Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
September 26, 2011
Between Heaven and Mirthby HarperOne. 256p $25.99

From the popular religious commentator and best-selling author of The Jesuit Guide to (Almost) Everything—which was the book club selection for March 2010—comes this new work on the importance of a joy-filled spiritual life. As Fr. Martin, culture editor at America, reminds readers, the tradition of laughter and joy can be located in many biblical stories—and especially in the person of Jesus. “A lighthearted spirit,” he writes, “is an essential element of a healthy spiritual life and a healthy life in general.” Know, however, this is a serious book with a serious purpose. Its nine chapters consider, among other themes, humor and the saints (joy as a gift from God); vocation, service and love; levity in the community of believers; and helpful insights from theologians and Scripture. The concluding chapter looks at a few means of private prayer: rote prayers, lectio divina, Ignatian contemplation, centering prayer and examination of conscience.

In a forthcoming (Oct. 3) review of the book for America, Marie Anne Mayeski sings a note of strong praise for this book, which “reaffirms the fundamental mystery of God’s love and redemption…at the heart of the...Incarnation.” We hope you will buy two copies: one for yourself and one with which to gift a friend. And remember: Rejoice always!

Purchase Between Heaven and Mirth: Why Joy, Humor, and Laughter Are at the Heart of the Spiritual Life from amazon.com.

The latest from america

In her new book, '(R)evolutionary Hope: A Spirituality of Encounter and Engagement in an Evolving World,' Kathleen Bonnette has brought St. Augustine’s philosophy into dialogue with 21st-century reality in ways that would impress even modern mindfulness gurus and internet pundits.
Michael T. RizziJune 27, 2024
In 'The West,' Naoíse Mac Sweeney tackles the history of the idea of the West through 14 portraits of both famous (Herodotus and Gladstone) and lesser-known historical figures (Phillis Wheatley and Tullia d’Aragona).
Joseph P. CreamerJune 27, 2024
In 'Who’s Afraid of Gender?,' Judith Butler contends that the contemporary backlash to “gender” is an attempt to recapture the transforming power structure and return to the (days when it was simple to use gender to organize power in the world.
Brianne JacobsJune 27, 2024
In 'Incarnating Grace: A Theology of Healing From Sexual Trauma,' Julia Feder is not only concerned with rejecting dangerous theological projects that have misled (and mistreated) survivors; she is also keen to plumb the depths of the Christian tradition more positively, for resources that offer
Karen Peterson-IyerJune 27, 2024