“When words bring you closer to the prisoner in his cell, to the patient who is dying on his bed alone, to the starving child, then it’s a prayer.” Elie Wiesel, the beloved writer known for his memoir of the Holocaust, “Night,” speaks of the power of prayer and forgiveness in the wake of profound suffering. Find more at onbeing.org/becoming-wise.
We Are the Beloved Community | John Lewis
The Universe Participates in the Mystery of God | Guy Consolmagno and George Coyne
I Feel, Therefore I Am | Eve Ensler
We Reclaim Abandoned Spaces | Shane Claiborne
We Choose Our Own Tribes | Seth Godin
Spirituality Is Enfolded Into the Act of Living | Sylvia Boorstein
The Good in the Other, the Doubt in Ourselves | Frances Kissling
The Inner World Is a Great, Undiscovered Terrain | Pico Iyer
Present to Life, Moment by Moment | Jon Kabat-Zinn
The Paradox of Suffering and Love | Kate Braestrup
Enriched by Difference | Jonathan Sacks
The Hidden Hand of the Equations | Brian Greene
The Desire to Know Each Other | Elizabeth Alexander
Compassion for Our Bodies | Matthew Sanford
Beauty Is an Edge of Becoming | John O'Donohue
Mapping Meaning in a Digital Age | Maria Popova
Courage Is Born from Struggle | Brené Brown
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