The winner of the Sacred Chaos giveaway is…
Congrats! I’ll be e-mailing you within the next couple of days to get your address and mail the book to you!
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The winner of the Sacred Chaos giveaway is…
Congrats! I’ll be e-mailing you within the next couple of days to get your address and mail the book to you!
{ 0 comments }
Prayer is not some practice we will one day perfect or a method we can eventually master, but instead it is a lifelong journey of our hearts awakening to the reality that God is with us.
Given the kind of chaotic lifestyles to which many of us are accustomed, what we may need more than anything else are some simple ways to foster greater sensitivity to his continual presence (24).
- Tricia McCary Rhodes, Sacred Chaos
Today I’d like to introduce you to a book and author that I have been greatly blessed by over the years.
Tricia McCary Rhodes, author of Sacred Chaos: Spiritual Disciplines for the Life You Have, is someone I’ve been blessed to know and learn from as my pastor’s wife at our home church. She has a passion for the Lord and helping others learn to walk intimately with Christ.
And that’s what Sacred Chaos is about,
…in the midst of a time of household turmoil, Tricia learned to see God and communicate with him in whole new ways–not on a spiritual retreat, but right in the midst of the chaos of life. She offers here a fresh view of connecting to God, one that focuses on quality time and frees us from the rigidity of a devotional life that may feel stifled, grow stagnant or bring about guilt when we can’t keep up. (book description)
What you can expect: Short, easily digestible chapters with a practical application at the end of each chapter called Making the Chaos Sacred, various experiments in prayer, and four extended experiments in prayer.
How it’s helped me: In short, the methods and freedom Tricia shares in developing a prayer life for the life you have has revolutionized how I approach prayer and even God. In many ways, I use to compartmentalize my life and my relationship with God. They rarely intersected except for at specific times of prayer and study or out of deep need. What I’ve come to learn is that’s not how God intended life to be lived. We’re to walk daily, moment by moment with Him.
Yes, we may have specific or extended times of prayer and study, but what about those times when we’re feeling overwhelmed, at the end of our patience, or completely defeated? Is God not to be met there also?
Learn more about the author: If you’d like to learn more about Tricia you can visit her website The Soul at Rest for more resources on a life of prayer, follow her on Twitter where she sends out quotes from saints of old, or stop by her blog where she occasionally shares the chaos of her own life.
Tricia’s also the author of five other books: The Soul at Rest, Contemplating the Cross, Intimate Intercession, Taking Up Your Cross, and At the Name of Jesus.
Tricia’s graciously given me a copy of Sacred Chaos to pass along to one of you! To enter the giveaway all you have to do is leave a comment answering this question,
How might meeting God in the chaos change your life?
The winner will be announced on Tuesday, January 18th.
Since Baby Otto (*finally*) decided to make his appearance, I decided to keep the giveaway open until Monday, January 24th. Winner will be announced Tuesday.
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The giveaway winner is…commentator #13:

Karen from Faith, Family, & Fibromyalgia and had quite a juicy random tidbit about herself:
One random tidbit that no one in the bloggy world knows. I dated an American Muslim for 11 years.
And the answer to #24 (which was what is my non-Caucasian ethnicity) is…well, first let’s go over everyone’s guesses. That’s always fun.
I’ve had people ask if I’m Mexican, part Chinese, Hawaiian, Samoan, half African-American, and probably some more I can’t remember.
You all guessed I was Persian, Guatemalan, Japanese, Lebanese, or Greek.
Well…still no one has correctly guessed my “other half”! Maybe I’ll just keep it a secret.
Just kidding.
Here’s a clue:

I am 50% Native American (or American Indian depending on which seems more politically correct to you—neither bother me).
I’m from the Lumbee tribe of Lumberton, North Carolina in Robeson County. I know you’ve never heard of it…it seems no one has. But it is one of the top ten largest tribes in the US (at least in the early 1990s).
Random facts about the Lumbee that you always wanted to know, but never did:
And that, my friends, is probably more information on the Lumbee than you’ve ever known or wanted to know.
So thanks for sitting around my fire and smoking the proverbial peace pipe with me!
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