– 12th Annual Outreach Resource of the Year (Social Justice)’Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.’ – Galatians 6:9If you're working to make the world a better place, you might find yourself discouraged. Needs are overwhelming, resources are limited, opposition is real and progress is slow. How do we persevere when the novelty wears off and our enthusiasm runs out?We all want change in the world. But as C. S. Lewis put it, we don't get second things by placing them first; we get second things by keeping first things first. As Christians, we don't just aim at change; we aim at faithfulness, and out of faithfulness comes fruitfulness.Activist Ben Lowe renews our mission with key postures and practices for sustaining faithful social action. What makes social action distinctively Christian includes such things as living out Jesus? love, having a prophetic witness, building bridges with opponents, repudiating idolatries, and practicing repentance and sabbath. Moving beyond theory, Lowe showcases practical examples of what it looks like to persevere in faithful activism and advocacy today. Take heart. As you work for God, God is at work in you to keep your hope alive.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Foreword
Begin Here: Prophets of a Future Not Our Own
Part One: Renewing Our Mission
1 Wait, Don?t Give Up!
2 Is Social Action Necessary?
3 Overcoming Obstacles to Social Action
4 Reconciling Evangelism and Social Action
5 Transcending the Culture Wars
6 Restoring a Faithful Agenda
Part Two: Sustaining Our Action
7 Love
8 Prophecy
9 Opposition
10 Idolatry
11 Repentance
12 Sabbath
13 Contemplation
14 Community
A Final Word: Onward
Acknowledgments
Notes
Sobre o autor
Ben Lowe is on staff with the Evangelical Environmental Network and serves as the national spokesperson for Young Evangelicals for Climate Action. A dedicated activist and organizer, Ben was raised as a missionary kid in Southeast Asia and now lives as part of an intentional community in a refugee and immigrant neighborhood outside Chicago, where he ran for US Congress in 2010. He is a graduate of Wheaton College and author of Green Revolution.