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Healing Our Broken Humanity: Practices for Revitalizing the Church and Renewing the World Paperback – 28 August 2018
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We live in conflicted times. We want to see justice restored because Jesus calls us to be a peacemaking and reconciling people. But how do we do this? Grace Ji-Sun Kim and Graham Hill offer ten ways to transform society, from lament and repentance to relinquishing power, reinforcing agency, and more. Embodying these practices enables us to be the new humanity in Jesus Christ.
- Print length226 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherIVP
- Publication date28 August 2018
- Dimensions13.97 x 1.78 x 20.96 cm
- ISBN-100830845410
- ISBN-13978-0830845415
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Review
"Healing Our Broken Humanity isn't so much a banquet as it is a big tasting plate, introducing us to a rich set of practices, rooted in the missional, contemplative, and progressive traditions of the church. Kim and Hill have packed their short book with such a vast array of ideas, resources, and stories, the reader's appetite to learn more and put it all into practice is thoroughly piqued-a wonderful introduction to the field."
"In these pages two voices that I respect harmonize beautifully to sing of what the church can be. Part road map for forming a community in the healing purposes of God, part primer on intersectional theology, part Bible study on how justice is at the center of following Jesus, this book is wholly about the practices that make us a people who live together more like Jesus (and less like jerks)."
"In this outstanding work-thought provoking, theologically sound, wonderfully practical, and comprehensive in scope-Grace Ji-Sun Kim and Graham Hill effectively synthesize and ultimately advance key tenets of varying mindsets and movements within the church today, all in pursuit of a common goal: disruptive innovation in the local church whereby it is repurposed and positioned to advance a credible witness of God's love for all people in an increasingly diverse, globally connected, painfully polarized, and cynical society. Healing Our Broken Humanity is a thorough guide and inclusive playbook for pastors and parishioners alike seeking to engage the complexities of race, class, culture, gender, politics, and more, in a biblically accurate and informed way, and in so doing recognize that such things as lament, corporate repentance, reconciliation, and justice are not peripheral but intrinsic to the gospel."
"In Healing Our Broken Humanity, two authentic voices from two continents offer the Christian church practical reflections to renew our mission, lives, and world. This work touches on critical contemporary issues facing our communities, and offers individual and communal responses that make a difference."
"Kim and Hill have marvelously provided what the church needs today: a road map for ways Christians can contribute to the common good and accordingly aid in the transformation of the world. Healing Our Broken Humanity is biblically grounded, sensitive to context, and eminently practical, as each chapter ends with concrete suggestions for 'practices, challenges, and activities for small groups' to move all those who encounter their book to immediate action. I heartily commend this book to all justice-seeking Christians."
"Kim and Hill in this courageous book are not simply offering us another account of Christian practices, but Christian practices that necessitate diverse communities for their performance. The crucial matter today for Christian discipleship is not what you practice but who you practice with. . . . If through our practices we follow Jesus into the depths of the world, then we will learn that the healing we all seek for ourselves and our world is offered to us not in our own strength but in God's power, if only we would seek it together."
"The reality of a broken humanity is fundamental to a Christian understanding of the world. The temptation would be to simply offer a diagnostic that is a litany of lament over a fallen world. In this text, Kim and Hill not only offer an appropriate analysis, but also a Christian justice ethic that engages a theological depth and breadth. They also offer practical, real-life ways to put these principles into practice. For those who seek to revitalize and renew an active Christian faith, this book offers not a simple how-to guide, but a genuine, deep, significant, practical resource for the church."
"There are many books dealing with diversity and reconciliation. Of all those books, including my own, I believe Healing Our Broken Humanity is the most relevant, hands-on, how-to manual on the subject you will encounter! Grace and Graham draw you into practical application from the earliest pages and they never let go. Regardless of whether you have been seeking ways to do the gospel in the midst of present brokenness or have become somewhat jaded to the theorizing of it, Healing Our Broken Humanity will not disappoint. Written by two powerfully seasoned and wise mentors, they have found the missing link on this subject that everyone and every church should read. Healing Our Broken Humanity lives up to its subtitle, Practices for Revitalizing the Church and Renewing the World, and what could be better than that?"
"There are plenty of reasons to throw our hands up in the air and walk away from the church. If we're honest, many of us have experienced it as a neutered counterfeit to the life and community Jesus invited us to embody. In this book, Grace and Graham remind us who we have been called to be all along, a new humanity in Christ who actively participate in healing our broken world. Rich in theological thought and firmly rooted in tangible practice, they invite us to be liberated into a cross-shaped ministry that leads to the flourishing of all. This isn't a church-growth strategy; it's holy provocation guiding us onto a path of confession, repentance, and new life. May this book be read and lived!"
