Take this Bread: A Radical ConversionCanterbury Press, 26. jaan 2013 - 304 pages The story of an unexpected and terribly inconvenient Christian conversion, told by a very unlikely convert, Take This Bread tells the story of a restaurant cook and writer who wandered into a church and found herself transformed, setting up a food pantry around the same altar where she first received the body of Christ. |
Contents
Cibapter | 10 |
Ebapter | 12 |
Cibapter 4 | 24 |
Cibapter | 54 |
Cibapter | 74 |
Cibapter 9 | 91 |
Gbapterll | 109 |
A Different Everyone | 119 |
Ebapter 15 | 159 |
Ebapter 17 | 179 |
Ebapter 18 | 198 |
Ebapter 20 | 218 |
Ebapter 22 | 242 |
Ebapter 24 | 261 |
Acknowledgments | 281 |
Ebapter14 | 141 |
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Common terms and phrases
altar America Anglican Communion asked baptism believe Bible body bread and wine called Central America Christ Christian church communion conflict congregation cook Corpus Christi massacre couldn’t David deacons Derek didn’t Donald door El Salvador Episcopal Eucharist faith feed feel felt figure filled finally find finding finished fire first five flesh floor Food Bank food pantry friends God’s going Gregory of Nyssa Gregory’s groceries hand he’d holy hunger hungry Jesus Jesus’s Katie kids kitchen knew learned listening liturgy lived looked lunch Martha meal meant mother never Nicaragua official ofthe omelet once ory’s Paul politics poor Potrero Hill pray prayer priest religion restaurant Rick Robert San Francisco Sandinista sang share singing someone Steve strangers Sunday talk tell thing thought told took trying volunteers walked wanted wasn’t week what’s who’d woman words