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Healing God's Earth (Hardcover)
S. Roy Kaufman; Foreword by L. Shannon Jung
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Our everyday personal, familial, and communal practices of eating,
says Jung, have the potential for making us more attentive to our
life purposes, more attuned to our communal identities, and even
more mindful of the presence of God. Juxtaposing practices with
values, Jung explores how food and eating function culturally
today. He explores the larger dimensions of personal and group
eating, the great resonance that feasting and food and fasting have
within the Christian tradition, and how all this figures very
practically in Christian lifestyle. His work culminates in a
chapter on the Lord's Supper as a model for eating and the
Eucharist as an occasion for sharing with the worldwide family of
God.
Food for Life draws on L. Shannon Jung's gifts as theologian,
ethicist, pastor, and eater extraordinaire. In this deeply
thoughtful but very lively book, he encourages us to see our
humdrum habits of eating and drinking as a spiritual practice that
can renew and transform us and our world. In a fascinating sequence
that takes us from the personal to the global, Jung establishes the
religious meaning of eating and shows how it dictates a healthy
order of eating. He exposes Christians' complicity in the face of
widespread eating disorders we experience personally, culturally,
and globally, and he argues that these disorders can be reversed
through faith, Christian practices, attention to habitual
activities like cooking and gardening, the church's ministry, and
transforming our cultural policies about food.
The well-being of those who are financially secure depends on the
well-being of those who are not, those who fall into the working
poor, or Asset-Limited, Income-Constrained, Employed (ALICE). We
are interdependent both materially and spiritually and are
diminished by the extent to which we do not flourish together. In
Building the Good Life for All, L. Shannon Jung explores four
strategies for mutual flourishing: charity, self-help, cultural
value formation, and government action. Rather than theorizing on
the causes of people's poverty, the chapters demonstrate how these
transformational strategies work and how others can participate in
them. Discussion questions with each chapter help groups process
what they are learning and how they can apply these strategies
personally and in their community. Designed to be read and
discussed in seven sessions, this book encourages the social
ministry of churches and the community development of
neighborhoods. Churches and community groups will find themselves
revitalized through this study and through enacting its strategies
to help their neighbors.
About the Contributor(s): Growing up in a rural community, and
serving four rural congregations in Iowa, Illinois, Saskatchewan,
and South Dakota over nearly four decades as a pastor of Mennonite
Church USA and Canada, S. Roy Kaufman personally witnessed the
dismantling and disintegration of rural communities and churches.
This book is a distillation of forty years of living, preaching,
and teaching with these rural congregations. Kaufman lives in his
home community, Freeman, South Dakota.
God's Spirit is breathing new vitality into rural congregations!
Hear what 26 effective rural congregations have to say about God's
activity in and through them. In these stories, you can explore the
best practices for vital ministry, and identify action steps for
your own setting.
In a world where there is so much food, why are so many people
hungry? Amidst so much plenty, why aren't people happier? L.
Shannon Jung insists that the two questions-one having to do with
physical hunger, the other with spiritual want-are related. Hunger
and Happiness exposes the atrocities of a global food system
whereby the affluent "feed" at the expense of others, but then goes
on to explore how complicity in the hunger of others contributes to
the "spiritual malnourishment" of those who otherwise are well fed.
Chapters address particular aspects of a global food policy that
insures cheap food for some at great expense to many others. Jung
considers the psychological and theological implications of such
policy and after assessing the moral ramifications of cheap food,
offers possibilities for alleviating physical hunger in the world
and spiritual malaise in our lives.
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