Sacred Belonging

A 40-Day Devotional on the Liberating Heart of Scripture

This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Buy on Amazon Buy on Waterstones
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app

1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 12 Sep 2023 | Archive Date 30 Sep 2023

Talking about this book? Use #SacredBelonging #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!


Description

In this forty-day devotional, Cuban American writer Kat Armas shows us that reading the Bible with fresh eyes allows us to experience God in new and liberating ways.

Many Christians today are seeking to disentangle biblical teaching from power structures that marginalize women and people of color. There's a hunger for a new kind of devotional that offers refreshing and relevant ways to connect with God and the Bible--ways that challenge readers to seek out a more liberated and embodied faith.

Drawing from personal narrative and Scripture, Armas highlights biblical passages that point toward decolonized themes centered on creation, wisdom, spirit, the body, and the feminine. Sacred Belonging helps us see how Scripture directs us to live a liberated faith, where we belong to God, the earth, and one another.

In this forty-day devotional, Cuban American writer Kat Armas shows us that reading the Bible with fresh eyes allows us to experience God in new and liberating ways.

Many Christians today are seeking...


Advance Praise

“Kat Armas does in Sacred Belonging exactly what she does best: leading us to tender and compelling questions while taking us on an inspired journey with the Sacred. Weaving stories of everyday life with thoughtful examinations of Scripture, Armas reminds us that our very lives are connected to the way we understand the Sacred around us and within us, which affects the way we treat one another and Mother Earth. Armas is a theological leader in fierce truth-telling and compelling story-sharing, and we should join her on this journey to reimagine what belonging could be.”—Kaitlin Curtice, award-winning author of Native and Living Resistance

“What a delicious book Sacred Belonging is. Yes, it’s a devotional, but it’s so much more than that. We are invited to taste and see biblical narratives with a new palate that decenters and decolonizes and disrupts limited ways of knowing. I read thankful for Kat’s daughter, for the stretch marks she gave her mom, and the baby breath on her mom’s neck, and the cooing that was music to Kat’s ear as she sat before Holy to write. I read thankful for her partner, Taylor; for her mother; for her posse; for Kat’s position in the world. Thankful for her eyes and heart in this moment, which though fraught and frightening, is where we sit, where we belong, yearning for better. I read thankful for the circumstances that put such beauty in Kat’s holy imagination. I read thankful for this foretaste of glory divine. And you will too.”—Rev. Dr. Jacqui J. Lewis, senior minister, Middle Church; author of Fierce Love

“Kat Armas is the theologian we need, and Sacred Belonging is the devotional we’ve been waiting for. Rooted in and informed by Scripture, she shows us intuitive ways of communing with God through common things like water, pets, dreams, birthing, and the passage of time. I am stunned silent by this beautiful, relevant work.”—Emily P. Freeman, Wall Street Journal bestselling author of The Next Right Thing

“Through beautiful stories interwoven with Scripture, Kat Armas has given us a devotional worth reading. She offers new perspectives rather than settling for conventional ones, casting a gentle but prophetic vision for a hopeful and decolonized faith. Kat invites us to see God differently. As for me: invitation accepted.”—Peter Enns, author of Curveball; host of The Bible for Normal People podcast

Sacred Belonging is a devotional for all of us who feel cringey about devotionals. I couldn’t stop highlighting and felt so held and respected by these words. The genius of this book is its author’s generosity. Kat Armas gently and fiercely invites us into the story where Divine Love still speaks through the Scriptures to our souls, shaping us into people who know we are so loved that we can risk remembering that everyone and everything belongs.”—K.J. Ramsey, trauma therapist; author of The Book of Common Courage and The Lord Is My Courage

“Armas offers an imperative spiritual balm to some of us who have experienced Scripture in ways that have been demeaning, dehumanizing, isolating, and used solely to reprimand and not to restore. In Sacred Belonging, the space to explore and wonder brought a calming peace over my anxious mind. Sacred Belonging is an invitation into a deep, expansive, and healing way of encountering Scripture in a truly meaningful and transformative manner. Armas has a gentle way of guiding you and inviting you to ‘go deeper’ just as Jesus has always invited us to do.”—Arielle Estoria, poet, author, and actor

“Kat Armas does in Sacred Belonging exactly what she does best: leading us to tender and compelling questions while taking us on an inspired journey with the Sacred. Weaving stories of everyday life...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781587435096
PRICE US$18.99 (USD)
PAGES 208

Available on NetGalley

NetGalley Shelf App (EPUB)
Send to Kindle (EPUB)
Download (EPUB)

Average rating from 6 members


Featured Reviews

"Sacred Belonging: A 40-Day Devotional on the Liberating Heart of Scripture" is the newest Bible study by Kat Armas. Having followed Armas on Twitter, I was excited to read this devotional book. However, it was a bit different than I expected. First, the book is divided into five sections: body, creation, wisdom, spirit, and the feminine. Second, Armas believes in the existence of Indigenous gods and speaks quite a bit about them.

Each of the 40 days in this devotional includes a Scripture passage, personal anecdote, religious reflections, and then some questions to answer. While I think many will find this book helpful, it was not my personal preference. Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC. All opinions are my own.

Was this review helpful?

