Wesley Granberg-Michaelson is a respected writer, speaker, and leader in the faith and justice communities. He has served as General Secretary of the Reformed Church, as Director of Church and Society for the World Council of Churches in Geneva, and as Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the John W. Kluge Center of the Library of Congress. He and his wife, Karin, live in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Description
Prologue: In a Boat without Oars 1 The Restless Soul Leaving behind the habits of predictable but discontented lives. Freeing ourselves from captivity to efficient routines of normalcy. First pilgrim steps interrupt regularity into uncharted land. 2 Real Presence Leaving behind the frenzy of our addictions to screens. Freedom from promoting a false virtual presence of the self. Opening unexplored interior space in one's outward journey. 3 Persistent Patience The relief of giving up instant gratification. Focusing only on the next step in long faithfulness. 350,000 steps that were never imagined. 4 Strength to Let Go Learning to surrender what weighs us down in the pilgrim journey. The lightness of being relinquishes the ego's false identities. Shedding the formerly necessary psychic securities that shaped our early life. 5 Walking into Faith Leaving disembodied systems of belief rooted primarily in the head. Recovering paths of embodied faith centered in practices. Expressing faith by where we walk, not what creed we sign. 6 Reckless Spirituality Leaving behind predictable piety that preserves our inner comfort. Freeing the Spirit from the bondage of our expectations. On the wind of the Spirit: a radical abandonment to following the Way 7 Unpredictable Grace Leaving planned outcomes in favor of spiritual preparedness for daily grace. The futility of strategic planning, the promise of pilgrimage. Journeying on paths far less predictable than we imagine. 8 A Re-enchanted World Recovering the spirituality of material, ordinary things. What the belief of pilgrims in 'living bones' means for us. Embracing sacred mysteries sacramentally embedded along our paths. 9 Leaving the Empire Behind Historic journeys away from Constantine's imperial clutches. Walking free from centers and systems of control today. Pilgrim pathways through the public square with new vision. 10 Life as We Know It The final pilgrimage, for us all, leaves life behind. Dying before we die to taste the presence of enduring life. Letting go, always living on the brink of the next unknown. Appendix: Suggested resources; author's guide to a variety of ways readers can consider practicing rituals of pilgrimage.

