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E-raamat: What Grows in Weary Lands: On Christian Resilience

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: Ebury Vine
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781529989724
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 14,99 €*
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  • See e-raamat ei ole veel ilmunud. Saate seda tellida alles alates: 14-May-2026
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  • See e-raamat on mõeldud ainult isiklikuks kasutamiseks. E-raamatuid ei saa tagastada.
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: Ebury Vine
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781529989724

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From the award-winning author and former New York Times opinion writer and columnist comes a fresh vision for navigating burnout and weariness through ancient Christian practices

'Honest, wise and persistent in imagination, this is a book to refresh the seasoned spiritual traveler. A beautifully crafted weave of both resilience and wonder' Martin Shaw, author of Liturgies of the Wild

How do we cultivate faith that endures?

Early Christians often grappled with a reality we rarely talk about in contemporary life: that God seems to abandon the soul at times, leaving us feeling as if we are alone and left to our own resources. For centuries, times of 'aridity' were seen as necessary prerequisites for growth and maturity. Yet in our culture fixated on speed and optimisation, we risk losing this deeper sense of the human journey and the resilience that comes with it.

Drawing from her own season of exhaustion and also from the rich well of Christian tradition particularly the earliest Christian monks Warren explores the habits and mindsets that anchor us through doubt, difficulty and spiritual dryness. She helps us see that nothing is wasted that, even in desert seasons, something good is growing, rooted in grace and reaching toward glory.

What Grows in Weary Lands speaks to anyone longing for a life of depth in a distracted age and guides us toward lives of resilience, renewal and flourishing.

Ebury Vine: The Home Of Christian Living. Drawing on the deep roots of Christianity to cultivate curious minds and inspire faith-informed growth.

Arvustused

Warren is one of our best living spiritual writers; her ability to blend Christian spirituality and insights from church history with beautifully down-to-earth honesty and raw humor, all while keeping our soul hopeful in God, is a rare gift. It would be impossible to overstate how warmly I recommend this book to all, but especially to the weary and heavy laden of the kingdom. * John Mark Comer, New York Times bestselling author of Practicing the Way and The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry * Tish Harrison Warren has written the book we need in this time as believers, as neighbors, and as men and women navigating the modern world. * Annie F. Downs, New York Times bestselling author of That Sounds Fun * I have loved all of Tish Harrison Warrens books, but I may have a new favorite. What Grows in Weary Lands is a rich application of ancient monastic wisdom to the burnout tendencies of modern life. You need to read it. * Justin Whitmel Earley, author of Habits of the Household and The Body Teaches the Soul * What Grows in Weary Lands is the book I needed to read to refresh my soul and invigorate my faith. If you are looking for a way of being Christian when you feel like you are at the end of your rope, this is the book for you. Warren is one of the best spiritual writers of our day, and this may be her best work to date. * Esau McCaulley, Phd, professor at Wheaton College * What I love about Tish Harrison Warrens writing is her clarity about both desolation and consolationher honesty and her hope. Read this book if you have discovered that you do not get through life without going through a desert; read this book to discover that the desert brings a kind of life you cannot find anywhere else. * Andy Crouch, partner for theology and culture, Praxis, and author of The Life Were Looking For * This book is too good simply to be readit must be conversed with. Warren writes in such a way that oftensometimes more than once on a pageI had to stop and journal or stop and pray. Whatever spiritual season in which a reader approaches this book, there are gifts abundant. Her honesty and hope bring balm to the soul of the hurting and zeal to the heart of the eager. * Rev. Dr. Amy Peeler, professor at Wheaton College, associate rector at St. Marks Episcopal Church (Geneva, Ill.), and author of Women and Gender of God * This book is like a friend who reminds you who you are and who God is when youre too weary to remember. I found myself pausing and relishing so many sentences as the truth sank injust because I cant see growth, doesnt mean its not happening. On behalf of weary pilgrims I say thank you, Tish! * Jon Guerra, devotional music singer-songwriter * With penetrating insight and disarming honesty, What Grows in Weary Lands retrieves and applies the ancient wisdom sorely needed in our distracted and burned-out age. This book is a tall glass of living water for parched, weary lives. It is poised to become a modern spiritual classic and another must-read offering from one of the brightest spiritual writers of our day. * Rev. Claude Atcho, pastor of Church of the Resurrection (Charlottesville, Va.), and author of Rhythms of Faith and Reading Black Books *

Tish Harrison Warren is a writer and an Anglican priest. She is the author of several books, including Liturgy of the Ordinary, which won Christianity Todays 2018 Book of the Year, and Prayer in the Night, which won Christianity Todays 2022 Book of the Year and the 2022 ECPA Christian Book of the Year. She currently serves as the C.S. Lewis Theological Writer-in-Residence for The Anglican Episcopal House of Studies at Baylors George W. Truett Theological Seminary. She is a senior fellow with the Trinity Forum and an assisting priest at Immanuel Anglican Church. She lives in Austin, Texas, with her husband and three children.