|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
In the wake of a historic earthquake in the fragile country of
Haiti, Kent Annan considers suffering--from the epic to the
everyday--as a problem for faith. Less than two weeks after the
release of Kent's book about his work with Haiti Partners, he heard
the news. Friends trapped under the rubble of buildings. Friends
sprinting across the city looking for family. Churches--including
one Kent often attended--turned to rubble. Suddenly Kent and his
friends were part of an uncomfortable fellowship: people whose
faith is shaken by crisis. Taking courage from the psalmists of old
and the company of his grieving neighbors, Kent has found that
there is solidarity in suffering. Others have followed life to the
edge of meaning and have heard God even there, calling for honest
faith. Are there questions or realities your faith can't handle?
Kent wroteAfter Shock to help you find out.
14th Annual Outreach Magazine Resource of the Year, Social Justice
No one said pursuing justice would be easy. The road can be so
challenging and the destination so distant that you may be
discouraged by a lack of progress, compassion or commitment in your
quest for justice. How do you stay committed to the journey when
God's kingdom can seem so slow in coming? Kent Annan understands
the struggle of working for justice over the long haul. He
confesses, "Over the past twenty years, I've succumbed to various
failed shortcuts instead of living the freedom of faithful
practices." In this book, he shares practices he has learned that
will encourage and help you to keep making a difference in the face
of the world's challenging issues. All Christians are called to do
justice, love mercy and walk humbly in the world. Slow Kingdom
Coming will guide and strengthen you on this journey to persevere
until God's kingdom comes on earth as it is in heaven.
"Wait, Dad. Are we for them or against them?" Kent Annan was
talking with his eight-year-old son about the immigrant and refugee
crises around the world. His son's question, innocent enough in the
moment, is writ large across our society today. How we answer it,
Annan says, will reveal a lot about what kind of family, community,
or country we want to be. In You Welcomed Me, Annan explores how
fear and misunderstanding often motivate our responses to people in
need, and invites us instead into stories of welcome-stories that
lead us to see the current refugee and immigrant crisis in a new
light. He lays out simple practices for a way forward: confessing
what separates us, listening well, and partnering with, not
patronizing, those in need. His stories draw us in, and his
practices send us out prepared to cross social and cultural
divides. In this wise, practical book, Annan invites us to answer
his son's question with confident conviction: "We're for them"-and
to explore with him the life-giving implications of that answer.
|
You may like...
Captain America
Jack Kirby, Joe Simon, …
Paperback
R543
Discovery Miles 5 430
|