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Inalienable

How Marginalized Kingdom Voices Can Help Save the American Church

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Outreach Resource of the Year

The American church is at a critical crossroads. Our witness has been compromised, our numbers are down, and our reputation has been sullied, due largely to our own faults and fears. The church's ethnocentrism, consumerism, and syncretism have blurred the lines between discipleship and partisanship.Pastor Eric Costanzo, missiologist Daniel Yang, and nonprofit leader Matthew Soerens find that for the church to return to health, we must decenter ourselves from our American idols and recenter on the undeniable, inalienable core reality of the global, transcultural kingdom of God. Our guides in this process are global Christians and the poor, who offer hope from the margins, and the ancient church, which survived through the ages amid temptations of power and corruption. Their witness points us to refocus on the kingdom of God, the image of God, the Word of God, and the mission of God. The path to the future takes us away from ourselves in unlikely directions. By learning from the global church and marginalized voices, we can return to our roots of being kingdom-focused, loving our neighbor, and giving of ourselves in missional service to the world.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 7, 2022
      In this urgent treatise, pastor Costanzo joins with Yang, director of the Send Institute, and Soerens, director of church mobilization for World Relief, to examine the ailments of contemporary American evangelicalism. Contending that “the evangelical commitment to the authority of the Bible... has momentarily become... secondary to the pursuit of political power and control,” the authors chart a path back to principles by sharing their experiences in U.S. and international congregations and calling on Christians to abandon the “material-wealth mindset” and adopt an inclusive vision of Christianity that welcomes refugees and immigrants. The authors also urge readers to spread “Christlike love” and embrace the example set by Jesus in the gospel of Luke when he appeals to the “poor, oppressed, and vulnerable” at the beginning of his ministry. Costanzo, Yang, and Soerens are refreshingly frank in their critique (“If left to itself, the American church is totally and utterly lost”), castigating the evangelical church for favoring nationalism over solidarity with Christian “neighbors” abroad. This scathing indictment hits home. Agent: Elisabeth Weed, The Book Group.

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  • English

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