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Shalom Place
HOME
ABOUT US
MEET THE TEAM
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SMALL GROUP PROGRAMS
RETREATS
SPIRITUAL DIRECTION
LENDING LIBRARY
PHOTO GALLERY
ARCHIVE OF PAST EVENTS
SUPPORT THIS MINISTRY
CONTACT US
HOME
ABOUT US
MEET THE TEAM
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SPIRITUAL DIRECTION
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ARCHIVE OF PAST EVENTS
SUPPORT THIS MINISTRY
CONTACT US
LENDING LIBRARY Friends of God and Prophets (Johnson)
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Friends of God and Prophets (Johnson)

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Although affirmed in a phrase in the Apostles' Creed, celebrated in a November festival, and honored in the Eucharist, the communion of saints has lost its imaginative hold on most Christians. Even Catholic theologians note that the saints no longer play a vital role in popular piety. Can we bring this doctrine to a new and liberating expression in our times?

Yes, answers Elizabeth Johnson, Distinguished Professor of Theology at Fordham University and author of She Who Is. With equal doses of enthusiasm, intellectual daring, and spiritual wisdom, she reinvests the communion of saints with fresh meaning using the rubrics of memory and hope. She recalls the great chorus of female friends of God and prophets and notes: "Their lives bespeak an unfinished agenda that is now in our hands; their memory is a challenge to action; their companionship points the way."

Johnson expands and deepens the traditional concept of the communion of saints as Christians in relationship with God to include not only martyrs but also unnamed souls and the whole sweep of the natural world. She admonishes believers to take on the intergenerational challenge of bringing justice and compassion to fruition in our world. Spirit-Sophia would have us do no less.

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Although affirmed in a phrase in the Apostles' Creed, celebrated in a November festival, and honored in the Eucharist, the communion of saints has lost its imaginative hold on most Christians. Even Catholic theologians note that the saints no longer play a vital role in popular piety. Can we bring this doctrine to a new and liberating expression in our times?

Yes, answers Elizabeth Johnson, Distinguished Professor of Theology at Fordham University and author of She Who Is. With equal doses of enthusiasm, intellectual daring, and spiritual wisdom, she reinvests the communion of saints with fresh meaning using the rubrics of memory and hope. She recalls the great chorus of female friends of God and prophets and notes: "Their lives bespeak an unfinished agenda that is now in our hands; their memory is a challenge to action; their companionship points the way."

Johnson expands and deepens the traditional concept of the communion of saints as Christians in relationship with God to include not only martyrs but also unnamed souls and the whole sweep of the natural world. She admonishes believers to take on the intergenerational challenge of bringing justice and compassion to fruition in our world. Spirit-Sophia would have us do no less.

Although affirmed in a phrase in the Apostles' Creed, celebrated in a November festival, and honored in the Eucharist, the communion of saints has lost its imaginative hold on most Christians. Even Catholic theologians note that the saints no longer play a vital role in popular piety. Can we bring this doctrine to a new and liberating expression in our times?

Yes, answers Elizabeth Johnson, Distinguished Professor of Theology at Fordham University and author of She Who Is. With equal doses of enthusiasm, intellectual daring, and spiritual wisdom, she reinvests the communion of saints with fresh meaning using the rubrics of memory and hope. She recalls the great chorus of female friends of God and prophets and notes: "Their lives bespeak an unfinished agenda that is now in our hands; their memory is a challenge to action; their companionship points the way."

Johnson expands and deepens the traditional concept of the communion of saints as Christians in relationship with God to include not only martyrs but also unnamed souls and the whole sweep of the natural world. She admonishes believers to take on the intergenerational challenge of bringing justice and compassion to fruition in our world. Spirit-Sophia would have us do no less.

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Land Acknowledgment: As a ministry of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Sault Ste. Marie, we are privileged to live and work on the sacred traditional lands of the Anishinaabek people including the people of Ketegaunseebee (Garden River) and Batchewana First Nations. They are two of the twenty-one First Nations of northern Ontario that comprise the nations of the Robinson Huron Treaty signed with Settlers in 1850. With gratitude, we acknowledge that the Indigenous peoples have cared for the land, water, air and creatures for all that time because they saw themselves as part of the surrounding natural world, responsible for the life of the ecosystems and watersheds in which they lived. We are all treaty people. May we journey on this land gently so that no plant is broken and no creature is harmed. Let us journey together today in a good way.