Some of you know that for the past four years I have been working on a book. Some of you have nudged me along with your supportive cajoling, and buoyed me through with grace when the gestation was longer and more arduous than my own impatience imagined it should be. It turned out to be just what this book needed to become what it was meant to be. So thank you, friends. And thank you, Lake Nokomis Presbyterian Church who recognized this calling and offered accountability and encouragement throughout - this is their story too.
I'm so pleased to announce that The Deepest Belonging is coming out June 1 and is now available for pre-order at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop (independent booksellers).
Where does God meet us in this life? Rooting Christian faith in joy, freedom, and trust that God interacts with us in this life, The Deepest Belonging: A Story of Discovering Where God Meets Us invites readers to walk through surprising doorways--weakness, vulnerability, smallness, rest, and honesty--into a new perspective of the Christian life and the role of the pastor.
Kara Root draws wisdom from three compelling stories, all about finding freedom on the other side of fear. In one thread, Marty, a member of the small congregation Root serves, learns that he is dying. In the second, Root finds that her once-invincible faith of assurance and answers collapses.
These stories come together in a third, when the congregation does a unique and counterintuitive thing: it commissions Marty to a "ministry of dying." By embracing instead of fleeing death, Marty, this community, and Root herself are infused with life through shared experiences of God. They learn to be vulnerable and brave. They discover--again and profoundly--an unguarded faith of wondering and watching for God's presence.
This is a book for all pastors and church leaders, as well as for those disillusioned with Christianity and the church and longing for something more real and honest. It explores questions such as: How does God meet us? What is church for? What is a pastor? What does it mean to be truly human?
The Deepest Belonging is a call not to resist but to embrace our vulnerability. As a move away from religion seeking security, protection, and influence, this story invites individuals and congregations to return bravely to the core of our humanity: our belonging to God and one another.
No comments:
Post a Comment