When we belong Reclaiming Christianity on the margins

Rohadi Nagassar

Book - 2022

"Step into a journey toward liberation, belonging, and a faith that fits your skin. We need belonging to survive and thrive. For Christians in marginalized communities who know the pain, isolation, and loss of identity that come with the ongoing struggle to be seen in churches and institutions full of barriers to belonging, it can feel easier to walk away from faith completely. But there is another way. When it feels as though there's no place left to belong, Jesus invites us into a love that knows no bounds and a community that truly liberates. In this hope-filled book, author Rohadi Nagassar brings the margins to the center to help readers rediscover a reality of love, belonging, and beauty through the journey of deconstructing,... decolonizing, and reclaiming faith. For anyone who has struggled to find belonging, for everyone who wants to join in building radically inclusive communities where all people can live fully in their own skin-now begins a journey to find this freedom"--

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2nd Floor 254.5/Nagassar Due Dec 5, 2024
Subjects
Published
Harrisonburg, Virginia : Herald Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Rohadi Nagassar (author)
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781513810355
9781513810362
  • Foreword
  • Prologue
  • Part I. On Belonging
  • 1. The Search for Belonging
  • 2. Grasping True Belonging
  • 3. The Problems with Belonging
  • Part II. Deconstruction
  • 4. The Woke Island
  • 5. Naming the Powers
  • 6. Discard the Church?
  • Part III. Reclamation
  • 7. Jesus for the Margins
  • 8. The Yawning Awning
  • 9. Know Thyself
  • Part IV. Beautiful Tales
  • 10. Newness
  • 11. Free
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Selected Bibliography
  • The Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Pastor Nagassar (Thrive) offers an eye-opening discussion of how to make Christian churches more inclusive for people of color. Arguing that many churches are plagued by white supremacy, Nagassar mines personal stories and Christian history to provide "new language and pathways" to help marginalized Christians find belonging in their places of worship. The author shares his own struggles with Christian bigotry, recounting how his childhood picture Bible rendered all the characters as white and how he left the Vineyard Churches of Canada after it denounced same-sex marriage. To decolonize Christianity, the author recommends looking to Christian traditions that predate the Roman Catholic Church, embracing the "land-based learning" of Indigenous spirituality, and taking inspiration from "church traditions that have embodied resistance to white hegemony in their foundation," such as African American churches. Nagassar provides scant details on how to put these principles into action, but he more than makes up for this with an exceptional overview of the history of white supremacy within the church, tracing its origins to the 15th-century papal decree that condoned seizing land from non-Christians and paved the way for European colonization of the Americas. Well researched and passionately argued, this should be required reading for justice-minded churchgoers. (June)

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