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Do Something Else (Hardcover)
Nate Phillips; Foreword by Bruce Reyes-Chow
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R972
R792
Discovery Miles 7 920
Save R180 (19%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Do Something Else (Paperback)
Nate Phillips; Foreword by Bruce Reyes-Chow
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R548
R454
Discovery Miles 4 540
Save R94 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In 40 Days, 40 Prayers, 40 Words, Reyes-Chow encourages readers to
pause in the bustle of their daily lives to reflect, engage, and
share during the Lenten season. Forty devotions are each framed
around a word inspired by the daily lectionary readings and include
a short scriptural passage, inspirational prayer, and reflection.
Readers who feel too busy for daily engagement with God will
appreciate Reyes-Chow's ability to speak to the blessings and
burdens of everyday life in a concise, lively manner. Moreover,
readers also have the ability to connect with others through
interactive elements like QR codes that link to social media and
provide access to additional reflections, graphics, and prayers.
This unique resource expands the ways we can connect with God, and
with each other, both during Lent and at any time along our
journeys of faith. Follow along using the hashtag: #40wordprayer.
In "But I Don't See You as Asian: Curating Conversations About
Race" Bruce Reyes-Chow curates a collection of cringe-inducing
statements about race such as, "If they can say it, why can't I?" "
"Do you know martial arts?" and "He's a different kind of Black,"
hoping to turn awkward moments into a dialogue between friends.
Sitting in the sweet spot between lectures in academia and activism
on the streets, Bruce invites the reader into a salon type of
atmosphere where he directly addresses thoughtless words and
diversionary tactics, such as dismissing racial discussions as
being impolite or avoiding race conversations altogether. He
invites the reader to chuckle, gasp, and perhaps nod in
understanding as he lists the kinds of statements often used
against persons of color in a predominantly white culture. But
rather than stopping there, Bruce asks readers to swap shoes with
him and reconsider their assumptions about race. Useful for
individual reading, or as a tool for opening group and community
discussions, "But I don't see you as Asian" puts one person's joys
and struggles on the table for dissection and discovery.
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