Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Alban Books
Pages: 202
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-56699-429-3 • Paperback • May 2013 • $32.00 • (£25.00)
978-1-56699-510-8 • eBook • May 2013 • $30.00 • (£25.00)
Cameron Harder is professor of systematic theology at Lutheran Theological Seminary, Saskatoon, SK and founder of CiRCLe M, a non-profit that supports engagement of churches with their communities, especially in rural and remote settings. He trains D.Min. students in rural ministry and community development and does workshops for congregations and church judicatories. He has written chapters for Writing Off the Rural West and Doing Ethics in a Pluralistic World.
Preface
Acknowledgments
1- The Church's Community-Building Mission
2- Public Church: A Mixed Blessing?
3- Appreciative Inquiry: Looking for God in the World
4- Asset Mapping: Doing Mission Like MacGyver
5- Beyond Strength: Mobilizing Weakness in the Economy of God
Appendix A- Sample Appreciative Inquiry Questions
Appendix B- Steps in Doing a Faith-Based Appreciative Inquiry
Appendix C- Doing an Appreciative Inquiry in Small Groups: Guide for Facilitators and Hosts
Notes
Cam Harder integrates two soul mates: Appreciative Inquiry and Asset Mapping on a foundation of theological reflection to provide a life-giving, gospel, way for congregations to be agents of transformation in their communities.
— Robert J. Voyle, Director, Clergy Leadership Institute, co-creator of the Appreciative Way
Over my 25 years of pastoral and denominational leadership experience, I am always on the lookout for meaningful books to place in the hands of my pastors. I believe Discovering the Other offers a refreshing gift to pastors and church leaders to rediscover their unique identity and related potential to be used by God to literally change the world around them by being changed themselves!
— Tim Beadle, Church Effectiveness Coach, Western Canadian District, Christian & Missionary Alliance
With this book, Cam Harder has done smaller membership churches (and indeed the whole church) a great service. Discovering the Other lays a substantial Trinitarian theological foundation for the essential task of building community, indicates how the church as a grassroots movement rather than an institution can contribute to a renewed sense of the public, and offers rationale as well as practical tools for using appreciative inquiry and asset mapping in building on churches' strengths.
— Shannon Jung, Franklin and Louise Cole Professor of Town and Country Ministries, Saint Paul School of Theology, Kansas City