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A House for Hope: The Promise of Progressive Religion for the Twenty-first
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A House for Hope: The Promise of Progressive Religion for the Twenty-first Century Paperback - 2011

by Buehrens, John A.; Parker, Rebecca Ann

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Beacon Press, 2011-05-03. Paperback. Like New.
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From the publisher

John A. Buehrens was president of the Unitarian Universalist Association from 1993 to 2001 and is now minister of the First Parish Church in Needham, Massachusetts. He is coauthor of A Chosen Faith and author of Understanding the Bible.
 
Rebecca Ann Parker
is president of and professor of theology at Starr King School for the Ministry in Berkeley, California, and coauthor of Saving Paradise and Proverbs of Ashes. An ordained United Methodist minister, Parker has dual fellowship with the United Methodist Church and the Unitarian Universalist Association.

Excerpt

Hope is rising. The political tide in the United States has
turned, and many are hoping for progress on issues such as
global warming, health care, marriage equality, and international
conflict. But religious fundamentalists of many varieties
continue to promote frameworks of meaning that put earth’s
global community, its diverse peoples, and its ecological systems
at profound risk. More than political change is called
for; America’s liberals and progressives need greater awareness
that at the core of social and political issues lie competing
responses to the classic questions posed by theology. Effective
work for social change requires people of faith who are theologically
literate and engaged. To that endthis book provides a
primer in progressive theology. It recovers and reconsiders the
hope-filled religious frameworks that inspired generations of
activists to work for women’s rights, racial equality, economic
justice, and peace. These frameworks embody reverence for the
sacred, nourish community life, carry forward the aspirations
of our forebears, and respond to legacies of violence and injus|tice that harm our bodies and souls. They hold promise for our
time. As Sara Robinson, blogging in 2008 for the Campaign for
America’s Future, argued:
 
"Secular progressives don’t seem to understand that while
politics is all about how we’re going to make the world better,
progressive religion tells us why it’s necessary to work
for change.... Liberal faith traditions offer the essential metaphors
and worldview that everything else derives from—
the frames that give our dreams shape and meaning. It has
an invaluable role to play in helping our movement set its
values and priorities, understand where we are in the larger
scheme, and gauge whether we’re succeeding or not.
The conservative movement knew from the get-go that
it would not succeed unless it could offer people this kind
of deeper narrative. Providing that was one of the most
important things the religious right brought to their party.
Progressivism will not defeat it until we can offer another
narrative about what America can and should be—and our
liberal churches have longer, harder, better experience than
anyone at developing and communicating those stories, and
building thriving communities around them."
 
This book uses the metaphor of a theological house to
articulate the “frames that give our dreams shape and meaning.”
Through this metaphor we explore the classic topics of
theology from a progressive vantage point—reminding the
reader that liberal religion has a long history, and inviting reconsideration
and reimagining of its key concepts. We write
as coauthors because we recognize that no one authoritative
voice can claim to speak to all of liberal and progressive religion.
Dialogue that opens up further conversation is integral
to progressive theological method. We have been in dialogue
with each other for a number of years about many issues in
progressive religion today. We have much in common as a
result, but we do not always agree about every issue or formulation.
To invite the reader into dialogue as well, in each
section of this book there are two or more chapters: one by
Rebecca introduces the theological theme and identifies distinctive
liberal perspectives on the topic; one by John offers
further historical perspective, counterpoints, and reflections on
the theme.
 
Each dimension of the house—including its setting within
the natural world—corresponds to one of the classic issues
of systematic theological reflection. Theology, we suggest, is
architectural—it provides a framework for human life. It is also
ecological—it creates an interactive system in response to a
specific environment. And it is archeological—it unearths artifacts
from the past that can inspire our imagination and understanding
now. Here are the basic dimensions and coordinates
of this theological house for hope, and the questions that each
represents.

Media reviews

“A thoughtful meditation on religion, duty, and the common good.”—Booklist

“To some observers, religion and conservatism have become inextricably fused. But to [Buehrens and Parker], something new is emerging—a liberal religious renaissance.”—Steven Levingston, The Washington Post

“For nearly three decades, journalists and pundits have focused on the views and beliefs of the Religious Right and basically ignored members of America’s mainline and liberal Protestant establishment. . . . [Buehrens and Parker] have set out to reintroduce people to the riches and bounties of progressive religion.”—Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, Spirituality & Practice
 
“Buehrens and Parker begin with the life of service and work for justice and deepen it to show the implicit beliefs that it assumes and that are implicit in it. They show that progressive Protestants can be proud and articulate about their beliefs.”—John B. Cobb Jr., coauthor of For the Common Good
 

About the author

John A. Buehrens was president of the Unitarian Universalist Association from 1993 to 2001 and is now minister of the First Parish Church in Needham, Massachusetts. He is coauthor of A Chosen Faith and author of Understanding the Bible.

Rebecca Ann Parker
is president of and professor of theology at Starr King School for the Ministry in Berkeley, California, and coauthor of Saving Paradise and Proverbs of Ashes. An ordained United Methodist minister, Parker has dual fellowship with the United Methodist Church and the Unitarian Universalist Association.