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OverviewSix months into a deep personal crisis occasioned by the unexpected end of his marriage, Jamie Howison traveled halfway across the continent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, to engage in a unique and intense five-week contemplative retreat served in the context of the chapel community of the University of King's College. Immersed in the liturgies of the Canadian Book of Common Prayer, mentored in the writing of an Orthodox icon of Christ Pantocrator, challenged to confront the hard truths behind his brokenness, and laid bare by the hours of silence and solitude, Howison discovered something of the power of the ancient spiritual traditions in the restoration of a twenty-first-century soul. A Kind of Solitude tells that story. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jamie HowisonPublisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers Imprint: Wipf & Stock Publishers Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 0.60cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.254kg ISBN: 9781725292796ISBN 10: 1725292793 Pages: 92 Publication Date: 26 February 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsIn A Kind of Solitude, Jamie Howison invites us onto an unfamiliar but beautiful healing path of his own agitated Way of the Cross. Are you as done as I am with the rah-rah 'gospel' of triumphalist platitudes and ready for some real and raw good news? Jamie is a man who's limped through the sorrow of Gethsemane, known the dying gasps of Golgotha, and beheld the Easter sunrise of resurrection life. Follow him on this tender retreat and I'm sure, like me, you'll breathe your own sighs of solace and hope. --Bradley Jersak, Dean of Theology & Culture, St. Stephen's University, New Brunswick In this story of a man with a broken heart and the healing power of an icon, Jamie Howison recounts how, with the aid of ancient spiritual insights and practices, and the faithfulness of an undergraduate Christian community in Halifax, a remarkable transformation took place in his life. St. Augustine said that the soul is like a 'waterless land, ' and in this journal we see the divine gardener at work, bringing about restoration and new life. This testimony will bring hope to others who long to see God while in a place of disillusionment and desperation. --Stephen Andrews, Principal, Wycliffe College, Toronto A Kind of Solitude is a must read for pastors and anyone who is interested in the spiritual life. It is a story of death and resurrection, from darkness to light. There are very few brutally honest spiritual memoirs, and this is one of them. Life is difficult, and often, downright impossible, and Jamie's story shows us how we can transform our pain into something beautiful. --William C. Mills, Eastern Orthodox priest and author of Losing My Religion: A Memoir of Faith and Finding This brief memoir of a time set apart for spiritual and emotional healing is a loving appreciation of the abiding power of the church's ancient spiritual traditions to sustain and nourish our souls--and of the hospitality of a community which seeks to be formed by that tradition, so as to be able to 'bear one another's burdens, ' as Christ has done for us all. --Lisa Wang, Adjunct Faculty, Trinity College Faculty of Divinity, Toronto Jamie Howison writes reverently, personally, and beautifully about the restoration of his own shattered soul after having submitted to the care of a wise spiritual director who knows and trusts the medicinal qualities of ancient spiritual practices and traditions. If you are inclined to suspect there may be medicinal properties to such practices, this book should convince you once and for all. --Steve Bell, recording artist and author The book's central insight comes through the author's personal tussle with the wisdom of Abba John the Little, who observed how 'we have abandoned a light burden, namely self-criticism, and taken up a heavy burden, namely self-justification.' Simple to say; hard to live. This story reveals glimmers of providence in the darkness of despair, a testament to the possibility of healing and renewal for all who earnestly seek it. --Doug Koop, Hospital Spiritual Health Practitioner and former editor of ChristianWeek """""In A Kind of Solitude, Jamie Howison invites us onto an unfamiliar but beautiful healing path of his own agitated Way of the Cross. Are you as done as I am with the rah-rah 'gospel' of triumphalist platitudes and ready for some real and raw good news? Jamie is a man who's limped through the sorrow of Gethsemane, known the dying gasps of Golgotha, and beheld the Easter sunrise of resurrection life. Follow him on this tender retreat and I'm sure, like me, you'll breathe your own sighs of solace and hope."""" --Bradley Jersak, Dean of Theology & Culture, St. Stephen's University, New Brunswick """"In this story of a man with a broken heart and the healing power of an icon, Jamie Howison recounts how, with the aid of ancient spiritual insights and practices, and the faithfulness of an undergraduate Christian community in Halifax, a remarkable transformation took place in his life. St. Augustine said that the soul is like a 'waterless land, ' and in this journal we see the divine gardener at work, bringing about restoration and new life. This testimony will bring hope to others who long to see God while in a place of disillusionment and desperation."""" --Stephen Andrews, Principal, Wycliffe College, Toronto """"A Kind of Solitude is a must read for pastors and anyone who is interested in the spiritual life. It is a story of death and resurrection, from darkness to light. There are very few brutally honest spiritual memoirs, and this is one of them. Life is difficult, and often, downright impossible, and Jamie's story shows us how we can transform our pain into something beautiful."""" --William C. Mills, Eastern Orthodox priest and author of Losing My Religion: A Memoir of Faith and Finding """"This brief memoir of a time set apart for spiritual and emotional healing is a loving appreciation of the abiding power of the church's ancient spiritual traditions to sustain and nourish our souls--and of the hospitality of a community which seeks to be formed by that tradition, so as to be able to 'bear one another's burdens, ' as Christ has done for us all."""" --Lisa Wang, Adjunct Faculty, Trinity College Faculty of Divinity, Toronto """"Jamie Howison writes reverently, personally, and beautifully about the restoration of his own shattered soul after having submitted to the care of a wise spiritual director who knows and trusts the medicinal qualities of ancient spiritual practices and traditions. If you are inclined to suspect there may be medicinal properties to such practices, this book should convince you once and for all."""" --Steve Bell, recording artist and author """"The book's central insight comes through the author's personal tussle with the wisdom of Abba John the Little, who observed how 'we have abandoned a light burden, namely self-criticism, and taken up a heavy burden, namely self-justification.' Simple to say; hard to live. This story reveals glimmers of providence in the darkness of despair, a testament to the possibility of healing and renewal for all who earnestly seek it."""" --Doug Koop, Hospital Spiritual Health Practitioner and former editor of ChristianWeek" Author InformationJamie Howison is a priest of the Anglican Church of Canada and the founding pastoral leader of Saint Benedict's Table in Winnipeg. He is the author of God's Mind in That Music: Theological Explorations Through the Music of John Coltrane (2012), and the co-author with Steve Bell of I Will Not Be Shaken: A Songwriter's Journey through the Psalms (2015). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |