Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Holy Luck

Rate this book
Eugene H. Peterson has long been known as a pastor, professor, and provocateur. With this first-ever collection of verse, Peterson will become known as a poet, too. Holy Luck emerged over many years, initially as individual poems sent to family, friends, and church congregations. Now, the translator of the bestselling Bible paraphrase The Message has collected his poems into three thematic sections of verseson the Beatitudes, the kingdom of God in the ordinary, and following Jesus everydayhere released as one transcendent volume.

128 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 2, 2012

37 people are currently reading
194 people want to read

About the author

Eugene H. Peterson

432 books1,014 followers
Eugene H. Peterson was a pastor, scholar, author, and poet. For many years he was James M. Houston Professor of Spiritual Theology at Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia. He also served as founding pastor of Christ Our King Presbyterian Church in Bel Air, Maryland. He had written over thirty books, including Gold Medallion Book Award winner The Message: The Bible in Contemporary Language a contemporary translation of the Bible. After retiring from full-time teaching, Eugene and his wife Jan lived in the Big Sky Country of rural Montana. He died in October 2018.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
44 (36%)
4 stars
50 (41%)
3 stars
21 (17%)
2 stars
5 (4%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews
Profile Image for F.C. Shultz.
Author 19 books36 followers
Read
July 22, 2023
If you’re trying to get into reading poetry, I probably wouldn’t recommend this collection (look to Billy Collins or Mary Oliver). But, if you’re a Eugene Peterson fan, you’ll appreciate these poems. They give you a glimpse of the heart of this incredible man.
Profile Image for Hannah.
23 reviews12 followers
September 12, 2023
I tried to savior this book over the course of many weeks but I couldn’t… the poems were just too good! He wonderfully ties together the invisible realities of the Kingdom with everyday mundane moments.
181 reviews2 followers
December 29, 2018
The lovely thing about poetry books is you've never really finished with them. One to ponder and savour over and over again
Profile Image for Alec Worrell-Welch.
8 reviews1 follower
February 2, 2024
Not every poem’s a 5-star poem. But more times than I can remember, I bookmarked two, or three, or four, so excited to share them with the one I love. This collection’s parts are worth pausing over. They are rich nourishment for meditative, prayerful conversation and life.
Profile Image for Gentry Wigginton .
29 reviews
March 7, 2023
Wonderful poetry from a master of language. Eugene, in each of these poems collected, makes you see the holy in the ordinary, the sacred in the mundane.
Profile Image for Thomas.
Author 8 books6 followers
November 14, 2018
I am by no means a connoisseur of poetry, but I'm a huge fan of Peterson, and this little book is beautiful from start to finish.
Profile Image for Anita.
654 reviews17 followers
December 9, 2017
The poems link the spiritual with the natural. I would say that one need not be a believer in God to find truth in these words. I loved several of them that resonated with my own experience or desires. Others, as is usual with poetry, went right over my head. I bought, rather than borrowed, this book because it is beauty that I want on hand.
Profile Image for Gabriella Llewellyn.
17 reviews53 followers
November 29, 2019
I love Eugene Peterson, and the introduction to this collection of poems is probably one of the most moving love letters to poetry I've ever read, however the actual poetry was disappointing.
Profile Image for Carol Bakker.
1,551 reviews137 followers
August 5, 2020
I'm trying to restrain myself from flinging 5 stars here and there, but I couldn't help myself. I loved this one. I hate typing reviews on a phone so I will tell you later why I loved it.
Profile Image for Jodi.
839 reviews10 followers
August 10, 2021
Really enjoyed this collection of poems/reflections on life and Scripture.
Profile Image for Kathryn Williams.
612 reviews6 followers
September 27, 2021
I took this poetry collection nice and slow. It is a slim book but mine has many, many sticky notes marking phrases that I loved. On my way to reading everything by Eugene Peterson.
Profile Image for Zach Busick.
86 reviews9 followers
October 4, 2021
My sense is that Peterson is stronger in prose, but there are some hidden gems here!
Profile Image for Roy Howard.
123 reviews2 followers
December 15, 2013
Eugene Peterson has had an enormous influence on pastors through his several books of theological reflection on pastoral practices and biblical commentaries. His widest influence though is likely with his popular version of the Bible - The Message. It is not a surprise that he is a poet or that his poems come from a deep listening to scripture. Peterson doesn't only listen well; he listens with a fertile imagination able to take a single line into a reflection on the universal. For instance, Peter's "practice hospitality ungrudgingly" become an opportunity to consider the way in which Christ appears to those who practice hospitality: "Christ the abused, Christ the fool,/Christ sullen, Christ laughing,/Christ angry, Christ envious,/Christ bewildered, Christ on crutches." And, "like Gospel writers of old we pray/and reminisce over left-behind guest signs–/A bra, a sock, a scribbled thank you–And let them grow into stories." Before his reflection is over we are in the presence of the resurrection through an ordinary practice of hospitality. These poems are written in what Peterson calls "the working context of the Kingdom of God" and are divided into three sections: Holy Luck, which focus on the Beatitudes; Rustling Grass which are "field notes on scripture" and Smooth Stones, occasional poems in various outdoor settings. These poems will stir up your imagination.
283 reviews13 followers
October 25, 2013
I picked up Peterson's poems with hopes to read poems set to the rhythm of spirituality and faith, words that send the soul into the depths of thought or prayer instead of deadened by cliche. I once read that such a thing, poems on faith, couldn't be done well - that the language so often associated with faith in the West was laden with cliche. Peterson, with this thought in my mind, comes at the task with a scythe, clearing the path.

