Description

Book Synopsis

Commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Shalem Institute, this collection of experiential and academic essays offers modern contemplative reflections from new and renowned voices in spiritual leadership.

Founded in 1973 by the Rev. Dr. Tilden H. Edwards, Jr., Shalem Institute for Spiritual Formation offers retreats, workshops, and groups centered around contemplative spirituality. The culmination of half a century of charitable ministry, this commemorative anthology features essays written by Shalem graduates, as well as current and former board members and program directors. Its release will coincide with the Shalem Institute’s 50th anniversary.

Co-edited by Shalem graduate and board member Westina Matthews, Shalem’s Executive Director Margaret Benefiel, and Jackson Droney, Shalem’s Director of Operations and Online Learning, Soul Food takes an inclusive and contemporary approach to contemplative living and leadership. Designed in alignment with Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion initiatives, this vital book spotlights authors of different ethnicities, faith backgrounds, and gender identities, while consistently centering the development of day-to-day practices designed to deepen engagement with the divine. With essays from notable contributors from Shalem's past and present, such as Tilden Edwards, the institute's founder and former director; Gay Byron, Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at Howard University; and Carl McColman, well-known Christian mystic and spiritual director, this collection looks to the future, set to serve as an invaluable resource in spiritual formation for the next 50 years, and beyond.



Trade Review

“Established by Tilden Edwards those many years ago, the Shalem Institute has continued to offer a safe space for diverse individuals to engage with the sacred and restore the divine image of an abundant, loving God. An illuminating addition to any spiritual library, Soul Food is a testament to the institute’s rich history and commitment to transformative spiritual growth.” – Fr. Richard Rohr, author of Falling Upward and founder of the Center for Action and Contemplation

“Exploring numerous rich perspectives on contemporary Christianity—from gender identity and theological languaging to issues of recovery, welcome and inclusion, decolonization, and social action, among others—the authors are unafraid to tackle new perspectives, all the while staying firmly rooted in the core of their faith. Anyone interested in immersing themselves in these topics will be well served here.” –Rev. SeiFu Singh-Molares, Executive Director, Spiritual Directors International

"This celebratory volume for the Shalem Institute is less commemorative than exuberant. It marks a rich history of leadership in spiritual formation by offering challenging and visionary reflection on the future of contemplation. The feast offered is varied, rich, and engaging—some of it stimulating, some soothing, all providing much-needed nourishment that defies ready categorization, except for its quality. This is a further gift to all who have benefitted from the work of Shalem, and all who should." —The Very Rev. Dr. Andrew McGowan, Dean and President, Berkeley Divinity School, McFaddin Professor of Anglican Studies, Yale Divinity School

"For fifty years, the Shalem Institute has fostered contemplative living and leadership. I'm one of tens of thousands of people who've admired and benefited from its work. Today, in a "post-truth" world, contemplation is crucial. It gives us the tools to penetrate the cultural illusions that divide us, and stay in touch with the love that has always made us one. With this book, Shalem sets forth a radical agenda for the next fifty years where we must do all we can to bend the arc of the moral universe toward love, truth, and justice. If you have any affinity for the contemplative life, you'll find this book a compelling companion as we work and pray for the Beloved Community." —Parker J. Palmer, author of Let Your Life Speak, The Courage to Teach, and On the Brink of Everything

"This book is a spiritual gamechanger. Soul Food demonstrates that the life of prayer and contemplation is never detached from the urgent issues of the day, reminding us that the foundation of the spiritual life is all about contemplation and leadership. These essays will make you pray, think, see, act, and live differently. Their voices are the tongues of fire calling us into a new experience of Pentecost and sacred living." —The Rev. Dr. Mark Francisco Bozzuti-Jones, Priest and Director of Spiritual Formation at Trinity Retreat Center and author of Absalom Jones and Face to the Rising Sun

"Fifty years ago, the year Nixon was sworn in for his second term as President, awe was a rarely used word. The disastrous course of world events, since then, shows Tilden Edwards’ wise foresight in founding Shalem as a place of awe. Today, if there is one word that says what our human family most urgently needs to recover, awe is that word. Experiencing awe makes us one. Awe is the magic wand that can transform I-thinking into We-thinking and rescue us from self-destruction. That Soul Food devotes so much space to awe honors Shalem’s finest tradition and makes it a most timely book of hope for the world." —Br. David Steindl-Rast, Benedictine monk, author, and co-founder of Grateful Living

"Soul Food is a worthy guide for those who seek to walk in the light and share that light with others. Thoughtful and engaging on many levels, it is indeed a nourishing book." —Sophfronia Scott, author of The Seeker and the Monk: Everyday Conversations with Thomas Merton

"For an everyday, this-worldly perspective on contemplative life and leadership, read Soul Food. Any one of the essays will be worth the whole book."—Keith Kristich, Meditation Teacher and Founder of the online, interspiritual community Closer Than Breath

"Soul Food is a feast! An inclusive collection brimming with nourishing essays honestly exploring the ways to be a loving human in an inhuman system, Soul Food features a community of contemplative authors compassionately addressing the ailments of our society. Their work offers us new wineskins of openheartedness, which can help us create a larger table where everyone is invited to sit and have plenty.

Grounded in silence, this welcoming book of healing words provides readers with vibrant poetry, thought-provoking essays, and experiential activities. From its opening reflection on gender as “profound mystery” and on gendered pronouns and their relationship to our image and view of God, to its explorations of what Martin Luther King Jr. named our “inescapable network of mutuality,” this collection celebrates Divine Diversity. It invites all to savor Love, “the {Ancient} New,” and it gives us contemplative ways to do that in a world of collective and personal trauma.

These essays present accessible, embodied paths back to our interconnectedness with the earth, each other, and all creatures—the “all my relations” of Native American prayers, as one author reminds us. This wise book speaks directly to the very human needs of our times, and it feeds us all, every one." —Dr. Carmen Acevedo Butcher, poet and translator of Br. Lawrence’s Practice of the Presence and The Cloud of Unknowing



Table of Contents

Foreword

Valerie Brown

A Note from the Founder

Tilden Edwards

Introduction

Westina Matthews, Margaret Benefiel, and Jackson Droney

Led by Starlight Down a Marvelous Road

Winston Breeden Charles

Part 1: Welcoming and Belonging

God's Pronouns: A New Translation of a Mystical Classic Invites Us Into the Beautiful Mystery of Gender

Carl McColman

Listening for the Holy

Sarah Forti

Contemplative Collegiality: Caring for the Souls of Black Biblical Scholars

Gay L. Byron

Toward a Decolonised Spiritual Direction Practice: Weeping, Gnashing Teeth, and Opening to the (Ancient) New

Althea Banda-Hansmann

I Am

Joanne Youn

Tell Me about Mary's Rage

Amanda Lindamood

To Heal What Ails Us: Belonging through Group Spiritual Direction

Melanie Dobson

Part 2: Holy Awe

A Thousand Paths to Contemplation

Westina Matthews

Seeing with the Eyes of the Heart: Social Justice and the Art of Spiritual Guidance

Phillip Stephens

Coming to Our Senses: Embracing Wonder and Gratitude

Leah Moran Rampy

Embodying Contemplative Leadership: Howard Thurman and Feeding the Timeless Hunger of the Human Spirit

Lerita Coleman Brown

Considerations of Recovery, Centering Prayer, and Social Justice Action

Anita-Yvonne (AY) Bryant

What Your Tender Heart Knows

Marcelle Martin

Embodied Contemplation of Deep Time: Resourcing for Spiritual Resilience

Kolya Braun-Greiner

A Contemplative View of Resilient Aging

Elaine Voci

Summer Day of the Owls

DanaLee Simon

Contributors

Vision Statement 2025

Acknowledgements

Soul Food: Nourishing Essays on Contemplative

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    A Paperback / softback by Westina Matthews, Margaret Benefiel, Jackson Droney

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      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Soul Food: Nourishing Essays on Contemplative by Westina Matthews

      Publisher: Church Publishing Inc
      Publication Date: 05/10/2023
      ISBN13: 9781640656345, 978-1640656345
      ISBN10: 1640656340

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Shalem Institute, this collection of experiential and academic essays offers modern contemplative reflections from new and renowned voices in spiritual leadership.

      Founded in 1973 by the Rev. Dr. Tilden H. Edwards, Jr., Shalem Institute for Spiritual Formation offers retreats, workshops, and groups centered around contemplative spirituality. The culmination of half a century of charitable ministry, this commemorative anthology features essays written by Shalem graduates, as well as current and former board members and program directors. Its release will coincide with the Shalem Institute’s 50th anniversary.

      Co-edited by Shalem graduate and board member Westina Matthews, Shalem’s Executive Director Margaret Benefiel, and Jackson Droney, Shalem’s Director of Operations and Online Learning, Soul Food takes an inclusive and contemporary approach to contemplative living and leadership. Designed in alignment with Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion initiatives, this vital book spotlights authors of different ethnicities, faith backgrounds, and gender identities, while consistently centering the development of day-to-day practices designed to deepen engagement with the divine. With essays from notable contributors from Shalem's past and present, such as Tilden Edwards, the institute's founder and former director; Gay Byron, Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at Howard University; and Carl McColman, well-known Christian mystic and spiritual director, this collection looks to the future, set to serve as an invaluable resource in spiritual formation for the next 50 years, and beyond.



      Trade Review

      “Established by Tilden Edwards those many years ago, the Shalem Institute has continued to offer a safe space for diverse individuals to engage with the sacred and restore the divine image of an abundant, loving God. An illuminating addition to any spiritual library, Soul Food is a testament to the institute’s rich history and commitment to transformative spiritual growth.” – Fr. Richard Rohr, author of Falling Upward and founder of the Center for Action and Contemplation

      “Exploring numerous rich perspectives on contemporary Christianity—from gender identity and theological languaging to issues of recovery, welcome and inclusion, decolonization, and social action, among others—the authors are unafraid to tackle new perspectives, all the while staying firmly rooted in the core of their faith. Anyone interested in immersing themselves in these topics will be well served here.” –Rev. SeiFu Singh-Molares, Executive Director, Spiritual Directors International

      "This celebratory volume for the Shalem Institute is less commemorative than exuberant. It marks a rich history of leadership in spiritual formation by offering challenging and visionary reflection on the future of contemplation. The feast offered is varied, rich, and engaging—some of it stimulating, some soothing, all providing much-needed nourishment that defies ready categorization, except for its quality. This is a further gift to all who have benefitted from the work of Shalem, and all who should." —The Very Rev. Dr. Andrew McGowan, Dean and President, Berkeley Divinity School, McFaddin Professor of Anglican Studies, Yale Divinity School

      "For fifty years, the Shalem Institute has fostered contemplative living and leadership. I'm one of tens of thousands of people who've admired and benefited from its work. Today, in a "post-truth" world, contemplation is crucial. It gives us the tools to penetrate the cultural illusions that divide us, and stay in touch with the love that has always made us one. With this book, Shalem sets forth a radical agenda for the next fifty years where we must do all we can to bend the arc of the moral universe toward love, truth, and justice. If you have any affinity for the contemplative life, you'll find this book a compelling companion as we work and pray for the Beloved Community." —Parker J. Palmer, author of Let Your Life Speak, The Courage to Teach, and On the Brink of Everything

      "This book is a spiritual gamechanger. Soul Food demonstrates that the life of prayer and contemplation is never detached from the urgent issues of the day, reminding us that the foundation of the spiritual life is all about contemplation and leadership. These essays will make you pray, think, see, act, and live differently. Their voices are the tongues of fire calling us into a new experience of Pentecost and sacred living." —The Rev. Dr. Mark Francisco Bozzuti-Jones, Priest and Director of Spiritual Formation at Trinity Retreat Center and author of Absalom Jones and Face to the Rising Sun

      "Fifty years ago, the year Nixon was sworn in for his second term as President, awe was a rarely used word. The disastrous course of world events, since then, shows Tilden Edwards’ wise foresight in founding Shalem as a place of awe. Today, if there is one word that says what our human family most urgently needs to recover, awe is that word. Experiencing awe makes us one. Awe is the magic wand that can transform I-thinking into We-thinking and rescue us from self-destruction. That Soul Food devotes so much space to awe honors Shalem’s finest tradition and makes it a most timely book of hope for the world." —Br. David Steindl-Rast, Benedictine monk, author, and co-founder of Grateful Living

      "Soul Food is a worthy guide for those who seek to walk in the light and share that light with others. Thoughtful and engaging on many levels, it is indeed a nourishing book." —Sophfronia Scott, author of The Seeker and the Monk: Everyday Conversations with Thomas Merton

      "For an everyday, this-worldly perspective on contemplative life and leadership, read Soul Food. Any one of the essays will be worth the whole book."—Keith Kristich, Meditation Teacher and Founder of the online, interspiritual community Closer Than Breath

      "Soul Food is a feast! An inclusive collection brimming with nourishing essays honestly exploring the ways to be a loving human in an inhuman system, Soul Food features a community of contemplative authors compassionately addressing the ailments of our society. Their work offers us new wineskins of openheartedness, which can help us create a larger table where everyone is invited to sit and have plenty.

      Grounded in silence, this welcoming book of healing words provides readers with vibrant poetry, thought-provoking essays, and experiential activities. From its opening reflection on gender as “profound mystery” and on gendered pronouns and their relationship to our image and view of God, to its explorations of what Martin Luther King Jr. named our “inescapable network of mutuality,” this collection celebrates Divine Diversity. It invites all to savor Love, “the {Ancient} New,” and it gives us contemplative ways to do that in a world of collective and personal trauma.

      These essays present accessible, embodied paths back to our interconnectedness with the earth, each other, and all creatures—the “all my relations” of Native American prayers, as one author reminds us. This wise book speaks directly to the very human needs of our times, and it feeds us all, every one." —Dr. Carmen Acevedo Butcher, poet and translator of Br. Lawrence’s Practice of the Presence and The Cloud of Unknowing



      Table of Contents

      Foreword

      Valerie Brown

      A Note from the Founder

      Tilden Edwards

      Introduction

      Westina Matthews, Margaret Benefiel, and Jackson Droney

      Led by Starlight Down a Marvelous Road

      Winston Breeden Charles

      Part 1: Welcoming and Belonging

      God's Pronouns: A New Translation of a Mystical Classic Invites Us Into the Beautiful Mystery of Gender

      Carl McColman

      Listening for the Holy

      Sarah Forti

      Contemplative Collegiality: Caring for the Souls of Black Biblical Scholars

      Gay L. Byron

      Toward a Decolonised Spiritual Direction Practice: Weeping, Gnashing Teeth, and Opening to the (Ancient) New

      Althea Banda-Hansmann

      I Am

      Joanne Youn

      Tell Me about Mary's Rage

      Amanda Lindamood

      To Heal What Ails Us: Belonging through Group Spiritual Direction

      Melanie Dobson

      Part 2: Holy Awe

      A Thousand Paths to Contemplation

      Westina Matthews

      Seeing with the Eyes of the Heart: Social Justice and the Art of Spiritual Guidance

      Phillip Stephens

      Coming to Our Senses: Embracing Wonder and Gratitude

      Leah Moran Rampy

      Embodying Contemplative Leadership: Howard Thurman and Feeding the Timeless Hunger of the Human Spirit

      Lerita Coleman Brown

      Considerations of Recovery, Centering Prayer, and Social Justice Action

      Anita-Yvonne (AY) Bryant

      What Your Tender Heart Knows

      Marcelle Martin

      Embodied Contemplation of Deep Time: Resourcing for Spiritual Resilience

      Kolya Braun-Greiner

      A Contemplative View of Resilient Aging

      Elaine Voci

      Summer Day of the Owls

      DanaLee Simon

      Contributors

      Vision Statement 2025

      Acknowledgements

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