Living Out of Control

AUGSBURG FORTRESS PUBLISHERSISBN: 9798889832249

Political and Personal Faith in Waning Christendom

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By Rodney Clapp
Imprint: FORTRESS PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
216 x 140 mm
Weight:
320 g
Pages:
150

Description

Rodney Clapp is an editor at Cascade Books in Eugene, Oregon. He is a former columnist for The Christian Century and the author of several books, including the award-winning A Peculiar People: The Church as Culture in a Post-Christian Society (1996), Tortured Wonders: Christian Spirituality for People, Not Angels (2004), and New Creation: A Primer on Living in the Time between the Times (2019). He lives in Wheaton, Illinois.

After Christendom or Waning Christendom? Responsibility as Response-ability The Bible's Renewed Relevance Prefigurative Politics and Secularity Christian Nationalism: An Alternative to Living Out of Control The Anarchistic Tendency and Christian Citizenship The Political Centrality of the Gospel: Proclamation and Eucharist Friendship Resonance

Reviews

In his latest book, the inestimable Rodney Clapp offers a great gift to the Christian community for this moment. With remarkable brevity, drawing on his wide-ranging and eclectic reading interests, and always deeply rooted in the biblical text, Clapp diagnoses a major current Christian problem--a desperate grasp for control--and offers a way to get us to a solution: learning to "live out of control." I learned a great deal from this book and commend it strongly to the global Christian community. --David P. Gushee, Distinguished University Professor of Christian Ethics, Mercer University In a time when much about our lives seems out of control, Rodney Clapp deftly explains that this, in fact, is our Christian calling, personally and collectively. Far from a posture of resignation or a relinquishing of agency, living out of control, he insists, is about embodying a lively and lifegiving witness that is shrewd in its assessment of systems of domination. Drawing on important work in prefigurative politics and Christian anarchism, Clapp paints a compelling picture of living out of control for the sake of the gospel and its good news for the oppressed and the suffering. --Debra Dean Murphy, professor of religious studies and founder of the Center for Restorative Justice, West Virginia Wesleyan College; author of Teaching That Transforms: Worship as the Heart of Christian Formation, and Happiness, Health, and Beauty: The Christian Life in Everyday Terms In this thoughtful and wide-ranging book, Rodney Clapp challenges Christians to take seriously the reality that Christendom is on the wane--that Christians qua Christians are not, will not be, and should not want to be in control of the American polity. His accessible, provocative reflections should spur conversation within congregations seeking to discern the shape of faithfulness to the gospel and among friends--inside and outside the church--in search of political integrity in the absence of control. --Gary Chartier, associate dean and Distinguished Professor of Law and Business Ethics, La Sierra University Rodney Clapp has given us the book we all need at this moment. With vivid writing, theological depth, and an abundance of wisdom, Living Out of Control will help you make sense of this moment and hear again the call of Jesus Christ to follow within it. Timely and rich. --Andrew Root, Carrie Olson Baalson Professor of Youth and Family Ministry, Luther Seminary, and author of Evangelism in an Age of Despair Christians in the US are severely tempted to bind themselves to political parties and politicians in hopes of exerting and even recovering a measure of power and control. Seeking control, Christians ironically find themselves under the control of forces and movements ultimately opposed to the goals of the gospel. Rodney Clapp's Living Out of Control is a bracing call to Christians in the US to repent of their desires to control and to devote themselves to resisting the powers that seek to control them. This book is filled with probing insights, wise counsel, and careful judgments. These work together to call Christians to the place where they are most secure because they are most out of control: the act of worshipping in word and sacrament. --Stephen Fowl, president and dean, Church Divinity School of the Pacific

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