A Tiny Step Away from Deepest Faith: A High Schooler's Search for Meaning

A Tiny Step Away from Deepest Faith: A High Schooler's Search for Meaning

by Marjorie Corbman (Author)

$17.08

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 120
Publisher: Paraclete Press
Published: 01 Nov 2015

ISBN 10: 155725429X
ISBN 13: 9781557254290

Media Reviews

RAISED as an unbelieving or Reform Jew, with all tile rituals but no faith, Marjorie Corbman first came to believe in a Higher Power in the spring of eighth grade, when she fell in love with peonies. This book covers her intellectual and spiritual journey from eighth through eleventh grade, when she finally embraces Orthodox Christianity, and provides a window into her generation's approach to life, its cynicism and bitterness and especially its deep spiritual hunger.

Her parents are children of the 1960s, still full of idealism for changing the world, but she and her friends are an uprooted, jaded, chaotic age bracket. Christianity is just too unfashionable, so it is the last place she looks, despite a powerful encounter with a picture of Christ as early as age eleven. A year later, she tells us, I would refer to this as the time I was almost 'sucked in' to the allure of Christianity.

Her story carries her through Eastern religions, wicca, neopaganism, neo-gnosticism, and all the world's cynical resistance to Christ and his Church. Her prose is a well-blended stew of references and stories of those who have influenced her: the Gospels and Epistles, Amma Syncletica, St. Augustine, Simone Weil, Fulton Sheen, Archimandrite Sophrony, not to mention her mother, her rabbi, and her English teacher.

All of this has been simmered together with conversations with other teenagers, and stories of depression, cutting, and the feelings of abandonment and despair. She writes about the love of nature, the need for community, the hunger for perfection, and the theological questions that her friends have, for instance, What's eternity? is it really stagnant? From such a promising young writer, surely, this is only a beginning.
Mother Macaria Touchstone February 4, 2006



The 17-year-old author has written a book that belies her years and the experience of her contemporaries. But she speaks up for them with a strong voice and convictions to match.

She says that for most kids her age, nothing is more intellectually unfashionable than Christianity. She was raised Jewish, though not always practicing. Corbman suffered from loneliness and despair as a preteen. For &time, she found solace in nature and in Wicca.

Though she writes with a certain existential angst, she also speaks for her generation with remarkable clarity. Our spirituality isn't that of rational beings, but of drowning souls, she writes.

Corbman's slim book read almost like a creed for modern teenagers. We aren't happy. We take Zoloft and cut open our flesh and do anything to assure us that we're here, that we feel, that our experience is valid and tangible. But it's not the external things that bother; it's the intense hunger inside us for something we haven't learned to understand yet, haven't encountered.

She found solace in Christianity, the religion she most equated with the antithesis of her being. There are moments when the young author can't resist showing how smart she is. She's read the works of many philosophers. But she does more than recite their teachings. Corbman has internalized the messages, discovered herself through God and tapped her talent for communicating that love. Wendy Hoke The Plain Dealer December 28, 2005

Author Bio
Marjorie Corbman lives with her parents in Morristown, New Jersey, where she is a junior at Morristown-Beard High School. She was baptized into the Orthodox Church this past Easter. Frederica Mathewes-Green is the author of many books including Facing East: A Pilgrim's Journey into the Mystery of Orthodoxy, and The Illumined Heart: The Ancient Christian Path of Transformation.