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Follow Me - A History of Christian Intentionality (Paperback)
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Follow Me - A History of Christian Intentionality (Paperback)
Series: New Monastic Library: Resources for Radical Discipleship, 4
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Description: From the very beginning there have been Christians who
wanted to go all the way--who, rather than asking, ""What must I do
to be a Christian?"" asked instead, ""What can I do to be more
Christian?"" These highly intentional Christians have had an impact
on the development of both Christianity and western civilization
that has been completely out of proportion to their numbers. The
greatest impact of these Christian has come through the communities
of like-minded believers--some of lay evangelicals and others of
celibate monastics--formed based upon their common desire to live
more intentional Christian lives. Throughout the past twenty
centuries, hundreds of groups of both kinds have formed. This
probing work tells the story of these communities, both monastic
and lay. It is a story that, though often overlooked, is both
inspiring and instructive. Above all it is a story that opens the
way for greater understanding between two groups of Christians who
have long been estranged--Protestant evangelicals and Catholic
monastics. Endorsements: ""Evangelicals are often accused of being
ahistorical because we jump from Paul to Martin Luther without a
pause to consider what the Spirit did in between. But every
Christian tradition finds some way to draw the line from Jesus to
the present. How we tell that story shapes who we are. 'Follow Me'
tells the Christian story in a way that sparks my imagination and
gets me excited about who the church is becoming in our
post-Christian era. I hope every community of disciples will read
it and ask, 'How is God calling us to live the next chapter?'""
--Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove author of To Baghdad and Beyond: How I
Got Born Again in Babylon ""Kauffman offers us a first installment
on the kind of scholarship becoming possible thanks to the
stereoscopic perspective of those who are learning to live on both
sides of a great river that has long divided Christianity. . . .
Unexpected though the news may be, it is the very burden of
Kauffman's book to show us why we should not have been surprised,
and would not be surprised, if we read the history of Christianity
looking for its broadest unifying patterns rather than for the
basis of our separate identities. . . . He has done a service to
historian, ecumenist, and renewal-minded Christian alike by looking
for the forest not just the trees, surveying the lay of the land,
and marking the river that gives it life."" --Gerald W. Schlabach
author of Just Policing, Not War: An Alternative Response to World
Violence About the Contributor(s): Ivan J. Kauffman grew up in one
of the oldest surviving lay evangelical communities, the Amish
Mennonites. Educated as both a Mennonite and a Catholic he has been
active in Mennonite Catholic dialogues from their beginnings in the
1980s, and was a founder of the North American grassroots Mennonite
Catholic dialogue, Bridgefolk, which meets regularly at Saint
John's Abbey, Collegeville, Minnesota. He identifies himself as a
Mennonite Catholic.
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