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Promote effective partnerships between men and women to end
domestic violence! Men's Work in Preventing Violence Against Women
examines the experiences of 12 practicing counselors who call on
their religious training to form partnerships between men and women
that promote an end to domestic violence. In both religious and
secular settings, the bulk of the work done to end violence against
women is done by womensurvivors who have become activists and
advocates who have been touched by the witness of survivors.
Motivating and educating men to share the everyday work of domestic
violence shelters, rape crisis counseling, and abuse prevention is
essential. This book challenges traditional images of masculinity,
exploring effectiveand ineffectivemethods of helping men face their
own sexism and change their behavior toward the goal of ending
domestic violence. Each contributor to Men's Work in Preventing
Violence Against Women approached the concept of man/woman
partnerships working to end domestic violence and sexual assault
with the following questions in mind: In your experience and social
world have you seen creative partnerships between men and women
that made a difference? Have you seen men in counseling struggle to
change their views on gender in order to become reliable allies in
the fight to end violence against women? How can religion become a
resource for men working to become allies with women? What
strategies can men use to help end violence against women? Men's
Work in Preventing Violence Against Women includes contributions
from Paul Kivel, cofounder of the Oakland Men's Project and of
Gvarim: Bay Area Jewish Men Against Violence; David Livingston,
author of Healing Violent Men: A Model for Christian Communities;
Al Miles, author of Domestic Violence: What Every Pastor Should
Know; and Richard Wallace Jr., editor of the Journal of Ministry in
Addiction & Recovery (Haworth). Each essay presents practical
and theoretical ideas, guidelines for partnerships, and insightful
information on sexual and domestic violence. Topics addressed
include: Jewish male violence holding Christian men accountable for
domestic violence shared experiences of batterers and the people
who treat them premarital preparation the dynamics of power in
pastoral care engaging Scripture with male abusers helping men
become pro-feminist Men's Work in Preventing Violence Against Women
is an essential resource for counselors, social workers, clergy,
laypersons, and anyone else working to end domestic violence and
sexual abuse against women.
Can practitioners and theorists talk to each other? The answer is
yes. This collection brings together top scholars in the fields of
pastoral care, systematic theology, and biblical hermeneutics to
offer a coherent practical theology for the pastoral mission of the
church. As Christians around the world practice their faith, this
important scholarly book highlights the salient struggles in
contemporary Christian thought and seeks to bring together the best
of church and academy for the greater good. Contents Interpreting
Situations: An Inquiry into the Nature of Practical Theology Edward
Farley Re-Visioning Ministry: Postmodern Reflections Charles E.
Winquist The Practical Play of Theology James D. Whitehead Theology
on Our Feet: A Revisionist Pedagogy for Healing the Gap between
Academia and Ecclesia Thomas H. Groome Practical Theology and
Religious Education Don S. Browning Thinking in the Community of
Faith: Toward an Ecclesial Hermeneutic Lewis S. Mudge Practical
Theology and Liberation Rebecca S. Chopp Practical Theology in the
Situation of Global Pluralism David Tracy Lewis S. Mudge is Robert
Leighton Stuart Professor of Theology Emeritus at San Francisco
Theological Seminary and the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley
James N. Poling is Professor of Pastoral Theology, Care, and
Counseling at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston,
Illinois.
Deliver Us From Evil explores the history of resistance to racial
and gender oppression-from a slave woman in nineteenth-century
America to a woman patient of Sigmund Freud-and traces the failed
promises of the American Revolution in the oppression of
subordinate groups. Poling reviews resistance by analyzing
communities that understand evil as the abuse of power. Also
treated are definitions of evil and debates between womanist and
feminist theologians. Jesus emerges as a model for marginalized and
oppressed people, as Poling calls for prophetic acts of solidarity
to create new possibilities for healing and justice.
Synopsis: In a time of life-and-death challenges to the human
spirit--global economics, nuclear dangers, environmental threats,
and religious polarization and war--Christians must look for
resources that provide new insights of God's power and care for all
people. What are the forms of suffering and hope in the world
today, and how can Christians respond with healing resources?
Korean Christians have unique contributions to make to our
understanding of pastoral theology and counseling. Pastoral
counselors and theologians from the United States should look to
the South Korean Christian churches and other Asian churches for
conversation partners about the nature of care and healing in
today's world. In this book, the authors explore important
ideas--such as han, jeong, and salim--from Korean history and
culture that can inform the healing ministries of the churches.
Synopsis: "Korean Resources for Pastoral Theology makes a
significant contribution to the field of pastoral care and pastoral
theology in the United States . . . The authors introduce Koreans
who are actively searching for God's spirit at work in healing,
liberation, and reconciliation . . . It is like seeing a newly
created world of God, in which all diversities dance together."
--Heesung Chung, Professor of Pastoral Counseling, Ewha Womans
University "This book is full of insightful and enthralling
information about Korean cultural values . . . Poling and Kim
present invaluable tools for pastoral counselors, Christian
leaders, and theologians to enrich the horizons of pastoral
theology and counseling at the global level." --Andrew S. Park,
Professor of Theology and Ethics, United Theological Seminary
"Korean Resources for Pastoral Theology is an excellent resource
for those interested in finding the way back to practices of
spirituality of care that foster sustainability, interdependency,
justice-making, healing, and freedom without violence. Critical and
constructive in their analysis, Poling and Kim present a promising
intercultural and interreligious perspective for Christian pastoral
theology through the particular lens of Korean Christianity."
--Wonhee Anne Joh, Associate Professor of Systematic Theology,
Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary "We have learned that how
to conduct one's cultural experiences, not as a footnote, but as a
main body of shaping one's pastoral theology, has been no less
significant to us than how to conduct universal, psychological
inquiry. I do believe Korean Resources for Pastoral Theology might
be a timely, great asset to the broader, main body of building
pastoral theology." --Soo-Young Kwon, Professor of Pastoral
Theology, United Graduate School of Theology Author Biography:
James Newton Poling is a retired Presbyterian minister and
Professor of Pastoral Theology, Care, and Counseling at
Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois. He
is author of Rethinking Faith: A Constructive Practical Theology
(2011). HeeSun Kim is a Presbyterian minister and PhD candidate in
pastoral care and counseling, with a feminist theology minor, at
Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary. Kim has been a pastor in
Korea and in the United States.
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Deepest Wound (Paperback)
Linda Crockett; Foreword by James Newton Poling
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R635
R544
Discovery Miles 5 440
Save R91 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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