Hopeful Realism in Urban Ministry: Critical Explorations and Constructive Affirmations of Hoping Justice Prayerfully - eBook
Stock No: WW108183EB
Hopeful Realism in Urban Ministry: Critical Explorations and Constructive Affirmations of Hoping Justice Prayerfully - eBook  -     By: Barry K. Morris

Hopeful Realism in Urban Ministry: Critical Explorations and Constructive Affirmations of Hoping Justice Prayerfully - eBook

Wipf and Stock / 2016 / ePub

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Stock No: WW108183EB

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Title: Hopeful Realism in Urban Ministry: Critical Explorations and Constructive Affirmations of Hoping Justice Prayerfully - eBook
By: Barry K. Morris
Format: DRM Free ePub
Vendor: Wipf and Stock
Publication Date: 2016
ISBN: 9781498221443
ISBN-13: 9781498221443
Stock No: WW108183EB

Publisher's Description

What, pray tell, does a faithful urban ministry require if not a triadic relationship of prayer, justice, and hope? Could such a theologically conjunctive relationship of prayer, justice, and hope fortify urban ministry and challenge students and practitioners to ponder and practice beyond the box? Frequently, justice is collapsed to charity, hope into wishful thinking or temporarily arrested despair, and prayer a grasp at quick-fix interventions. An urban ministry's steadfast public and prophetic witness longs for the depth and width of this triad. Via three countries' decades of endeavors, one chapter brainstorms urban ministry practices while another's literature survey signals crucial convictions. Amid many, seminal theologians are summoned to ground urban ministry intimations and implications: Niebuhr on justice, Moltmann on hope, and Merton on contemplative prayer. Evident is passion that fuels compassion in the service of justice, hope that engages despair, and prayer that draws from the contemplative center of it all--thankful resources for long haul ministry. The triad presses to illumine a concrete ministry's engagement of relentless, forced option issues yet with significant networks resourcing. Contrast-awareness animates endurance. The summary exegetes the original grace-based serenity prayer. Hence, hope vitally balances realism's temptation to cynicism. Realism saves hope from irrelevancy.

Author Bio

Barry K. Morris is a United Church of Canada minister in Vancouver, British Columbia, with the Longhouse Council of Native Ministry. He has been in urban ministry for forty years in five cities and two countries. He is the co-author of The Word on the Street (1991) and the Book of Rita's Living (1989); also, Engaging Urban Ministry (ThM thesis, V.S.T., 1999).

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