"This book is a clarion call for all those who dream of a church that is whole, holy, and humble, a church that acknowledges its own failings and seeks justice, and a church that seeks to join those who hope for a better humanity. It will inspire those who eschew the pursuit of power so they may better amplify the voices of the powerless and those who believe in community. This is a superb, clear-eyed call for all of those who dream of a better church and world, to begin to work toward it, and draw strength from the transformative power of love. There can be no greater and more urgent work than this."
"This book is simply incredible. Goodness. So needed. I can't wait to get this in our church bookstore. It is robust in theology, rich in ecclesiology, and practical in application. Grace Ji-Sun Kim and Graham Hill paint the glorious vision of the bride of Christ rooted in the grand narrative of Scripture. Grace and Graham brilliantly put feet on this so any local church can catch a vision for participation in the healing of broken humanity."
"This marvelous book is a practical and relevant resource that will help the church work with God to build renewed communities based on the new humanity in Christ. It will empower Christians to deal with the problem of racism and all forms of injustice. This book emphasizes the importance of corporate expressions of pain, grief, repentance, and lament. This comes at a time when the world is faced with fresh upheavals of tensions and a resurgence of racism, nationalism, and white supremacy. I commend this book to all pastors and churches that are looking to equip the saints to face the challenges of racism, misogyny, nationalism, tribalism, and any other form of injustice."
About the Author
Grace Ji-Sun Kim (PhD, University of Toronto) is professor of theology at Earlham School of Religion in Richmond, Indiana. She is the host of the Madang podcast and has published in TIME, Huffington Post, US Catholic, and The Nation. She is an ordained PC(USA) minister and enjoys being a guest preacher on most Sundays. Her many books include Invisible, Reimagining Spirit, and Healing Our Broken Humanity. She and her spouse, Perry, have three young adult children and live in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
Graham Hill (PhD, Flinders University) teaches applied theology at Morling College in Sydney, Australia. A former church planter and pastor, he is the founding director theglobalchurchproject.com. He is also the author of GlobalChurch: Reshaping Our Conversations, Renewing Our Mission, Revitalizing Our Churches.
Willie James Jennings (PhD, Duke University) is associate professor of systematic theology and Africana studies at Yale Divinity School. He is the author of The Christian Imagination: Theology and the Origins of Race.
Product details
- Publisher : IVP (28 August 2018)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 226 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0830845410
- ISBN-13 : 978-0830845415
- Dimensions : 13.97 x 1.78 x 20.96 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 294,705 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Grace Ji-Sun Kim received her her Ph.D. from the University of Toronto and is Professor of Theology at Earlham School of Religion. Kim is the author or editor of 24 books, most recently, Surviving God, Spirit Life; Invisible; Hope in Disarray; Keeping Hope Alive and Reimagining Spirit She is a co-editor for the Palgrave Macmillan Book Series, “Asian Christianity in the Diaspora”. She is the host of Madang podcast which holds conversations on Christianity, religion and culture. Madang is hosted by Christian Century Magazine.
Kim is a much sought after lecturer and has given papers/lectures throughout the United States and in Malaysia, Korea, Myanmar, Spain, Qatar, Brazil, Switzerland, Peru, England, South Africa, Paris and Canada. Grace Ji-Sun Kim has appeared on MSNBC, PBS and C-Span. She has been a guest on BBC Radio, Soul Search Radio, WBEZ Radio, and Keep Hope Alive Radio.
Kim writes for Faith and Leadership, The Christian Century, The Huffington Post, Sojourners, GoodFaithMedia, Wabash Center and Feminist Studies in Religion, Spirituality and Health Magazine and the Baptist News Global. Kim has published in TIME, The Feminist Wire, Feminism and Religion, The Forum for Theological Education, and The Nation.
Kim is the co-director with Graham Joseph Hill of The Global Church Project. Kim served on the Board of Directors for the American Academy of Religion and sits on the editorial board for the Journal for Religion and Popular Culture .
Kim is a member of the working group on Climate Change for the World Council of Churches. Kim served on the board for the Korean American Clergywomen and is also a member of the Presbyterian Church(USA)’s Social Ethics Network.
She is honored to be included in the Englewood Review of Book‘s list of “Ten Important Women Theologians That You Should Be Reading” and to be included in their list of books to read under “Our God is Too White? Diversifying our Theology”. Eerdmans included her in Five Great Women Scholars (and Their Books) and is included in the “15 Majority World Books that will Change the Way you see the World in 2017”. She is also one of the “Top 10 Writers Shaping Our Movement” put together by the Center for Progressive Renewal.
Grace Ji-Sun Kim is an ordained minister of word and sacrament within the PC (USA) denomination.
