Interspiritual Practice of Zen and Christianity
- Mystery and Hermeneutics- Part Two
- James Martin: Essential writings
- The Way of Gratitude - Readings for a Joyful Life
- The Cross in Contexts
- Vesper Time
- Joyce Rupp
- Be Still and Know
- The Works of Mercy
- Spiritual Direction
- Richard Rohr
- And God Created Wholeness
- A New Way to Be Church
- Rejoice and Be Glad
- Blessed Are the Refugees
- Soul Seeing
- Jon Sobrino
- Culture over Christ
- Loving Water across Religion
- Ruth Burrows
- The Way of Forgiveness
- Love Prevails
- A Living Gospel
- Becoming New
- Catholicity and Emerging Personhood
- Vesper Time - The Spiritual Practice of Growing Older
- Ellen Birx: Embracing the Inconceivable
- When Tears Sing
- The Radical Gospel of Bishop Thomas Gumbleton
- Saints Celebrated and Unsung
- The Diary of Jesus Christ
- Catholic Social Teaching
- 99 Names of God
- Eyes of Compassion
- Hunger for Hope
- Belonging
- The Ten Green Commandments of Laudato Sí
- Letters of Tribulation
- O Death, Where Is Thy Sting?
- Mystics in Action
- Walter Rauschenbusch
- Creation's Wisdom
- Unlearning white Supremacy
- The Way of Love
- The Crucible of Racism
- Comprometernos con la diversidad
- Journey of Mother Mother Teresa Nuzzo in the footsteps of Jesus
- Matthew Fox
- The Mystics who came to Dinner
- Telling the San Jose Story
- Awakenings
“This book . . . serves as a guide for people practicing in more than one faith and as a help to people raised in a Judeo-Christian culture who are trying to integrate their religion of birth with their chosen practice of Zen or other forms of meditation.”
Written by a woman who is both a Zen roshi and a Christian, Embracing the Inconceivable is the perfect guide for people of either faith—or those who share both—to experience the joy at their intersection. It will appeal to Christians who are interested in the interspiritual practice of Christianity and eastern forms of meditation and mindfulness. Also included are sections on prayers and practices for those wishing to explore and apply the thoughtful insights Birx offers to their own interspiritual practice.