Hopeful Realism in Urban Ministry. Barry K. Morris
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Название: Hopeful Realism in Urban Ministry

Автор: Barry K. Morris

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Религия: прочее

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isbn: 9781498221443

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СКАЧАТЬ It likely has an unprecedented opportunity for dedicated social justice commitments. There has been an intentional summons from Cox and Winter to the people they influenced. This generation is bound to benefit from all of their writings. Cox is by no means retired as a recent work, The Future of Faith dedicated to his grandchildren, illustrates.57

      Such action-reflection and revised-action by an actual residential, parish-based theologian gives to urban ministry an integral model to draw upon. Along with the East Harlem Protestant Parish model, it foreshadows the “new monasticism” discussed below. Leech often emphasizes the role of present “place” and context when engaging urban ministry as he did in The Eye of the Storm, Care and Conflict, and in the works anthologized in Prayer and Prophecy: The Essential Kenneth Leech (2009). From the latter, Leech asserts that “physical location is a critical element in theological work” and echoes insights about place and human relationships:

      Similarly the Canadian Anglican cleric, Norm Ellis, penned valuable contributions based on his parish ministry in the urban core of Toronto. His notable work is My Parish Is Revolting (1974). The writings of Ellis (nick-named the “sky-pilot”) illustrate concrete urban theologizing similar to that Leech and others. Concreteness helps to ground academic theologians, such as the philosophical theologian John Caputo in the writing of his What Would Jesus Deconstruct? (2007). Caputo draws on the concrete realism—in the service of hope—of John McNamee’s Diary of a City Priest (1993). William Stringfellow’s witness is equally concrete and theologically instructive. From his My People is the Enemy memoir, inspired by his involvement in the East Harlem Protestant Parish, Stringfellow affirmed the role of the poor themselves to be prayerful intercessors for the rich as their oppressors, indirectly or otherwise.

      Anthologies, Urban Training, and Action Research