
Reconciling Practices: Listening, Praying, and Witnessing in the Midst of Division - Paperback
Reconciling Practices: Listening, Praying, and Witnessing in the Midst of Division - Paperback
$28.58
/

Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
by Jacques B. Hadler Jr. (Editor), Hartley Hobson Wensing (Editor), Robert S. Heaney (Author)
From 2017 to 2020, ten seminarians from five different Anglican seminaries met to discuss the difficult topics that have caused division and conflict in the worldwide Anglican Communion. Representing the Anglican Church in North America, The Episcopal Church, and the Anglican Continuum, these seminarians desired to humanize the conflict by pursuing embodied experiences of disagreement and reconciliation, even while recognizing that resolution in the form of agreement would be virtually impossible. Reconciling Practices recounts their journey in the hope that the experiences of these seminarians might serve as a model for the Anglican Communion. In the words of the Most Rev. Michael Curry, the Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church, this book shows us "how it is indeed possible to encounter one another not as opposition or other, but as beloved children of God."
Praise for Reconciling Practices
"Intentional reconciliation amidst deep disagreement is hard work. It is also necessary work for all who choose to follow Jesus in his Way of Love. But what does this look like? Outlining the interactions of a cohort of very different students from five seminaries, Reconciling Practices shows how it is indeed possible to encounter one another not as opposition or other, but as beloved children of God." -The Most Rev. Michael B. Curry, Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church and Author of Love is the Way: Holding on to Hope in Troubling Times
Robert S. Heaney is Professor of Theology and Mission, Virginia Theological Seminary. He is author of Post-Colonial Theology: Finding God and Each Other Amidst the Hate (2019) and, with William L. Sachs, The Promise of Anglicanism (2019). Jacques Hadler, Jr., retired from Virginia Theological Seminary where he served as Director of Field Education and taught courses in Practical Theology and Cross-Cultural reflection, currently provides spiritual direction and coaching and consults on multicultural ministry and reconciliation. Hartley Wensing serves as Associate Director of the Virginia Theological Seminary Center for Anglican Communion Studies where she provides leadership to projects supporting cross-cultural and reconciliation ministries.



















