LEADING from the CENTER

NEWSLETTER

Endnotes

1 Taken from "Lord of the Dance" by Sydney Carter. Copyright 1963 Stainer & Bell Ltd. Admin. by Hope Publishing Co. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

2 A hymn attributed to Jesus and his disciples after the Last Supper, from the Apocryphal Acts of St. John (mid-2nd century). See Edgar Hennecke, New Testament Apocrypha 2 (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1965), p. 229.

3 Phrase is borrowed from Dame Julian of Norwich, a 14th-century English mystic.

4 Robert Corin Morris, Wrestling with Grace: A Spirituality for the Rough Edges of Life (Nashville: Upper Room Books, 2003). Chapter 14.

5 Definition offered by Robert Morris in a presentation at the Pathways-Weavings Retreat, Nashville, Tennessee, October 2001.

6 This felicitous phrase comes from one of Wendy Wright's presentations at the Pathways-Weavings Retreat.

7 Op. cit., &Lord of the Dance.&

 

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