiritual formation. To thrive in our increasingly diverse contexts, we need an unforming and a reforming of our souls. We need to unform the ways Western-dominated church leaders have understood formation. We need to reformto imagine and create a more intricate spirituality that includes diverse experiences of God.
Our Unforming
is organized into three cultural orientations and eight postures. Lee proposes that when we consider non-Western cultural ways of beingturning from linear to cyclical, from cerebral to experiential, and from individual to collectivethe formation journey shifts. We live out these movements through postures, ways of entering into deeper spiritual transformation. The eight postures reflect our experience of
time, generations, imagination, uncertainty, language, work, dependence, elders, and harmony.
Lee offers a more robust spirituality to hold the complexities of a multicultural God and the God-human relationship.
is sure to inspire further conversation as it shifts how we approach formation in our diverse communities.