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Spirituality at Work: 10 Ways to Balance Your Life on the Job

Spirituality at Work: 10 Ways to Balance Your Life on the JobAuthor: Gregory F. Augustine Pierce
Publisher: Loyola Press
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
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Seller: Goodwill Industries of the Columbia
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 307,172

Media: Paperback
Pages: 157
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.6

ISBN: 0829421165
Dewey Decimal Number: 248.88
EAN: 9780829421163
ASIN: 0829421165

Publication Date: January 1, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Kindle Edition - Spirituality at Work: 10 Ways to Balance Your Life on the Job
  • Hardcover - Spirituality at Work: 10 Ways to Balance Your Life On-the-Job

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Inviting us to pause, reflect, and act with the God who is already present, Gregory F. A. Pierce boldy confronts and honestly evaluates our struggle to find meaning in the workplace. Unlike books that try to impose religion on the world of work, spirituality@work promotes an authentic spirituality that is rooted in the nitty-gritty of the workplace. Pierce shows how each of us can successfully balance our work with other aspects of life.


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars Spirituality for the Rest of Us   April 6, 2001
Michael E Coyne (Pittsburgh, PA United States)
35 out of 35 found this review helpful

This wonderful little book could be aptly subtitled "Spirituality for the rest of us." Pierce, who confesses himself "piety-impaired," has written a practical, day-to-day handbook for discovering the divine presence as it lurks in some of the places we may least expect it.

This is not a book about how to cope with jobs that overwhelm and diminish us. It is rather a step-by-step set of instructions, which Pierce terms "disciplines," through which we may actively transform our daily grind (whether we're priests or poets, doctors, lawyers, butchers, bakers or candlestick-makers) into our own best crack at co-creation of the world. It is not a book about getting away from the world, but rather a book about getting really into the world with our spiritual wholeness intact, about remembering to remember that God is present among the daily hum and rattle, if only we have the personal discipline to look. Not a book to read and put away or pass along, you'll want to keep it desk-side, a User's Manual for the spirit, available for ready reference.


5 out of 5 stars very down to earth   February 9, 2007
Suz
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I love this book. I love its accessibility and the author's honesty about the realities of work demands. He invites the reader into a conversation about integrating spiritual values into everyday work, rather than declaring he has attained a lofty spiritual plane in his worklife. He offers his own journey and the things he has learned for consideration.


4 out of 5 stars Looking for spirituality in the workplace?   August 30, 2002
JtomGolfer (Hendersonville NC)
18 out of 18 found this review helpful

My ongoing professional development involves a commitment to read books that have nothing to do with my profession. I chose this book for two reasons: It is the textual basis for a faith-sharing program in which I am involved at my church. I also thought its subject was far a-field from my job as a preceptor/facilitator.It appears I was mistaken on the second reason.

Gregory Pierce is in the publishing business, he's a husband and father, and he's active in his church and civic communities. The subtitle, "10 ways to balance your life on the job" is really what the book is all about. As he puts it, "It is pretty clear that God is present on our workplaces. Yet the workplace is a difficult place to 'be spiritual.' It is noisy, crowded, complex, competitive, materialistic, tiring, frustrating, dangerous, busy, [and] secular. To find God there, we have [to work hard at it], and most of our traditional spiritual disciplines are not well designed to help us do that."

This is the belief that forms his thesis and Pierce's life experiences provided the motivation for his writing. The writing is crisp and clear, and, unlike similar spiritual books, is not aimed at changing one's belief systems about God, but it's rather a 'how-to' book on achieving a higher level of spirituality in the workplace.

Pierce establishes some common language for us about work, defines spirituality, and he adds some ground rules about how he wants us to focus on what he refers to as spirituality disciplines. He presents ten disciplines, or practices, for spiritual improvement and invites our examination in the context of what we do with each area daily.

This book revealed more about leadership than I first imagined. Woven into each discussion on each of the disciplines are anecdotal quotes concerning how each person practices their spirituality and why it's important for them to do so. Although he didn't use the term servant-leader, Pierce shares this from a social worker who was talking about her boss:
"She was direct and honest but never disparaging of others. She was strategic but not conniving. Her power came from her vision, not just from the authority she held by virtue of her position. She was gentle in her correction or direction of others- affirming not mushy. [She] was passionate but not emotional, smart, tolerant of other views but always clear about her own. She treated others like she wanted to be treated, and others who worked for her eventually began to behave that way too." This reflects that notion of Robert Greenleaf's servant leadership plus the "modeling the way" espoused by Kouzes and Posner.

These ten disciplines remind one of Stephen Covey's Seven Habits, especially Pierce's last discipline entitled "Engaging in Ongoing Personal and Professional Development." This was almost a carbon copy of Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw. The book is simply constructed, with just enough thought provocation on each spirituality discipline followed at chapter end by a section prescribing real-life methods of practicing each discipline discussed in that chapter. Great stuff!

This was a well-conceived and well-researched book by an author who convinced me that he had experienced the same kinds of issues and problems faced by those searching to practice spirituality at work. I recommend putting this book on your leadership bookshelf for the practical lessons it teaches and for the timelessness of the author's prescription for a balanced life.


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