When it comes to a topic as personal and private as ones body image, it takes an author with tremendous courage and willingness to be vulnerable to touch the hearts of readers. Amanda Martinez Beck is that author, and her book Lovely: How I Learned to Embrace the Body God Gave Me is surely that book, ready to touch the hearts of its readers. Packed with important truths from Scripture and Church teaching, moments of deep and powerful reflection, and a personal story that will relate to so many, this book is ready to touch hearts and reframe all of our thinking about the gift God has given us in our unique and beautifully created bodies.
Tommy Tighe, author of The Catholic Hipster Handbook and co-host of Repent & Submit on CatholicTV
I have witnessed too many homilies filled with body disparagement and calls to diet to lead a more holy life. For decades I have longed for the Church to have access to non-diet ways to relate to food, yet the diet industry and weight bias have kept it from us. Finally, I have a book that describes the dangerous distraction to diet along with futile focus on weight through the lens of Catholic teachings. Thank you, Amanda, for writing this book and sharing your story! I found it easy to read and deeply inspiring. I hope every member of the Catholic Church connects with her books wisdom. Especially, I hope priests read it before they deliver homilies referring to food and bodies. This book helps us understand the important nuances of how we relate to food and how it can enhance or hinder our relationship with God and loving our neighbor.
Julie Duffy Dillon, registered dietician and host of the Love, Food podcast
Amanda Martinez Beck has written a lovely book that teaches women about loving their bodies the way they are and realizing that their bodies are perfect in the eyes of God even when the world is telling them that they are imperfect. She intersperses her work with moving vignettes from her own journey from an insecure, overweight child to a confident size-dignity activist, and provides insightful questions for reflection as well as guidance in accepting ones body and by extension, ones self as a valuable gift with inherent worth and dignity in the eyes of God. This book is a must-read for any woman who has ever looked in the mirror and wished she had a different body.
JoAnna Wahlund, The Catholic Working Mother (blog)
In Lovely, Amanda Beck bypasses the trite statements we think were supposed to make about our bodies and delves right into the tough questions about how we should view ourselves, body and soul, in light of the Gospel. A challenging, beautiful read!
Haley Stewart, blogger, podcaster, and author of The Grace of Enough: Pursuing Less and Living More in a Throwaway Culture
When I was twelve, a stranger told me I had thick thighs, and 17 years later, I still think about that comment as examine my body in the mirror. Lovely is the first book Ive read that asked to engage my whole person mind, soul, body, and thick thighs and Im so glad I said yes. Achingly raw and vulnerable at points, this book never demands more than it gives as Amanda weaves together biblical insight, expert voices, and her own personal experiences. In bravely entering into this conversation, Amanda offers us a gift: a chance to dialogue with her on questions weve been too afraid to ask. I, for one, am so grateful for the chance to finally speak.
Joy Beth Smith, author of Party of One
There are so many plus-size models, so many plus-size retailers, so many people advocating for body love and body grace and body mercy in the world. But youll only find those voices in the world. What about those people who are in the world but not of the world? The fact of the matter is that when we go to church, when we are among the body of Christ, those voices are painfully absent, and, ironically, those of us with unconventional bodies are often met with shame, scorn, derision and judgment as opposed to the peace, love, grace, and mercy the Church should be known for. Lovely advocates for body compassion and challenges us to see ourselves the way God sees us. My body tells my story and Jesus loves my body. Whew. Its a radical, almost revolutionary idea that ought not to be so radical: the idea that Jesus loves us as we are, with our bodies, in our bodies, our bodies themselves, and that he actually might be responsible for the story written in and by our bodies. Amanda reminds us that our bodies are instruments not ornaments to do the Lords bidding. They are vehicles of his grace and kindness in this world. It may not be perfect, but it is good and holy, and God created it, so I shall learn to love it. I thank God for this book and I thank God for you, Amanda!
Simone Samuels, plus-sized fitness professional, blogger, and Youtuber/host of Sipping with Simone, www.Simonesamuels.ca
Amanda Martinez Beck has written a book that is radical that is, it gets to the root of so much of what ails our society. Her call to see ourselves as made for relationship with God, and to see our bodies as good no matter what, is holy work. This book beats back the forces of evil which long to ensnare and entrap and abuse, and replaces fear and self-hatred with love. Read it for yourselves, your families, and your neighbors. May we all learn to give grace to ourselves, that we might be able to give grace to our neighbors.
D. L. Mayfield, activist and author of Assimilate or Go Home: Notes from a Failed Missionary on Rediscovering Faith
If youve ever experienced shame and frustration in regard to your physical self, Amanda Martinez Beck has words of mercy and grace you need to hear. In Lovely: How I Learned to Embrace the Body God Gave Me, Amanda challenges our commonly held notions of health and wellness for our greatest good. Through vivid personal stories and powerful biblical teaching, Amandas gentle voice dislodges the various ways body shame has taken hold in our own hearts and lives. Readers of Lovely will learn how to extend mercy to the body God has given them, thereby becoming beacons of Gods mercy to everyone they encounter something we need more of in todays world.
Erin Straza, author of Comfort Detox: Finding Freedom from Habits That Bind You, co-host of Persuasion Podcast, and managing editor of Christ and Pop Culture
In Lovely: How I Learned to Embrace the Body God Gave Me, Amanda Martinez Beck invites us to see our bodies the way the Creator made them, as good and lovely. In a world that constantly tells us how to fix our imperfect bodies, Amanda calls us into a better way. She asks us to see our bodies and the bodies of those around us as good, while acknowledging their weaknesses and flaws and pain. With personal stories and truths rooted in Scripture and Christian theology, Beck offers us a theology of the body that honors each body as made in the image of God. Becks book is important reading for anyone who struggles to embrace their body and live fully into who God has created us to be.
J. Nicole Morgan, author of Fat and Faithful: Learning to Love Our Bodies, Our Neighbors, and Ourselves
Lovely
Lovely
How I Learned to Embrace the Body God Gave Me
Amanda Martinez Beck
www.osv.com
Our Sunday Visitor Publishing Division
Our Sunday Visitor, Inc.
Huntington, Indiana 46750
Disclaimer: This book is not intended as a substitute for medical advice from physicians. The author is not a licensed medical provider, and author and publisher make no representations or warranties of any kind with respect to this book or its contents. The reader should regularly consult a trusted physician in matters relating to health and particularly with respect to any symptoms that may require diagnosis or medical attention.
Next page