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Esta es la tesis central de la presente obra, uno de los textos que más polémica ha suscitado en la última década en Estados Unidos y posteriormente en otros países de Europa y que, dada su audaz propuesta, generará también un amplio debate entre los lectores de habla hispana.
"El libro religioso más discutido e importante de la última década". David Brooks, The New York Times
"Dreher no es un periodista de investigación y menos aún un visionario, sino un sobrio analista que desde hace tiempo ha seguido, de un modo atento y crítico, la situación de la Iglesia y del mundo, conservando sin embargo una mirada tierna de niño".
Georg Gänswein, prefecto de la Casa Pontificia y secretario del papa emérito Benedicto XVI
265 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 2017
We live liturgically, telling our sacred story in worship and song. We fast and we feast. We marry and give our children in marriage, and though in exile, we work for the peace of the city. We welcome our newborns and bury our dead. We read the Bible, and we tell our children about the saints. And we also tell them in the orchard and by the fireside about Odysseus, Achilles, and Aeneas, of Dante and Don Quixote, and Frodo and Gandalf, and all the tales that bear what it means to be men and women of the West.While I don't agree with all Dreher suggests, I do like the idea of our home as a domestic monastery. The peace and tranquility of our home greatly increased when we eliminated television. But, alas, my computer and smart phone remain. (That's fully hypocritical; I love being connected to my people.) Making our home a sanctuary, a place of hospitality and discussion and prayer, growing herbs, cooking food, filling it with music — these are practical ways we can worship God.
We work, we pray, we confess our sins, we show mercy, we welcome the stranger, and we keep the commandments. When we suffer, especially for Christ's sake, we give thanks, because that is what Christians do. Who knows what God, in turn, will do with our faithfulness? It is not for us to say. Our command is, in the words of the Christian poet W.H. Auden, to 'stagger onward rejoicing.'