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For church leaders seeking to inspire social change
Addresses apathy in faith communities towards injustice
You will learn to cultivate hope and active faith practices
When the #BlackLivesMatter protest movement burst into dynamic action following the shooting death of young Michael Brown in the fall of 2014 in Ferguson, MO, a good number of clergy and lay leaders in greater St. Louis sprang to action and learned anew what it took to "put some feet to their prayers." However, as improvisational efforts continued to rally and organize churches toward the enduring work of confronting the insidious violence of systemic social injustices in their own backyard, these religious leaders ran head-on into a familiar yet perplexing wall: the incapacity and unwillingness of their faith communities to respond. In many cases, the resistance was (and still is) fierce, eerily reminiscent of the stand-offs that divided religious communities and leadership in the 1960s Civil Rights era. If the Church's teaching, learning, and practice of faith is purportedly transformative, then where was/is that faith when it was/is needed most? If good religious formation had been happening--or had it?--then why the enduring signs of indifference, paralysis, apathy, exasperation, resistance, symptoms of anesthetized moral consciousness and debilitated hope in the face of pervasive social-cultural violence?
The answer may come in a searing indictment: that in an emerging cultural-religious era in which religious identity, expression, and experience are increasingly pluralistic, yet also politicized, polarizing, and racialized, Christian faith communities--even those of progressive theological persuasions--are still held under dominant cultural captivity, and fashioned by colonizing teaching strategies of "disimagination" - such that the stories (theologies) and rituals (practices) of the faith have effectively become obstacles that anesthetize moral agency and debilitate courageous action for hope and change.
This book addresses the above practical concerns with three paradigmatic questions:
Title
Reset the Heart: Unlearning Violence, Relearning Hope
Author
Mai-Anh Le Tran
Book Format
Paperback / softback
Publisher
Abingdon Press
Published
May 2017
Weight
227g
Dimensions
15.3 x 22.7 x 1.1 cm
ISBN
9781501832468
ISBN-10
1501832468
Eden Code
4519677
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£23.93
Save 27% | Free UK Delivery
Available - Usually dispatched within 4 days
Available - Usually dispatched within 4 days