I'm sitting here less than three weeks before bladder cancer will claim my bladder. After a several months long journey that began shortly before last Christmas, I will be admitted to the hospital for a few days and, if all goes well, return home cancer free yet without a bladder and wearing an ostomy that will be my companion for the rest of my life.

It's the latest physical challenge in a long life filled with them. I'm a paraplegic and double amputee with spina bifida, a 50+year-old man who has lived far longer than anyone expected yet who continues to crave more life.

As I began what I expected to be yet another "typical" reading of a devotional designed to inspire my heart and mind, I was prepared for a quick read popping with a few insights.

I received so much more.

Cuban-American writer Kat Armas has written an atypical devotional, a devotional that truly liberates the heart of Scripture and encourages readers toward a liberated faith by offering devotions centered around five different themes - creation, wisdom, spirit, the body, and the feminine.

The overarching lesson, if you will, is that we do belong. We do, we really do. We belong to God, we belong to the earth, and we belong to one another.

Armas highlights biblical passages that point toward decolonizing themes and moving away from the oppression that so many of us have felt from patriarchal, and just plain incorrect, interpretations of scripture designed more for power and control than bringing forth the sacred.

At times, "Sacred Belonging: A 40-Day Devotional on the Liberating Heart of Scripture" feels like Thich Nhat Hanh's remarkable "Living Buddha, Living Christ" with Armas's gentle ability to weave together Scripture with Indigenous spirituality and other faith journeys. It's open-hearted and faithful throughout yet will most resonate with those who long for a more liberated faith.

I expected "Sacred Belonging" to be a quick read, though as I worked my way through it I found myself stopping and starting, reflecting and praying quite often. I found myself dealing with issues brought up in each chapter and genuinely immersing myself in those times when Armas would end a chapter with questions for personal exploration.

I found myself dealing with my long history of abuse, my points of grief, my body image and, yes, my cancer journey and the experiences I'm about to face in terms of body image, physical function, intimacy, and a fear of the social isolation that already splashes over me in waves.

"Sacred Belonging," however, felt like a safe place. It felt like a belonging space where I could acknowledges these truths, some temporary and others permanent, and have them held as sacred in this difficult yet holy journey.

It's likely unsurprising that I most deeply resonated on the section centered around "the body," however every section resonated deeply and even when Armas seemed to be writing directly for women I found myself listening, learning, appreciating, respecting, and even belonging.

If you are expecting a sound byte devotional, you might want to alter your expectations as Armas shares both personal narrative and theological insights and reflections with enthusiasm, intelligence, insight, wisdom, and tenderness. Some devotions end with guiding questions, others do not. Some devotions are nearly all intellectual discourse, others radiate the richness of human experience.

As I end my time with "Sacred Belonging," at least for now, I feel a little more prepared for the challenges I will be facing in the coming 2-3 weeks. I feel greater the presence of the creation around me and the communal spirit that often feels like it's off at a distance. I feel a little more liberated from a fear of the unknown and a lot more secure in the belonging that comes whatever journeys our bodies are on.

In a world where Scripture is often used as a weapon, Armas invites us into a 40-day journey that reminds us that we are so loved and so never alone.

Amen.

Was this review helpful?

I was intrigued by the description of this devotional and am glad I picked it up. It was unlike any other book I've read, looking at scripture through lenses of embodiment, feminism, and liberation. It challenged me and I'd like to read it again with a discussion group.

Was this review helpful?

Kat has done it again! I’ve been privileged enough to participate in a small cohort of women who were able to read this prior to its release. And just like in Abuelita Faith, she did what she does best - encourage us to ask questions, center marginalized identities, build a decolonized faith. All our our liberation is tied up together and this devotional does a phenomenal job of expounding on that and highlighting all the “unconventional” ways we can see and connect to the divine ❤️‍🔥

Was this review helpful?

This is a devotional for people who are sick of devotionals. It's for people who are wondering if there is a place for them in Christian spaces. It is for people who are disentangling all of the misogyny, racism, abelism, and xenophobia from their faith. It is good people seeking liberation and freedom. It's for people who long to connect deeply with God in a new way.

Sacred Belonging is divided into 5 sections: creation, wisdom, spirit, the body, and the feminine. Each of these sections include devotions 5-10 min in length that are thought-provoking, deeply theological, and personal. The way Kat is able to take seemingly normal or uninteresting things, and make them reflect the beauty and glory of God, is incredible. I learned so much, was encouraged, and challenged by this book. Highly recommend!

Was this review helpful?

“In this forty-day devotional, Cuban American writer Kat Armas shows us that reading the Bible with fresh eyes allows us to experience God in new and liberating ways.”

I first ‘met’ this author in her pages of Abuelita Faith. She was making the podcast circuit and I was drawn in by her stunning blend of feminism, anti-racism, and deep love of Scripture. Her IG platform has been a source of joy and learning ever since.

While some readers readers might be disappointed if they came to this work hoping for a Sister Beth-type study, these daily devotions, with their scripture, heartfelt anecdotes, calls-to-action, and personal questions are exactly what I was looking for.

Also: The cover is smashing.

Thanks to NetGalley and Brazos Press for this life-giving ARC.

Was this review helpful?

Readers who liked this book also liked: