1. Target
  2. Movies, Music & Books
  3. Books
  4. Non-Fiction

Teach Us to Want - by Jen Pollock Michel (Paperback)

Teach Us to Want - by  Jen Pollock Michel (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 18.00 USD

Similar Products

Products of same category from the store

All

Product info

<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p>Isn't desire sinful and selfish? The story of each person is a story of want--desires unmet, hopes dashed, passions pursued and ambitions fulfilled. Jen Pollock Michel guides us on a journey that reintroduces us to a God who purifies our longings and gives us the desires of our hearts.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><ul> <li>Logos Bookstores' 2015 Best Book in Spirituality/Devotional</li> <li>2015 <em>Christianity Today</em> Book of the Year</li> <li>Honorable Mention, 2014 Best Book of the Year from Byron Borger, Hearts and Minds Bookstore</li> </ul><p>As Christians, we're squeamish about desire. Isn't wanting sinful and selfish? Aren't we supposed to find and follow God's will rather than insisting upon our own? The story of each person is a story of want--desires unmet, hopes dashed, passions pursued and ambitions fulfilled. Our wants cannot be ignored. But when desire is informed by Scripture and re-formed by our spiritual practices, it can root us more deeply in the fundamental belief that God is good and generous and can invite us into active kingdom participation. Jen Pollock Michel guides us on a journey of understanding who we are when we want, and reintroduces us to a God who gives us the desires of our hearts. That same good God calls us into a new reality in which we seek first his kingdom and righteousness, and we discover our disordered desires burned away while our truest longings are happily fulfilled and purified. The disciples asked Jesus to Teach us to pray. This book asks, Teach us to want.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>'Lead me not into ambition, ' I have prayed, sideways, with the weight of ambition on my shoulders. Who has not wrestled with the tensions between what we desire and what (we think) God desires? Michel has brilliantly lit a way through our own dark, tangled brambles. I've been waiting for this book for a long time.</p>--Leslie Leyland Fields, author of Forgiving Our Fathers and Mothers<br><br><p>'Desire is primal: to be human is to want, ' writes Jen Pollock Michel in the opening chapter of her praiseworthy new book <em>Teach Us to Want</em>. Certainly this is not new information, but in this compelling book that masterfully interweaves juicy personal narrative, scholarly research, and solid biblical exegesis, Michel builds a case for the importance of examining desire's many facets: 'Desire is the powerful subtext of our lives. It determines decisions. This is why we need to pay attention to it.' With grace and humor, she bravely bares her own stories of struggle with wanting and loss, hope and doubt. Her vulnerability elicits the reader's trust. Here is a worthy and compassionate guide to join on this important journey; Michel helps us distinguish between <em>What do I want?</em> and <em>What does God want for me?</em> Using the Lord's Prayer as a rubric to frame our naked wanting, the reader is invited to consider Jesus' language of prayer as a way of realigning our hearts with God's purposes and priorities. These 'are words we pray, not always because we believe them but because we want to believe them.' Our desires, though warped by our sin, have been placed in us by God, and it is <em>his</em> desire to recalibrate our hearts for the glory of his kingdom. Though it would be easy to float off in many divergent theoretical theological directions, the book stays grounded through relatable stories and practical application. . . . This is the kind of book you set down not because it has lost your interest, but because you need time to soak in its profound intricacy.</p>--Aleah Marsden, Books Culture, August 2014<br><br><p>In <em>Teach Us to Want</em>, Toronto-based writer Jen Pollock Michel challenges conventional Christian notions about heeding desire. She helps us understand that what we want isn't our enemy, but can be one of God's most powerful tools for shaping and directing us. We might easily think of desire as all bad, but Michel argues that desire, rightly understood, should be followed.</p>--Laura Turner, Christianity Today, July/August 2014<br><br><p>In her debut book, Jen Pollock Michel offers a meditation on what it means to walk the line between dismissing our desires as evil and abandoning ourselves to them. The book's mix of narrative and biblical reflection nudges us into deeper contemplation of our desires, God and the ends toward which our desires are driving us.</p>--Relevant Magazine, September-October 2014<br><br><p>Jen Pollock Michel's latest book, <em>Teach Us to Want</em>, reflects on the Lord's Prayer as a way of knowing our desires. . . . This title guides women in understanding that when their desire is informed by Scripture and reformed by spiritual practices, it can invite them into active kingdom participation.</p>--CBA Retailers + Resources, August 2014<br><br><p>Most of us have wanted something at some point in life. Some of us live with a deep void in our souls that never seems to be filled. How do we live with such desires? How do we respond to the emotions brought on by longing and wanting? With raw honesty and a scriptural foundation, Michel shows that our desires have a place in the journey of faith.</p>--Courtney Reissig, Christianity Today's 2015 Book Awards (Book of the Year), January/February 2015<br><br><p>Probably the best praise for a book is the difference it makes in your own life. Michel makes a case for praying honestly: not self-editing as we go because we know perfectly well that many of our prayers are illegitimate, but just letting it come out because it behooves us to know what's in our own hearts. So I tried it and was surprised at some of what surfaced. God had never been fooled by my careful petitions, but I had been. I will try it again, and often. We don't always get what we want. And we don't always want what we get. Michel's book is a kindly, accessible guide to sorting through those realities in a Christian perspective.</p>--Sarah Wilson, Lutheran Forum, April 8, 2015<br><br><p>This is an important and enjoyable work. In the end, Michel shows that desires are a divine gift--corrupted by sin, to be sure, but to be embraced as we seek their transformation by grace. Especially for those who consider happiness and holiness at odds, Michel wants to prove they have been friends all along. This is a book for anyone looking for an enjoyable and insightful read on a nuanced perspective of our desires and longings.</p>--Drew Hunter, Themelios, April 2016<br>

Price History