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Tables in the Wilderness: A Memoir of God Found, Lost, and Found Again (Special)
Tables in the Wilderness: A Memoir of God Found, Lost, and Found Again (Special) | Preston Yancey, Zondervan Publishing
2 posts | 1 read | 6 to read
In Tables in the Wilderness, Preston Yancey arrived at Baylor University in the autumn of 2008 with his life figured out: he was Southern Baptist, conservative, had a beautiful girlfriend he would soon propose to, had spent the summer living in southeast Asia as a missionary, and planned to study political science. Then God slowly allowed Preston's secure world to fall apart until every piece of what he thought was true was lost: his church, his life of study, his political leanings, his girlfriend, his best friend . . . and his God. It was the loss of God in the midst of all the godly things that changed Preston forever. One day he felt he heard God say, 'It's going to be about trust with you, ' and then God was silent---and he still hasn't spoken. At least, not in the ways Preston used to think were the only ways God spoke. No pillars of fire, no clouds, just a bit of whisper in wind. Now, Preston is a patchwork of Anglican spirituality and Baptist sensibility, with a mother who has been in chronic neurological pain for thirteen years and father still devoted to Southern Baptist ministry who reads saints' lives on the side. He now shares his story of coming to terms with a God who is bigger than the one he thought he was worshiping---the God of a common faith, the God who makes tables in the wilderness, the God who is found in cathedrals and in forests and in the Eucharist, the God who speaks in fire and in wind, the God who is bigger than narrow understandings of his will, his desire, his plan---the God who is so big, that everything must be his.
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Yancey details college as a time filled with questions regarding the traditions under which he was raised. He details so much of what he read + thought while looking for answers--it almost felt as if he planned to write this memoir while he was going thru this experience.

Maybe it was adapted from his blog.

I learned a bit about non-evangelical traditions + I love that. I do not feel the comparison to Donald Miller's writing. This stands alone.

brendanmleonard Thank you for the recommendation! 8y
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"When you grow up evangelical in the South, you hear God speak all the time."

This book is blurbed by sooo many people that I adore so this was the scene at my house earlier today: red pears for brunch, mid-morning coffee + a Kindle copy of this book with the first sentence already highlighted.

This book has been compared to Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller (a major, major favorite of mine) so I'm anxious + excited to see how I feel about it. ☕️

Laalaleighh I loved blue like jazz when I read it forever ago and omg that first sentence is so crazy accurate. 8y
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