Strahan Coleman

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Strahan Coleman



Average rating: 4.52 · 2,489 ratings · 470 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
Beholding: Deepening Our Ex...

4.46 avg rating — 1,709 ratings3 editions
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Thirsting: Quenching Our So...

4.55 avg rating — 464 ratings
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Prayer Vol. 2

4.82 avg rating — 103 ratings
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Prayer Vol. 01

4.76 avg rating — 90 ratings
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Prayer Vol. 01

4.70 avg rating — 50 ratings2 editions
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Prayer Vol. 3

4.79 avg rating — 48 ratings
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Thirsting: Quenching Our So...

4.68 avg rating — 25 ratings2 editions
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Strahan Out of Exile : Song...

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“In those years, my early twenties, when I was bursting into my faith with a burning-hot first fervour, many of my friends and I wanted to see the miracles of the New Testament. I still do. But as the years have passed and that first fervour has given birth to a deeper and more persistent and admiring second love, I've come to see that kindness is a miracle, self-control a shocking characteristic, gentleness and humility rare commodities, and Christian unity almost worthy of greater awe than dead-raising. We were looking for the "grand" stuff, but surprisingly, the "little" stuff was harder to come by.”
Strahan Coleman, Beholding: Deepening Our Experience in God

“emotion, though a devotional life leads to a sensitivity of feelings. It is the rhythms and moments of our days, weeks, months, and years that open communing space. Devotion isn’t ritual, but it is ritualistic. It isn’t working, but it is about works. It’s about laying hold of our lives in such a way that they become containers for the Spirit of God to fill, creating a counter-liturgy to the gravitational draw of technology, entertainment, and the endless purchasing of things. I’ve learned over the years that devotion isn’t reliant on how spiritually powerful we feel we are. If we have seconds, minutes, and hours in our day, then we can devote our lives to a living affection for God. Because devotion is about making space, and we all have it in some shape or form. When we wake in the morning, we can choose to devote time to God in the same way we devote our bodies to food, hygiene, and exercise. We don’t call those things ritualistic or religious; we don’t have breakfast with a sense of romanticism and heightened emotional experience. We do those things because we’re alive and because they’re good. Becoming a people of prayer is saying that as worthy as our stomachs are of food, our bodies are of cleansing, our lungs are of breathing, God is even more of our attention. And it’s about building habits throughout our day to live into it. If we leave eating to chance, we’ll likely find ourselves oscillating between irritable hunger and satisfaction. Likewise with God, without planning in rhythm, we’ll experience Him in boom and bust. Seasons of wonder and seasons of confusion and frustration.”
Strahan Coleman, Beholding: Deepening Our Experience in God

“A strange thing happens when we decentralize asking in our prayer life. What do we do? How do we commune with God without agenda or necessity? I wonder if the answer is partly why so many of us pray like crazy in suffering, then forget about God in healing, because we don’t know what to do when the basis of our relationship is no longer desperate acceptance, healing, longing, or need.”
Strahan Coleman, Beholding: Deepening Our Experience in God

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