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OverviewThis is a Christian mystic's archive of writings about feeling God's abiding presence and love in all things, even in the poet himself, but also feeling pain and loneliness because human finitude prohibits knowing God fully. He cannot wholly know the God he wholly loves. Finally the poet comes to feel in the natural world God reaching out to the poet personally, which brings hope and peace. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Robert Morrison RandolphPublisher: Resource Publications (CA) Imprint: Resource Publications (CA) Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 0.30cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.073kg ISBN: 9781666733877ISBN 10: 1666733873 Pages: 52 Publication Date: 23 November 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback 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 ContentsReviews"""In The Appalachian Archive, Randolph evokes the biblical book of Psalms with his expressions of spiritual longing. The human quest for love, for fulfillment, and for relationship with the divine is on full display in his carefully drawn images and heartfelt petitions. . . . To read this work is to enter prayerfully into 'the depths' with hope and faith (Ps 130:1)."" --Jerome F. D. Creach, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary ""This spiritual map of the ineffable in the nearby will guide seekers and thinkers, doubters and singers of all sorts. From 'the hollows of my bones, ' Appalachian poet Randolph yearns to 'speak God's name in the marrow' and invite us into 'secret rain that enlivens our hearts.' Walk with this poet through The Appalachian Archive and find that our 'strange jar made of mortality' is 'filled with forever.'"" --Gilson A.C. Waldkoenig, United Lutheran Seminary" In The Appalachian Archive, Randolph evokes the biblical book of Psalms with his expressions of spiritual longing. The human quest for love, for fulfillment, and for relationship with the divine is on full display in his carefully drawn images and heartfelt petitions. . . . To read this work is to enter prayerfully into 'the depths' with hope and faith (Ps 130:1). --Jerome F. D. Creach, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary This spiritual map of the ineffable in the nearby will guide seekers and thinkers, doubters and singers of all sorts. From 'the hollows of my bones, ' Appalachian poet Randolph yearns to 'speak God's name in the marrow' and invite us into 'secret rain that enlivens our hearts.' Walk with this poet through The Appalachian Archive and find that our 'strange jar made of mortality' is 'filled with forever.' --Gilson A.C. Waldkoenig, United Lutheran Seminary In The Appalachian Archive, Randolph evokes the biblical book of Psalms with his expressions of spiritual longing. The human quest for love, for fulfillment, and for relationship with the divine is on full display in his carefully drawn images and heartfelt petitions. . . . To read this work is to enter prayerfully into 'the depths' with hope and faith (Ps 130:1). --Jerome F. D. Creach, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary This spiritual map of the ineffable in the nearby will guide seekers and thinkers, doubters and singers of all sorts. From 'the hollows of my bones, ' Appalachian poet Randolph yearns to 'speak God's name in the marrow' and invite us into 'secret rain that enlivens our hearts.' Walk with this poet through The Appalachian Archive and find that our 'strange jar made of mortality' is 'filled with forever.' --Gilson A.C. Waldkoenig, United Lutheran Seminary Author InformationRobert Morrison Randolph is Professor of English at Waynesburg University and Professor Emeritus from Texas State University. He has been a Fulbright teaching scholar in Finland and Greece, and for twelve years pastored a small rural church near the Monongahela River. He is the author of Floating Girl: Angel of War (2006). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |