WHAT READERS ARE SAYING. . .
"This is a marvelous read for all interested in the spiritual journeys of others as well as their own. Over 100 interviews with diverse persons from various faith traditions are woven into a narrative that will deepen the reader's own faith as it broadens their understanding of the faith of others."
Dr. Ralph W. Hood Jr., Professor of Social Psychology, University of Tennessee-Chattanooga
"Heather Tosteson knows how to listen past the surface where differences are so evident to the depths where common hopes and dreams are found. What's more--and this is rare--she knows how to describe what she has heard. This book is a model for genuine and generous conversation."
Dr. Guy Sayles, Pastor, First Baptist Church of Asheville, NC
"I devoured it."
Georgia Tassopoulos, 88, Greek Orthodox and Interfaith Sister, Atlanta, GA
"This is a compelling read whether you are pondering themes, theology, or just being human. I didn't read it analytically, I read it in relationship. I feel like I know these people after reading those very personal interviews. They become part of the tapestry of MY life, MY faith journey, MY spiritual stretching and shifting. Oh - I forgot to mention - the artwork in the book is AWESOME."
Kim Hunt, United Church of Christ, Venice, FL
"I find God Speaks My Language, Can You? very enlightening. It has caused me to be more open-minded. I'm now questioning myself as to how I listen when people share: How accepting am I really of others faith journeys? How willing am I to connect with them and to honor their choices? We all want to think we're tolerant, but are we just hearing what we want to hear? In these stories, we have more details than we might have in a daily conversation, so we can see more things in a person's experience—their childhood and their feelings—that have influenced their beliefs. Our questions become more complicated too—of them and of ourselves."
Shahidah Mohammed, 61, Muslim, Atlanta, GA
“I loved the stories. I felt I was right there listening with the author. As I read more and more stories, I was in awe of the tremendous diversity and the great range of spiritual experience. I recognized the underlying continuity in the quest for the presence of the Holy in all these people. As soon as I finished one story, I was eager to get on to the next one.”
Sue Gibbons, Spiritual Director and Communications Consultant, Lafayette, CA
"God Speaks My Language: Can You? is a valuable and fascinating collection of almost one hundred stories of faith, all from the Southeast, reconstructed from interviews by Heather Tosteson, Founder of Universal Table. Tosteson is an astute observer, a courageous and empathetic interviewer, and a splendid writer. She offers her own interpretation of these varied accounts, constructing a plausible typology and suggesting that beneath our commitments to disparate practices and doctrines are personal stories offering glimpses of common religious experiences. This fine book is an invitation to join the conversation about affirming difference in an ever increasing religious pluralism."
Dr. John Shelley, Professor of Religion, Furman University, Greenville, SC
"While I was reading God Speaks My Language, Can You? I was pulled forward with delight. The book is nuanced, rich, respectful, and musing. Since listening is such a key thing for spiritual directors, the discussion on holding in imagination enriched my awareness of my own process of listening."
Rev. Dr. Janice Johnson Hume, Spiritual Director and Chaplain, Disciples of Christ, Atlanta, GA
"In the delightful God Speaks My Language, Can You? Heather Tosteson has woven stories told by people of diverse faith traditions and spiritual experiences together with her own struggles to hear and understand each speaker on his or her own terms. She says, “I have been especially interested in the role of story in opening us safely to unfamiliar worlds, and ways of thinking or believing wherever we find them – our faith life, our professional life, across our back fence” Spiritual directors or a spiritual direction program might use these stories in role plays as “what ifs”: What if the person whom you are companioning brings such an experience to direction? How might you enter into the world of such a person? This would be a valuable resource for any religious leader who wonders what might be going on in the lives of their faith community below the surface or what led the child raised in the community to leave it and seek another. The book might be used as a supplementary text for a course in religion and communication, where there would be ample opportunity for students to gain a fuller understanding of people who may believe differently than they do, to see points of commonality and also gain respect for profound difference."
Kathleen D. Clark, Ph.D., spiritual director and Associate Professor of Communication, University of Akron, Akron, OH
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