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Consuming Faith: Integrating Who We Are with What We Buy

Autor Tom Beaudoin
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 dec 2006
Americans search for identity through a stunning and paradoxical pair of passions: spirituality and consumerism. We participate in religion or practice spirituality on the one hand, and are keen consumers on the other. But, as Tom Beaudoin's Consuming Faith makes clear, if we truly seek to put our spirituality into practice, we are called to integrate who we are with what we buy.

In our consumer-driven culture what we buy, wear, eat, and drive say much about our deepest values. We buy the products that seem to meet our spiritual needs-they make us feel good, offer us experiences of community, tap into our deepest desires, form our imaginations, help us "fit in." But if we stop to think about how we are linked to the rest of the world through our purchases, we are faced with some tough questions: Where do these products come from? Who made them and in what conditions do they work? How does what I buy affect others? What does my faith have to do with what I buy? When is enough, enough? Today, it is more important than ever to pay attention to our economic spirituality.

Consuming Faith is an invitation to think about how our purchases affect who we are as individuals and as members of a global community. This breakthrough book offers practical ways that individuals, communities, and churches can practice a more intentional economic spirituality that integrates our values with what we buy.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781580512084
ISBN-10: 1580512089
Pagini: 121
Dimensiuni: 154 x 236 x 11 mm
Greutate: 0.21 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Sheed & Ward
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

1 Living in a Branded Culture
2 A Divine Economy
3 Today's Spiritual Discipline: The Brand Economy
4 Bodies and Branding
5 Economic Spirituality: Starting with the Body
6 The Challenge of Maturing Economic Spirituality
7 Appendix: On Reading Scripture

Recenzii

[Consuming Faith] may play a critical role in helping to shape the theological agenda...In an accessible style sure to have wide appeal, Tom Beaudoin argues for an economic spirituality. Beaudoin helps us understand how the modern economy shapes our imaginations and elicits our commitments.
Economic spirituality? Yes, of course. And now with Consuming Faith, we have an examination of conscience about what we wear, eat and watch. You'll never look at a logo in quite the same way again.
Consuming Faith has the great merit to offer paths towards a realistic spirituality for our consumer society-far from naiveté, moralizing, or demonizing. Tom Beaudoin's call for a responsible attitude in buying and consuming is rooted in his deep concern for the inalienable dignity of all human beings which transcends all economic categories. Although Beaudoin calls for a "spiritual indifference to numbers," I wish his new book a large sales success!
Over the past ten years, writers of faith have reengaged the ancient question of God and Mammon, what is owed God and what is owed to Rome. From Harvey Cox and Ron Sider, to Robert Wuthnow and Jim Wallis, the pressing questions are not only about the just distribution of income and wealth, but the impact of pervasive consumerism on human identity and relations. Tom Beaudoin has advanced that debate with a profound yet accessible reflection on our "branded" culture and the alternatives available to it. Consuming Faith invites us to live life anew, freed of the golden chains which hold so many prisoners. This is a timely, compelling book that deserves a wide audience and debate.
Mr. Beaudoin deals honestly with the nasty little secret behind the branding culture. Although Mr. Beaudoin is critical of the economic strategies corporations adopt to remain competitive, this is not an anti-corporation rant. It is a call to faithful living in North America.
A hard-hitting and ethically provocative book that deserves a wide-reading.
In an age of increasing globalization, where a purchase puts one in contact with people from China to El Salvador (a truly catholic experience), Consuming Faith calls us to a greater sense of awareness and responsibility as to what we buy and consume.
He does help the reader understand the theological and ethical issues involved in the disconnect between those who make the products and those who consume them.
Beaudoin's first book, Virtual Faith, alerted many readers to the 30-something Catholic's gift for language, appreciation of material culture's spiritual significance and theological acumen. In this book he turns his attention to a topic he confesses he had previously overlooked: the role of economics in the branded world in which young people live, move and have their being...Beaudoin has once again put an understudied topic on the Christian agenda.
The author makes an irrefutable case for how economic choices are part of everyday spirituality.
This book must be read by those who work with anyone 18 to 38 years old, anyone who has been raised in a branded culture like ours.
Beaudoin seems to be finding his own true voice in some of these pages.
Consuming Faith is a provocative look into the role that definitive faith can and should play in the realm of finances and consumerism.