Rev Dr Graham Joseph Hill (OAM PhD) is an Australian author, theologian, and former theological college principal. He is an Adjunct Research Fellow and Associate Professor at Charles Sturt University. Graham is a research associate at the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, Massachusetts, USA, and has been in theological education for over twenty years. Graham is the author of 15 books, the editor of 3 books, and numerous journal articles and book chapters. His books include “Healing Our Broken Humanity” (co-authored with Grace Ji-Sun Kim) and “World Christianity: An Introduction.”
Customer reviews
Top reviews from Australia
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- Reviewed in Australia on 16 October 2018As someone moving into full-time ministry of a local church, ‘Healing our Broken Humanity – practices for revitalizing the Church and Renewing the World’ has been a wonderful resource to help focus thinking around true mission to the community. Too often ‘church’ tries to create new programs and new technologies and new events in order to remain relevant to their community, yet Grace Ji-Sun Kim and Graham Hill remind us the answer to being relevant are true and genuine relationships with Jesus and each other – nothing less than the calling of Jesus to his followers.
It is through these Jesus-shaped relationships that the church can be a source of renewal and relevance to a hurting world. Hill and Kim explore this process through nine practices taken from Christian tradition and reimagined for the present day. Simply expressed yet immensely challenging, these nine practices provide a model for the church to be a place of healing, comfort and refuge to a broken world. The insights provided around these practices are a gift to not only new pastors like myself, but to the seasoned ministry worker, they will provide a fresh and valuable reflection around church practice.
The addition of ‘Questions for Discussion and Engagement’ surrounding each practices means this can be a resource for the whole church community. We will certainly be doing a series based upon the book and questions, seeking to make ‘Healing our Broken Community’ a whole of church mission. I highly recommend this publication.
- Reviewed in Australia on 16 October 2018This book helped me learn from the words and example of Jesus and His followers from across the centuries and around the world. Graham Hill and Grace Kim clearly revealed the problems of this world and the church but didn't stop there. They encourage us to be ready to repent, change and follow Christ (individually and in Christian community).
Solid theology is a foundation but the main part of the book focuses on practices and reelationships which help these truths to be applied for the sake of others.
The included tools for discussion and accountability help the reader make the most of the encouragement in this book to be part of God's solutions for the world through the church.
Top reviews from other countries
- Hart EdmondsReviewed in the United States on 9 January 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars A book that speaks to our times! Prophetic and Healing!
Verified PurchaseThis is a wonderful book that I’ve used several times with pastors and church leaders as a way of responding to the bitterness and violence and chaos of these times. It offers prophetic and healing practices that address the bigotry and racism and small mindedness of so much that passes for leadership both in too many churches and too much of our politics. God is claiming us for purposes grander than we can imagine. Kim and Hill offer a compassionate and courageous vision for the faith, hope and love we need.
- Judith JenkinsReviewed in the United States on 13 April 2023
4.0 out of 5 stars A Guide to actively making a difference
Verified PurchaseA step by step guide to making a difference in our community. The refreshing part of this book is that it empowers the individual to act. The practices use small group development which is less intimidating than trying to engage large groups in social change. Change begins in your heart and expands outward.
- ivbellReviewed in the United States on 23 October 2023
3.0 out of 5 stars Good ideas, poorly presented
Verified PurchaseRevitalizing the church and renewing the world are rather large tasks. They require the extensive work of churches and the faithful, plus government cooperation. This book definitely covers the extensive work involved with suggestions for numerous studies to be undertaken and long lists of tasks to be performed. All good ideas. One big issue though; they never talk about how these other people feel about our studies and tasks. Yes, we need to be open to refugees, other cultures, new theologies, different styles of worship. But. Do the refugees want to join us? Do other cultures have the remotest interest in our worship practices? And new theologies? Sure. New practices? What about death penalty for gays and lesbians. Are we good with that? Separation of men and women in the church? Policing of behavior of church members by elders? It’s not that I think other cultures in the US necessarily advocate for these practices, but there needs to be acknowledgement that reaching out also means that someone has to be there who WANTS to take your hand. Otherwise, it seems kind of presumptuous on our (mainly white European history) part.
The book also had this weird style of identifying one or the other author sharing a story. I found this very annoying. Now I (Graham), the white dude, will share my particular experiences.
Lastly it was terribly redundant. The same ground was covered over and over, each time with some new study and list of tasks quite similar to the ones in the previous chapter. It could have been condensed down. Also the many many anecdotes blurred together, robbing them of their import.
I wish this was a better, and frankly, more honest book about caring for others who are different than ourselves, learning from each other, and sharing the Gospel in ways that speak to the hearts of the lost of hurting in our community.