In all, I felt Peterson's work was the best I've read on this, but I think (and he might agree) that there's much to do in redeeming words of faith, images of faith.
Profile Image for Jason Leonard.
90 reviews9 followers
April 9, 2014
Wonderful. When I read poetry, I expect that only a portion of it will resonate. Expecting to ring with half of the poems in any collection is too ambitious for me, but once I reached the halfway mark of this book, I anticipated wonder on the next page. I began to look for signs of life and a wiser, kindred spirit to shine a light for me. I laughed a fair amount and wept more than I deserve. This is wonderful poetry and borne of an abundant life. And don't skip the preface, it is piercing and beautiful.
Profile Image for Farzana Marie.
Author 5 books23 followers
February 16, 2015
This refreshing book of poems contains many stunning details and memorable moments, as in these lines from "The Lucky Sad:"
"...Under
The Mercy every hurt is a fossil
Link in that great chain of becoming.
Pick and shovel prayers often
Turn them up in valleys of death." (p. 5)

Some of the poems don't reach their full potential, as they are either unimaginatively titled (mostly the one-word titles in Part II) or recycle certain tired wording and tropes that on the whole Eugene Peterson is very successful in escaping. Grateful to him for this uplifting collection!
Profile Image for Tamara Murphy.
Author 1 book31 followers
February 5, 2016
Ever since Brian and I heard Pastor Peterson speak in 2008 during a symposium, we have reclaimed the word "luck" as another way to say "We are surprisingly blessed, indeed!" This small book of poetry reminds me that this man wrote the Message translation of the Bible. And he knows he is a lucky man, indeed.
Profile Image for Gloria.
2,325 reviews54 followers
August 6, 2016
Eugene Peterson's poetry is gentle and reflective. Here he presents a Bible verse with each poem to indicate where his inspiration was drawn from. The poems are rather brief, yet reflect the human experience and nature simply and poignantly.
Profile Image for Brandon.
58 reviews3 followers
October 21, 2014
Loved these short poems steeped in meditation on Scripture. Many were very thought provoking and some unraveled new layers of meditating on certain passages.
Profile Image for David Pierce.
70 reviews7 followers
Read
March 18, 2015
Anything Eugene Peterson writes, I want to read. I am drawn to his command of words. This book is no exception to the rule. I want to read what Eugene Peterson writes.
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.