Kayla Hammond - Landscapes Of the Sacred (Reading 2)
In the the Landscapes of the Sacred chapter 8 it explains the problems in articulating an American sense of sacred space. Americans are so often accustomed to change that they are even constantly moving. In this chapter it describe that even though Americans are constantly moving they still desire a sense of belonging in one place. A place where they are supported, understood, and In community with others. However, this notion is challenging to find in a individualistic society. Although according to this chapter it explained that Americans fail to realize that the sacred space they are longing for is right in front of them. It is at church, at home, and wherever you look with new eyes. This concept of looking with new eyes was explained as the ability to see the holy masked in ordinary things. Over the past couple years I have lived mostly at Christopher Newport University with many trips to my childhood home in Charlottesville, Va. As each year passed I would come with a different sense of the space by the time I was a Junior at CNU my childhood home no longer felt a home but instead a space that I visited often. Now as a senior I am able to recognize this place as sacred because it is the place I grew up in. The space that I spent countless hours playing in the creek behind the house and swinging on a rope swing that was hung from a tree next to the house.
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