Home :: Books :: Christianity  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity

Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Swallow's Nest: A Feminine Reading of the Psalms

The Swallow's Nest: A Feminine Reading of the Psalms

List Price: $19.00
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Refreshing
Review: As an expectant mother, I found it very comforting. It felt great to look at God as a woman and mother. It also made my relationship with God closer knowing that he cares for me as I care for my child.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Help in getting that God-is-a-man picture out of your mind
Review: Have you ever wanted to pray using the Psalms--but found that their language assumes a male reader?

Let's face it, from Psalm 1, verse 1 --"Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked"--they seem to be male-oriented.

This book is widely used by thousands of Roman Catholic nuns as well as by laywomen, including evangelicals,more liberal Protestants, and Catholics--any woman of faith who wants to pray the Psalms from the heart and finds it easier to do so in a more feminine context.

The author is an ordained Presbyterian pastor who grew up in the Christian Reformed Church, which does not ordain women. She has close ties with Dominican sisters and others.

Her version of Psalm 1, verse one, reads, "Blessed is the woman who ignores the advice of the wicked...." She calls her book "A Feminine Reading of the Psalms"--not a translation.

For each psalm she provides a one-sentence possible context to relate to our lives today. For example, she says for Psalm 141, "This might be the prayer of an inner-city girl struggling to resist the pressure to join a gang of drug dealers." With some context, it is easier to respond to a psalm that speaks about enemies or great suffering.

Marty Rienstra takes all 150 Psalms and divides up them up to be read 3-4 per day, in a cycle of four weeks per month, to be started again each month. Each day of the week has a theme--Sunday,"worshipping God our Savior"; Monday, "hoping in God our future"; Tuesday, "seeking God's wisdom"; Wednesday, "trusting in God our refuge"; Thursday "crying out to God for justice"; Friday, "confession and lamentation before God," and Saturday, "praising God the Creator."

She lays out the psalms for each day in three groups as a morning prayer time, midday prayer time, and evening prayer time. Each has an opening, hymn, suggested reading, short prayer, and benediction along with a psalm or two.

She also provides prayers and quotations from great women and men in church history, such as Hildegard of Bingen and Julian of Norwich.

I have been praying with this book since it came out in 1992, and I bought one for each of my daughters and many other friends. I know you will like it too...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Help in getting that God-is-a-man picture out of your mind
Review: Have you ever wanted to pray using the Psalms--but found that their language assumes a male reader?

Let's face it, from Psalm 1, verse 1 --"Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked"--they seem to be male-oriented.

This book is widely used by thousands of Roman Catholic nuns as well as by laywomen, including evangelicals,more liberal Protestants, and Catholics--any woman of faith who wants to pray the Psalms from the heart and finds it easier to do so in a more feminine context.

The author is an ordained Presbyterian pastor who grew up in the Christian Reformed Church, which does not ordain women. She has close ties with Dominican sisters and others.

Her version of Psalm 1, verse one, reads, "Blessed is the woman who ignores the advice of the wicked...." She calls her book "A Feminine Reading of the Psalms"--not a translation.

For each psalm she provides a one-sentence possible context to relate to our lives today. For example, she says for Psalm 141, "This might be the prayer of an inner-city girl struggling to resist the pressure to join a gang of drug dealers." With some context, it is easier to respond to a psalm that speaks about enemies or great suffering.

Marty Rienstra takes all 150 Psalms and divides up them up to be read 3-4 per day, in a cycle of four weeks per month, to be started again each month. Each day of the week has a theme--Sunday,"worshipping God our Savior"; Monday, "hoping in God our future"; Tuesday, "seeking God's wisdom"; Wednesday, "trusting in God our refuge"; Thursday "crying out to God for justice"; Friday, "confession and lamentation before God," and Saturday, "praising God the Creator."

She lays out the psalms for each day in three groups as a morning prayer time, midday prayer time, and evening prayer time. Each has an opening, hymn, suggested reading, short prayer, and benediction along with a psalm or two.

She also provides prayers and quotations from great women and men in church history, such as Hildegard of Bingen and Julian of Norwich.

I have been praying with this book since it came out in 1992, and I bought one for each of my daughters and many other friends. I know you will like it too...


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates