Two consummate journal writers describe the process and give writing exercises for keeping a journal. By Barbara Parsons and Mary Morrison Pendle Hill Pamphlet #354
This author shares the story of experiences in her monthly meeting to illustrate how our dying can be as fully centered in God as our living. By Kirsten Backstrom Pendle Hill Pamphlet #355
This early Quaker minister’s essay relates poverty to wasteful consumption, brings the rich and powerful to account, and calls for simplicity as a style of life. 56 pages.
A Quaker examines what constitutes evil in our modern era, drawing on the theological work of the 16th_century German mystic, Jacob Boehme. First published as Pendle Hill pamphlet #214. By Ann Liem Pendle Hill Pamphlet #351
A Quaker examines what constitutes evil in our modern era, drawing on the theological work of the 16th_century German mystic, Jacob Boehme. First published as Pendle Hill pamphlet #214. By Ann Liem Pendle Hill Pamphlet #351
The author rediscovered a powerful sense of God calling her to a more real spiritual life through her artistic work with clay in the Pendle Hill studio. Photographs and devotions record that experience.
Supporting Gifts of Ministry and Eldering in the Monthly Meeting, Martha Paxson Grundy describes the traditional Quaker understanding of power and spiritual authority, and God’s gifts in relation to them.
A longtime friend of Pendle Hill offers vignettes that shine with the Presence and challenge the conventional boundaries between literature, theology, and personal narrative.