A Long Way from Tipperary: What a Former Monk Discovered in His Search for the Truth
John Dominic Crossan  
A Long Way from Tipperary: What a Former Monk Discovered in His Search for the Truth Image Cover
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Publisher:HarperOne
Genre:Biographies & Memoirs
Pages:240
ASIN:0060699744
ISBN:9780060699741
Dewey:220.092
Format:Hardcover
Edition:1st
Release:2000-07-01
Dimensions:0.91 x 8.58 x 5.82 in
Date Added:2009-11-26
Price:$23.00
Rating:4.0 (20 votes)
Summary: "If people have had enough chicken soup for the soul, how about some Irish stew for the mind?" asks John Dominic Crossan in the introduction to his meaty new memoir, "A Long Way from Tipperary: What a Former Irish Monk Discovered in His Search for the Truth". Crossan burst into the public eye in 1991 with the publication of his bestselling "The Historical Jesus: The Life of a Mediterranean Jewish Peasant". In this and subsequent books, Crossan's historical research has demonstrated the follies of both secularist denial and fundamentalist distortions of Jesus' significance. "Tipperary" is Crossan's memoir of the ways in which his personal experience "from Ireland to America, from priest to professor, from monastery to university, and ... from celibacy to marriage" have influenced his evolving understanding of who Jesus was. Crossan's struggle has always been to find a way of understanding Jesus that engages "both reason "and" revelation, both history "and" faith, both mind "and" heart." Here is his description of his ideal readers: They are ... dissatisfied, disappointed, or even disgusted with classical Christianity and their denominational tradition. They hold on with anger or leave with nostalgia, but are not happy with either decision. They do not want to invent or join a new age, but to reclaim and redeem an ancient one. They do not want to settle for a generic-brand religion, but to rediscover their own specific and particular roots. But they know now that those roots must be in a renewed Christianity whose validity does not reject every other religion's integrity, a renewed Christianity that has purged itself of rationalism, fundamentalism, and literalism, whether of book, tradition, community, or leader. Those who recognize themselves in this passage will find hope and courage in Crossan's book. "--Michael Joseph Gross"