<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p>Home is our most fundamental human longing. Jen Pollock Michel connects that desire with the story of the Bible, revealing a homemaking God with wide arms of welcome--and a church commissioned with this same work. <em>Keeping Place</em> offers hope to the wanderer, help to the stranded, and a new vision of what it means to live today longing for our eternal home.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p> <strong>To be human is to long for home.</strong> Home is our most fundamental human longing. And for many of us homesickness is a nagging place of grief. This book connects that desire and disappointment with the story of the Bible, helping us to see that there is a homemaking God with wide arms of welcome--and a church commissioned with this same work. Many of us seem to be recovering the sacred, if ordinary, beauty of place, writes author Jen Pollock Michel. Perhaps we're reading along with Wendell Berry, falling in love with Berry's small-town barber and Jayber Crow's small-town life. . . . Or maybe we're simply reading our Bibles better, discovering that while we might wish to flatten Scripture to serve our didactic purposes, it rises up in flesh and sinew, muscle and bone: God's holy story is written in the lives of people and their places. Including a five-session discussion guide and paired with a companion DVD, <em>Keeping Place</em> offers hope to the wanderer, help to the stranded, and a new vision of what it means to live today with our longings for our eternal home.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><em>Keeping Place</em> weaves together a wide range of materials and supports, drawing from history, cultural studies, literature, and the Bible. It discusses crossing borders, immigration, and mobility, and considers each topic through the author's personal vignettes and published reports of other individuals' stories. All this theory wraps up in the book's second half, which includes a dash of do-it-yourself to help turn its big ideas into reality. While theory often sounds better that its iterations in lived reality, <em>Keeping Place</em> is cognizant of offering practices and ideas for truly building a better home. It considers the importance of neighbors, church, love, and marriage, among other aspects. There is a place for this book in the heart of a world so divided along national and international lines. <em>Keeping Place</em> stands ready to offer alternative sites within a world that often feels divided--places where home really matters, with the idea that everyone is welcome to find their own place.</p>--Jeremiah Rood, Foreword Reviews, May/June 2017<br><br><p>Michel (<em>Teach Us to Want</em>), contributor for <em>Christianity Today</em> and <em>Today in the Word</em>, mixes theology and real-life scenarios to create a homey place of reflection. . . . Readers will appreciate Michel's section on doing work at home, which explores the ins and outs of daily life and how every bit of work helps to create a welcoming, comforting environment. Her examples are all engrossing and rich with parallels between biblical characters and today's hectic lifestyles.</p>--Publishers Weekly, March 13, 2017<br><br><p>This is a biblical theology, personal and personable, for those who might not think they can handle theology. It asks us to listen closely, to discern how our lives respond to God's homeward call.</p>--Matthew Forrest Lowe, Faith Today, May/June 2017<br><br><p>This well-researched title offers profound insights and makes connections most laypeople wouldn't. The author's extensive knowledge of Scripture is evident, and she strikes a readable balance of personal and historical anecdotes, biblical references, and thoughtful reflection.</p>--Christy Pitney, Christian Market, May 2017<br><br><p>Through Scripture and story--hers as well as those from an array of sources--she shows how understanding the desire for home provides opportunities to fulfill the work of the church and reflect God's hospitality.</p>--Linda Sladkey, Covenant Companion, July/August 2017<br><br><p>Well-researched, firmly grounded in a variety of disciplines; personal, yet universal in its themes and queries, <em>Keeping Place: Reflections on the Meaning of Home</em>, is a suitable companion for the journey of spiritual growth and meaning making that is at the heart of being human. Jen Pollock Michel's writing is clear and engaging and her tone warm and genuine. I highly recommend this book to anyone encountering their own questions about what it means to be at home--in a place, in a church, or in your soul.</p>--Pam Kittredge, Englewood Review of Books, Eastertide 2017<br>
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