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Products>Churches and the Crisis of Decline: A Hopeful, Practical Ecclesiology for a Secular Age (Ministry in a Secular Age)

Churches and the Crisis of Decline: A Hopeful, Practical Ecclesiology for a Secular Age (Ministry in a Secular Age)

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ISBN: 9781493434978

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Overview

Congregations often seek to combat the crisis of decline by using innovation to produce new resources. But leading practical theologian Andrew Root shows that the church’s crisis is not in the loss of resources; it’s in the loss of life—and that life can only return when we remain open to God’s encountering presence.

This new book, related to Root’s critically acclaimed Ministry in a Secular Age project, addresses the practical form the church must take in a secular age. Root uses two stories to frame the book: one about a church whose building becomes a pub and the other about Karl Barth. Root argues that Barth should be understood as a pastor with a deep practical theology that can help church leaders today.

This book pushes the church to be a waiting community that recognizes that the only way for it to find life is to stop seeing the church as the star of its own story. Instead of resisting decline, congregations must remain open to divine action. Root offers a rich vision for the church’s future that moves away from an obsession with relevance and resources and toward the living God.

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  • Addresses the practical form the church must take in a secular age
  • Argues that Barth should be understood as a pastor with a deep practical theology that can help church leaders today
  • Offers a rich vision for the church's future that moves away from an obsession with relevance and resources and toward the living God
  • When the Church Becomes a Pub, and the Immanent Frame Our Map
  • Brother-Trouble and Meeting the Exorcist’s Son: The Beginning of Karl Barth
  • A Funeral for a Church—A Funeral That Remakes a Church
  • An Apple Tree and the Incoherence of “God Is God”
  • The Church Can’t Know How to Find God
  • The Church Is Not the Star of Its Own Story
  • Welcome to Crisis Mode
  • Wedding Blunders and Brotherly Love
  • Say Goodbye to Being and Give Me More Busyness
  • A Shady Obituary and the Need to Wait
  • Waiting Sucks but Resonance Is Life
  • Waiting Is Living: The Church and Resonance
  • When Mozart Goes Straight Into You and Through You
  • Pietism and Its Discontents: A Dialectical Escape from Individualism and Religion
  • A True Ghost Story and the Birth of Watchwords
  • Getting Real with a Dialectical Demand
  • Deepening the Dialectic: Avoiding Sledgehammering the Ceiling

Andrew Root (PhD, Princeton Theological Seminary) is Carrie Olson Baalson Professor of Youth and Family Ministry at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota, and has written extensively about youth ministry. He is the author of numerous books, including Faith Formation in a Secular Age, The Pastor in a Secular Age, Bonhoeffer as Youth Worker, The Children of Divorce, Revisiting Relational Youth Ministry, and Relationships Unfiltered, and the coauthor (with Kenda Creasy Dean) of The Theological Turn in Youth Ministry.

Reviews

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  1. Eleanor Emmott
    This is one of the most powerful books that I have read in a long time. There are very few authors who could combine church revitalization, Karl Barth, a story of a fictional church and deep, practical theology into one book... but Andrew Root can. And I wouldn't have imagined that a book on those themes could bring me to tears, but this one did. This book has impacted my preaching, my praying, and my vision, for myself and for my church.

$27.99