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Mystics and Misfits: Meeting God Through St. Francis and Other Unlikely Saints

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"A lively memoir mixed with short biographies of appealing religious outcasts." —PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
With untested ideals and a thirst for adventure, Christiana Peterson and her family moved to an intentional Christian farming community in the rural Midwest. It sounded like a simple and faithful way to follow Jesus, not to mention a great place to raise kids. In Mystics and Misfits, Peterson discovers that community life is never really simple and that she needs resources beyond her own to weather the anxiety and exhaustion of trying to save a dying farm and a floundering congregation. She turns to Christian mystics like Francis of Assisi, Simone Weil, and Dorothy Day to find sustenance for the everyday struggles and unique hardships of community life. With a contemplative's spirit and poet's eye, Peterson leads readers into an encounter with the God of the wild mystics and the weird misfits.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 7, 2018
      Peterson, contributor to Good Letters and Christianity Today, cannily crafts a lively memoir mixed with short biographies of appealing religious outcasts. She begins with St. Francis, her guiding saint, whom Peterson became interested in after receiving a statue of him at the same time that her daughter was learning about saints in kindergarten. , Peterson began researching other saintly figures, such as Clare of Assisi, Francis’s beloved cohort; Margery Kempe, a 15th-century English mystic; Dorothy Day, an American social activist and Catholic convert; and Simone Weil, a French political activist and poet. Finding herself attracted to mystics who were “less apt to be seduced by worldly things,” Peterson looks to these figures for guidance during difficult times. The bulk of her personal story explores her introduction to the Mennonite community of Plow Creek Farm in Illinois, where she moved from Washington, D.C., with her husband and six-month-old daughter so she can “have the life of St. Francis—bucolic and good.” While living there she learned to live a “simple life” of raising her own food and mending her own clothes. The couple had three other children at Plow Creek before eventually leaving after some discomfiting experiences hosting new guests. Toggling between her struggles adjusting to rural life and her brief but informative biographies of mystics, Peterson’s oddly organized book is carried by her zest for new experiences and passion for St. Francis.

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