Status Updates From The Prodigal Prophet
The Prodigal Prophet by
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Allison Kohn
is 77% done
This book makes me want to read on forever and I am relating so much of it to my own journey. I can see, in retrospect, from reading this, how god was working through some bad choices of mine to get me where he wanted me. I would have to recommend it to anyone interested in psychology or having a love affair with their creator. That covers a large area.
— Sep 07, 2013 04:34PM
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Allison Kohn
is 50% done
This gets better as I read it. On one page he says,"Maybe this is what salvation was suppose to be all along...not a set of beliefs or practices but a wild love affair..." He's sure right about that. Reading this is a real pleasure.
— Sep 07, 2013 12:11PM
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Allison Kohn
is 15% done
I am having a lot of empathy for this guy and kind of mesmerized by the book. It is a well written and well edited book too. I think you would like it.
— Sep 05, 2013 05:44PM
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Mark
is 60% done
God may direct us into fellowship among those with whom we may disagree on many points. God can use this to teach us more about ourselves and the world around us through the differences we see and experience, and our eyes can be opened to a broader picture. The differences can highlight problems as well as areas of minutiae that really don't matter in the big picture.
— Feb 18, 2013 12:28PM
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Mark
is 50% done
A couple chapters describing events where God slowly breaks through resistance, sometimes in dramatic fashion, to get Dylan's attention. Dylan attends events that naturally arouse his suspicions based on former abusive experiences, but God is able to work through and even apart from the content of the messages of the events. The message may be far less important than the act of opening up to receive God.
— Feb 17, 2013 11:47PM
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Mark
is 37% done
A brief summary of Girardian (c.f.,René Girard) mimetic theory and its manifestation within religious systems. We have a tendency to idealize strong and charismatic spiritual leaders and seek to become like them. As we do they subconsciously begin to see us as rivals and they seek to place distance. We sense disapproval and try even harder. Cycle continues until we are scapegoated and pushed out.
— Feb 17, 2013 03:50PM
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Mark
is 22% done
Fear of disapproval by those we consider to be out spiritual superiors can compromise rational thinking and place us into spiritual abuse.
— Feb 17, 2013 03:11PM
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Mark
is 19% done
It is easy to fall into spiritual abuse without even realizing it is happening. We have spiritual egos that want to be stoked. Popularity, prestige, acclamation, invitation to serve a well known leader, etc. all can be means of stoking our spiritual egos. In return we allow these things and people to control us, often leading to abuse. Even so, God still works through such dysfunctional systems and beings.
— Feb 17, 2013 02:37PM
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Mark
is 10% done
Comedic vignettes of the author's encounters during his earlier years with various religious groups and denominations.
— Feb 12, 2013 11:48PM
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