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Anita Yoder

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Anita Yoder

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September 2016


Average rating: 4.29 · 51 ratings · 10 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
Life Is for Living (Not for...

4.37 avg rating — 41 ratings2 editions
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Amish Country Cookbook, Vol...

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Amish-Country Cookbook, Vol...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 4 ratings7 editions
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Life is for Living: (Not fo...

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Home Matters, Part II

Last week, this post gave the first part of this article on “home.” It introduced the idea that God cares that home creates comfort and safety. One day in chapel this week, we read Psalm 27 and my brain starting pinging when I saw all these words about God’s home: house, temple, dwelling, tabernacle. This concept must be important to God. I wonder how that should inform how we live, how we see the Read more of this blog post »
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Published on October 17, 2025 17:30
The Body Teaches ...
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Anita’s Recent Updates

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How Far to the Promised Land by Esau McCaulley
"This is the kind of memoir I enjoy, one that opens new windows in my soul."
Anita Yoder and 1 other person liked Dawn’s status update
Dawn Nolt Dawn Nolt is currently reading My Name Is Asher Lev
Theo of Golden by Allen  Levi
" I bet Lonita would mix with excellent fiction. "
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Jayber Crow by Wendell Berry
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This beautiful story is character-driven with understated action. It might be moralizing slightly with its commentary on farm machinery and bigger farms but the point was well made. The story illustrates the arc of how a soul gets shaped by its place ...more
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Jayber Crow by Wendell Berry
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This beautiful story is character-driven with understated action. It might be moralizing slightly with its commentary on farm machinery and bigger farms but the point was well made. The story illustrates the arc of how a soul gets shaped by its place ...more
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Dreamers of the Day by Mary Doria Russell
Dreamers of the Day
by Mary Doria Russell (Goodreads Author)
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Walking by Erling Kagge
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The Body Teaches the Soul by Justin Whitmel Earley
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“Without a connectedness to Christian tradition, to the Church through time, we too easily dilute is strangeness, succumbing to the tyranny of the present. We make Christianity comfortable, palatable, adorn it in the fashions of our day. While the Church must always work to make her truth alive and heard in the present age--which is difficult, if the Church is not a coherent entity--she must also preserve it from being harnessed by the zeitgeist and made to serve its ends. When this happens, Christianity loses its countercultural witness, its prophetic voice, which will always, in one way or another, be at odds with the surrounding society.”
Abigail Favale

“There is a givenness to our bodies that makes present the realities of God, and the intricate nexus of these images, that sacred web, has become far more precious to me, far more beautiful than a flattened, bland gesture toward earthly equality. Sacrificing the embodiment of these metaphors to satisfy some modern egalitarian sensibility would be, to me, a tragic desecration, a calamitous loss.”
Abigail Favale

“If we think marriage is easy and self-satisfying and the celibate life is difficult and self-denying, we've understood neither, at least not in the Christian sense. The cross is not imposed on gay and celibate people but offered to all as a means to holiness. We are all asked to curb our sexual desires out of deference for human life and its genesis in human sexuality.”
Abigail Favale

James Joyce
“A few light taps upon the pane made him turn to the window. It had begun to snow again. He watched sleepily the flakes, silver and dark, falling obliquely against the lamplight. The time had come for him to set out on his journey westward. Yes, the newspapers were right: snow was general all over Ireland. It was falling on every part of the dark central plain, on the treeless hills, falling softly upon the Bog of Allen and, farther westward, softly falling into the dark mutinous Shannon waves. It was falling, too, upon every part of the lonely churchyard on the hill where Michael Furey lay buried. It lay thickly drifted on the crooked crosses and headstones, on the spears of the little gate, on the barren thorns. His soul swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe and faintly falling, like the descent of their last end, upon all the living and the dead.”
James Joyce, Dubliners

“The curious seeks knowledge out of anxiety and fear; the studious seeks knowledge from a place of love.”
Alex Sosler, Learning to Love: Christian Higher Education as Pilgrimage

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