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Let Your Faith Grow
 
 
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Let Your Faith Grow [Paperback]

Reverend David Bick
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Product details

  • Paperback: 248 pages
  • Publisher: O Books (26 Aug 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1846944600
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846944604
  • Product Dimensions: 21.3 x 14 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 923,553 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

This is a rare, informed synthesis about the growth of faith over the life span by a wise, scholarly Anglican priest with proven experience as a parish leader, pastoral counsellor and spiritual director. His text is alive with biblical, historical and contemporary psychological insights of great worth that can assist in anyone's quest for and deepening practice of faith. --(George Carey, former Archbishop of Canterbury)

David Bick is a wise counsellor and a man of great faith. 'Let Your Faith Grow' will be of great help to many, especially during these times when real faith seems to be a rare and little valued virtue. --(Francis Baird OSB, Abbot of Prinknash)

Product Description

This important rooted and readable book is about the living character of human faith. Crucially, personal 'faith' is not portrayed as some sort of 'once-off' acquisition of a ready-packaged creed or secular belief system. Rather, seeds of faith actually tend to grow, change, indeed 'evolve' through particular stages during the human life-course. These relatively unknown stages are the main platform for David Bick's text. Facing all of us with fundamentals of our human character, this book provides food for the soul in all seasons of life, from teens to old age.

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Format:Paperback
Let Your Faith Grow by Reverend David Bick is a text to be profoundly savoured, indeed re-read. This is a well-organized, insightful and deep commentary on faith development that will help to counter `formulations of faith' that rely too exclusively upon doctrinal conventions of both an `evangelical' or `catholic' nature. For too many essentially church-sympathetic people, those formulations of faith tend to run out of steam in the thickets of life experience. Bick, a most unusual and mature Anglican priest and spiritual advisor, leads the reader through the various `stages of faith' empirically suggested by James W Fowler some 30 years ago, and still too little known in church circles, yet notably summarized in a 1984 paperback subtitled The Psychology of Human Development and the Quest for Meaning. Though these faith stages fit in well with modern theories of holistic human development and the recent findings of neuroscience, and indeed provide Bick with a helpful template, the gist of his work does not hinge upon this frame of reference.

Let Your Faith Grow with its distinctive cover, featuring a painting by the author: Light Shining in Darkness, Unquenched, distils a lifetime of psychological and spiritual experience in which Bick has sat lightly amid church institutions. The text has been masterfully edited and is both introduced and concluded by former University Dean, Child Care Director in the charity sector, educator and family policy activist Richard Whitfield. (Whitfield's last full-time post was Warden/CEO of St George's House within Windsor Castle's historic cloisters, a residential study centre charged with ecumenical leadership development within Church and State, being notably sustained by its 1964 co-founder, HRH the Duke of Edinburgh). .

Bick is clearly a trustworthy master teacher, having a truly enlightened Christian faith. He is well-grounded in biblical scholarship, and deeply considers Christ's comments, illustrating their inner wisdom and showing how they apply to modern life and personality growth. He foresees what may be a problem in theological understanding, reflecting a down-to-earth, pragmatic approach to a defensible modern faith in God. For example, Bick is compelling in his exploration of on what the expression `born again' truly means. His mapping and commentary on Fowler's stages of faith permit him to explain essentially Jungian terms, including projection, intuition and individuation

Early in the book (pp13-14) Bick very bravely uses the full text of Thomas Hardy's poem "The Dead Man Walking", about a depressed man who feels like one who has lost all faith. Bick's manifest human touch makes text come alive; his narrative about being a youth club leader - a story of his giving up the position and then of his return to it in order to straighten out the mess his youthful replacement created - is but one example, showing an important point about common psychological projections that may beset us all. There are also riveting sections concerning Darwinism, a superb commentary on The Book of Job, and on the literary figures Tolkien (a devout cradle Catholic) plus his influence on C.S. Lewis (whose life illustrates the `conjunctive' stage of faith). Bick's writing on the meaning and importance of mythology is masterful, the best I have encountered. He is clearly attached to 1. Corinthians 13 concerning love's true character, and to Jesus' words about being child-like in approaching matters of faith; he also ably explains Jesus' use of parables.

Let Your Faith Grow is an impressive resource for those involved in pastoral counselling and spiritual direction. Bick is a truly sensitive reader of souls, a capability based on years of experience as a parish priest, pastoral counsellor, therapist, parent, and as a man who has taken the inner journey seriously. His `Prayer of Silence' proves for any reader needing to know that the author is one having the right to claim spiritual knowledge through devoting a lifetime to following in Jesus' footsteps. Late sections on morality and institutional religion enable the author to write convincingly about ethical absolutes formed from his own heartfelt experience. Institutional churches do sometimes take on the values of the World, but because Christ enjoined us all to be unworldly, our churches need to try harder to emulate Christ's dictum.

In his spiritually expansive Epilogue Whitfield well describes Bick's book as "wise and practical", while his wife, Shirley, prized in her prime role as a 'home-maker', contributes an honestly grounded Foreword.

Of course, any discerning reader is bound to have minor quibbles, particularly in a first printing when minor errors can so easily creep through. The following peccadilloes were noted:

a) Despite the author's reticence to task readers with further textual study, a need to incorporate some specific bibliographic references to Jung's vast and important work;

b) an error for the unwary in Table 2 on page 31, whose right-hand column should of course be headed `positive' side;

c) on page 76, the T.S. Eliot poetic quote should be "Humankind cannot bear too much reality" (rather than `cope with').

Such quibbles notwithstanding, many kinds of groups can benefit from Let Your Faith Grow: as a working text for classrooms, in small Christian groups, prayer groups, catechistic work for young people and for adults. Our modern, secular world is in dire need of books of this nature, so hopefully this fine book will be widely studied, becoming uniquely influential.

Robert Waldron

Retreat leader, teacher and experienced author, notably concerning books raising key issues within Christian spirituality. He is an expert on the inner life of Thomas Merton, the spiritually influential Cistercian monk who died in 1968.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  1 review
Let Your Faith Grow O Books 25 Aug 2011
By Robert G. Waldron - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Let Your Faith Grow by Revd David Bick, O-Books, August 2011

Let Your Faith Grow by Reverend David Bick is a text to be profoundly savoured, indeed re-read. This is a well-organized, insightful and deep commentary on faith development that will help to counter `formulations of faith' that rely too exclusively upon doctrinal conventions of both an `evangelical' or `catholic' nature. For too many essentially church-sympathetic people, those formulations of faith tend to run out of steam in the thickets of life experience. Bick, a most unusual and mature Anglican priest and spiritual advisor, leads the reader through the various `stages of faith' empirically suggested by James W Fowler some 30 years ago, and still too little known in church circles, yet notably summarized in a 1984 paperback subtitled The Psychology of Human Development and the Quest for Meaning. Though these faith stages fit in well with modern theories of holistic human development and the recent findings of neuroscience, and indeed provide Bick with a helpful template, the gist of his work does not hinge upon this frame of reference.

Let Your Faith Grow with its distinctive cover, featuring a painting by the author: Light Shining in Darkness, Unquenched, distils a lifetime of psychological and spiritual experience in which Bick has sat lightly amid church institutions. The text has been masterfully edited and is both introduced and concluded by former University Dean, Child Care Director in the charity sector, educator and family policy activist Richard Whitfield. (Whitfield's last full-time post was Warden/CEO of St George's House within Windsor Castle's historic cloisters, a residential study centre charged with ecumenical leadership development within Church and State, being notably sustained by its 1964 co-founder, HRH the Duke of Edinburgh). .

Bick is clearly a trustworthy master teacher, having a truly enlightened Christian faith. He is well-grounded in biblical scholarship, and deeply considers Christ's comments, illustrating their inner wisdom and showing how they apply to modern life and personality growth. He foresees what may be a problem in theological understanding, reflecting a down-to-earth, pragmatic approach to a defensible modern faith in God. For example, Bick is compelling in his exploration on what the expression `born again' truly means. His mapping and commentary on Fowler's stages of faith permit him to explain essentially Jungian terms, including projection, intuition and individuation

Early in the book (pp13-14) Bick very bravely uses the full text of Thomas Hardy's poem "The Dead Man Walking", about a depressed man who feels like one who has lost all faith. Bick's manifest human touch makes text come alive; his narrative about being a youth club leader - a story of his giving up the position and then of his return to it in order to straighten out the mess his youthful replacement created - is but one example, showing an important point about common psychological projections that may beset us all. There are also riveting sections concerning Darwinism, a superb commentary on The Book of Job, and on the literary figures Tolkien (a devout cradle Catholic) plus his influence on C.S. Lewis (whose life illustrates the `conjunctive' stage of faith). Bick's writing on the meaning and importance of mythology is masterful, the best I have encountered. He is clearly attached to 1. Corinthians 13 concerning love's true character, and to Jesus' words about being child-like in approaching matters of faith; he also ably explains Jesus' use of parables.

Let Your Faith Grow is an impressive resource for those involved in pastoral counselling and spiritual direction. Bick is a truly sensitive reader of souls, a capability based on years of experience as a parish priest, pastoral counsellor, therapist, parent, and as a man who has taken the inner journey seriously. His `Prayer of Silence' proves for any reader needing to know that the author is one having the right to claim spiritual knowledge through devoting a lifetime to following in Jesus' footsteps. Late sections on morality and institutional religion enable the author to write convincingly about ethical absolutes formed from his own heartfelt experience. Institutional churches do sometimes take on the values of the World, but because Christ enjoined us all to be unworldly, our churches need to try harder to emulate Christ's dictum.

In his spiritually expansive Epilogue Whitfield well describes Bick's book as "wise and practical", while his wife, Shirley, prized in her prime role as a 'home-maker', contributes an honestly grounded Foreword.

Of course, any discerning reader is bound to have minor quibbles, particularly in a first printing when minor errors can so easily creep through. The following peccadilloes were noted:

a) Despite the author's reticence to task readers with further textual study, a need to incorporate some specific bibliographic references to Jung's vast and important work;

b) an error for the unwary in Table 2 on page 31, whose right-hand column should of course be headed `positive' side;

c) on page 76, the T.S. Eliot poetic quote should be "Humankind cannot bear too much reality" (rather than `cope with').

Such quibbles notwithstanding, many kinds of groups can benefit from Let Your Faith Grow: as a working text for classrooms, in small Christian groups, prayer groups, catechistic work for young people and for adults. Our modern, secular world is in dire need of books of this nature, so hopefully this fine book will be widely studied, becoming uniquely influential.

Robert Waldron

Retreat leader, teacher and experienced author, notably concerning books raising key issues within Christian spirituality. He is an expert on the inner life of Thomas Merton, the spiritually influential Cistercian monk who died in 1968.
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