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Everybody's Normal Till You Get to Know Them |
List Price: $34.99
Your Price: $23.79 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating: Summary: Wonderful Analysis of Porcupine's Dilemma and Relationships Review: In this classic book the author Ortberg zooms on the things that make community tick. He elaborates in the chapter `Porcupine's Dilemma' "Community is the place God made us for. Community is the place where God meets us. Here is the rub : How to get close without getting hurt? How do you pursue this beautiful dream of community with actual, real-life people? Weird, not-normal, as-is, dysfunctional real life people? Your friends, colleagues, your children, your parents? Can it really happen?
The Hebrew prophets had a word for connectedness of all things : shalom - the webbing together of God, humans, and all creation in justice, fulfillment, and delight. The connectedness has also been called `reciprocal rootedness'.
The North American Common Porcupine is a member of the rodent family that has around 30,000 quills attached to his body. Each quill can be driven into an enemy, and the enemy's body heat will cause the microscopic barb to expand and become more firmly embedded. The wounds can fester; the more dangerous ones, affecting vital organs, can be fatal.
Ortberg analyzes the Porcupine's Dilemma : How do you get close without getting hurt? This is our dilemma too. Every one carries our own little arsenal. Our barbs have names like rejection, condemnation, resentment, arrogance, selfishness, envy, contempt. Some people hide them better then others, but get close enough and you will find out they are there. We, too, learn to survive through a combination of withdrawal and attack. We, too, find ourselves hurting (and being hurt by) those we long to be closest to. We try to figure out how to get close without getting hurt. We wonder if there is not a softer, less-barbed creature out there - a mink or an otter, perhaps. We can usually think of a number of particularly prickly porcupines in our lives. But the problem is not just them. I am somebody's porcupine. So are you.
This golden book is relevant to the current scenarios in most of the world. What we see in drive-by shootings and suicide bombings is only the ultimate working out of anger that is in all of our hearts. We get hurt and we want to hurt back. Little jihads (attacks) get fought every day between people who work together in the same office, between husband and wife, between parent and child. Hafrada is a word for separation and withdrawal. The Wall of the West Bank, The Berlin Wall and the Iron Curtain are expressions of the same impulse that causes all of us to withdraw and withhold ourselves. Sometimes the wall is a newspaper at a breakfast table that expresses and emotional distance that cannot be bridged.
Jihad and hafrada. Attack and withdrawal. These are the two essential forms of relational sin. We assault others when we act against what is good for them. This is true even if it happens with their consent - to give a whiskey to an alcoholic, for example. We withdraw from someone when we regard their well being as a matter of indifference to us. Attack and withdrawal are practiced by every human being on earth, and they damage every marriage and family and workplace and church. All our relational mismanagement is really a variation on these two tendencies of the fallen human heart. When we feel threatened, we want to hurt others or hide from them. We, too, head for a tree or stick out for quills. But there is a better way. Things do not have to be that way.
Miracle of miracles : Relationship does happen - even for porcupines. They learn to keep their barbs to themselves. They also figure out how to get long enough to make sure that another generation will come along. Males and females may remain together for some days before mating. They may touch paws and even walk on their hind feet in the so-called `dance of the porcupines.' It turns out there really is an answer to the ancient question, how do porcupines make love? They pull in their quills and learn to dance.
Hope you enjoyed the vivid analysis of the miracles called relationship in the light of Porcupine's dilemma presented by Ortberg. This chapter alone is sufficient for awarding a full five star rating for this book. It deserves thoughtful reading by all communities.
Rating: Summary: A few questions about this book... Review: Is this a typically well written, readable book by Ortberg? Yes! Does this book lope along, filled with good illustrations & interesting applications? Yes! Does this book present the realities, foibles, challenges, & deep rewards of developing strong, transparent community? Yes! Will this book mess with you? YES! Buy it, underline it, digest it, apply it.
Rating: Summary: The Title Is Everything! Review: Ortberg nails all of us with his title. There is no "normal" human being...we are all unique...Ortberg exposes the facade of normalcy that most all of us hide behind and, in so doing, makes hiding no longer necessary.
Rating: Summary: The Title Is Everything! Review: Ortberg nails all of us with his title. There is no "normal" human being...we are all unique...Ortberg exposes the facade of normalcy that most all of us hide behind and, in so doing, makes hiding no longer necessary.
Rating: Summary: The Title Is Everything! Review: Ortberg nails all of us with his title. There is no "normal" human being...we are all unique...Ortberg exposes the facade of normalcy that most all of us hide behind and, in so doing, makes hiding no longer necessary.
Rating: Summary: An Enjoyable Guide Into True Community Review: The title speaks to the fact that we all fall short of God's definition of "normal". Despite our flaws, imperfections, and dysfunctions, we still need each other. Ortberg compares it to porcupines learning to dance. Though we may stick one another from time to time, to fully live we must learn to experience community. The book looks at our need for each other, necessary elements for establishing community, and keys to building strong relationships. Ortberg does a masterful job of using vulnerability, wit, and reason to present a Biblical view of our need for community and the ways to achieve it. I highly recommend this enjoyable, instructive, and challenging book.
Rating: Summary: An Enjoyable Guide Into True Community Review: The title speaks to the fact that we all fall short of God's definition of "normal". Despite our flaws, imperfections, and dysfunctions, we still need each other. Ortberg compares it to porcupines learning to dance. Though we may stick one another from time to time, to fully live we must learn to experience community. The book looks at our need for each other, necessary elements for establishing community, and keys to building strong relationships. Ortberg does a masterful job of using vulnerability, wit, and reason to present a Biblical view of our need for community and the ways to achieve it. I highly recommend this enjoyable, instructive, and challenging book.
Rating: Summary: Great Resource for Small Groups Review: This book has been a tremendous tool for creating community within the small group that I am involved. The book has served a very practical tool for examining our motives, morals and hindrances to building community both within this group of 30 something and 40 something year old men both divorced and married. I think it should be the first book that new small groups should study because it will create a journey of fellowship and friendship that I did not think possible for men of any age.
Rating: Summary: A delightful little book! Review: This book is delightful and meaningful. Full of anecdotes and encouraging insights, John Ortberg has done it again!
Rating: Summary: All About Relationships & Community Review: This is my fourth Ortberg book and, as with the others, I am thoroughly pleased. Ortberg's easy writing style and wit make learning the deep truths he discusses fun. I find myself frequently sharing his insights with others. I lead the Caring and Sharing Ministry at our church and know his take on community and relationship topics such as anger, forgiveness, reconciliation, and the fact that we're all imperfect "as is" people will find their way into our Celebrate Recovery, Divorce Care, Healthy Boundaries, and Men's Issues support groups. Especially touching to me were his treatment of the accounts of the friends who lowered the crippled man through the roof to be healed by Jesus, the woman at the well, the woman caught in adultery, and the woman who washed Jesus' feet with her tears and anointed Him at Simon's home. His expositions of these narratives were really the highlights of this excellent book to me.
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