Living Devotions: Reflections on Immigration, Identity, and Religious Imagination - eBook
Stock No: WW111387EB
Living Devotions: Reflections on Immigration, Identity, and Religious Imagination - eBook  -     By: Mary Clark Moschella

Living Devotions: Reflections on Immigration, Identity, and Religious Imagination - eBook

Pickwick Publications / 2007 / ePub

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Stock No: WW111387EB

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In Stock
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Pickwick Publications / 2007 / ePub
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Product Information

Title: Living Devotions: Reflections on Immigration, Identity, and Religious Imagination - eBook
By: Mary Clark Moschella
Format: DRM Free ePub
Vendor: Pickwick Publications
Publication Date: 2007
ISBN: 9781630878436
ISBN-13: 9781630878436
Series: Princeton Theological Monograph
Stock No: WW111387EB

Publisher's Description

Living Devotions explores how a particular community has creatively negotiated its religious bonds of connection in the context of immigration. These matters cannot be studied in the abstract. Religious practice is not something separate from the economic, cultural, and psychological dimensions of life, but rather something integral, which shapes and is being shaped by all of these other realities. The author examines these dynamics through an ethnographic case study of the living devotions of a group of Italian Catholic immigrants to San Pedro, California. The narrative describes how the group's historical experiences of immigration and fishing find expression in their particular forms of prayer, art, artifacts, and food. The healing and transformative power of these shared religious practices is explored. As contemporary theologians, pastors, and congregations seek to welcome and care for immigrants and other strangers in a shifting social landscape, we need ways to engage in care-full and attentive relationships. The ethnographic method employed here suggests a way to lift up the voices of ordinary people, allowing them to tell their own stories, while piecing together emerging bits of theological wisdom and compelling care practices. While the particular insights of any community are situated and specific, theological reflection in one context can animate a broader discussion of transformative pastoral theology and practice.

Author Bio

Mary Clark Moschella is Associate Professor of Pastoral Theology and Congregational Care at Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington, D.C. She is the author of Ethnography as a Pastoral Practice: An Introduction (Pilgrim Press 2008).

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