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Andrew Root - The Congregation in a Secular Age--Keeping Sacred Time against the Speed of Modern Life

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Andrew Root The Congregation in a Secular Age--Keeping Sacred Time against the Speed of Modern Life
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A leading practical theologian articulates why congregations feel pressured by the speed of change in modern life and encourages an approach that doesnt fall into the negative traps of our secular age.

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Endorsements

Andrew Root is one of our leading practical theologians. Over the years he has carved out a space within which solid theological reflection and philosophical inquiry are merged into practical strategies that are illuminating and often fascinating. In this new book he continues his ongoing dialogue with Charles Taylor, providing us with a fascinating and timely exploration of time, church, and culture. Time is something we tend to take for granted. But it is a crucial dimension of social and ecclesial life. In this book Root clearly lays out the implications of thinking about time and speed and the ways in which we build communities, think about theology, and ultimately become more faithful disciples. This is a book well worth reading.

John Swinton , University of Aberdeen

Root serves as a guide for current congregations often lost in the time and space of the wilderness of high modernity. He deftly leads his readers on an adventure through historical, philosophical, and theological perspectives, providing an eternal compass of resonance toward our True North. The experience of reading this book is what I imagined it was like to witness Moses parting the Red Sea. Just as Moses created a passage for Israel from Egypt, Root shows us how to suspend the relentless rush of time and points the church toward a path from our present captivity in the rat race of modernity to the life-giving vitality of the love of God. This book is required reading for the next generation of Christian leaders. Root provides a clear and resounding perspective on why and how the church matters in a secular age.

Pamela Ebstyne King , Thrive Center for Human Development, Fuller Theological Seminary

On a secular view of the world, we are thrown into an existence in which our time is running out. The pressure is on to accomplish as much as we can, as quickly as we can, which generates a constant anxiety that fuels depression. Not only does this pressure terrorize the secular world, it also menaces the many congregations that are fighting for survival in the so-called secular age. In response to this situation, Andrew Root offers a fierce remedy. As someone to whom this book really speaks, I could feel a weight being lifted off my shoulders, page by page. Why? Because this book offers a fresh, timely, and powerful reminder of the hope of all hopesthe one true hopeto which the gospel witnesses. As such, it made me a happier person, authentically so!

Andrew Torrance , University of St. Andrews

Root is an expert reader of contemporary church life. He deftly distills complex philosophical, historical, and sociological scholarship and delivers what his readers need to know. And Roots constructive proposals challenge churches and individuals to rethink their relationship to time and busyness. The Congregation in a Secular Age will leave many readers wondering just how Root knows them and their congregations so well. This book is a valuable resource to anyone who has the nagging feeling that theres never enough time.

Ryan McAnnally-Linz , Yale Center for Faith and Culture

Half Title Page
Series Page

M INISTRY IN A S ECULAR A GE PREVIOUS TITLES :

Volume 1: Faith Formation in a Secular Age: Responding to the Churchs Obsession with Youthfulness

Volume 2: The Pastor in a Secular Age: Ministry to People Who No Longer Need a God

Title Page
Copyright Page

2021 by Andrew Root

Published by Baker Academic

a division of Baker Publishing Group

PO Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287

www.bakeracademic.com

Ebook edition created 2021

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any meansfor example, electronic, photocopy, recordingwithout the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

ISBN 978-1-4934-2972-1

Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

The characters in this book are fictional, but they are based on real people and interactions, trimmed and adjusted to fit this context. Some names and identifying details have been changed to protect the privacy of the individuals involved.

Dedication

To Maisy Root
A person of resonance, a true delight

The Congregation in a Secular Age--Keeping Sacred Time against the Speed of Modern Life - image 1

C ontents

Cover

Endorsements

Half Title Page

Series Page

Title Page

Copyright Page

Dedication

Preface

Part 1: Depressed Congregations

1. The Church and the Depressing Speed of Change

2. Speeding to the Good Life, Crashing into Guilt: Why $1.6 Billion Isnt as Good as You Think

3. Fullness as Busyness: Why Busy Churches Attract and Then Lose Busy People

4. The Strip Show: When Sacred Time Is No Longer the Time We Keep

Part 2: Examining Congregational Despondency; Our Issue Is Time

5. When Time Isnt What It Used to Be: Whats Speeding Up Time?

6. When Brains Explode

Dimension One: Technological Acceleration

7. Minding the Time: Why the Church Feels Socially Behind

Dimension Two: Acceleration of Social Life (Part One)

8. Why The Office Cant Be Rebooted: The Decay Rate of Social Change

Dimension Two: Acceleration of Social Life (Part Two)

9. When Sex and Work Are in a Fast Present: The Church and the Decay Rate of Our Social Structures

Dimension Two: Acceleration of Social Life (Part Three)

Dimension Three: Acceleration of the Pace of Life (Part One)

11. Reach and the Seculars

Dimension Three: Acceleration of the Pace of Life (Part Two)

Part 3: Moving from Relevance to Resonance

12. Time-Famine and Resource Obsession: Another Step into Alienation

13. Why the Slow Church Cant Work: Stabilization, Alienation, and Loss of the Congregational Will to Be

14. Alienations Other: Resonance

15. When Bonhoeffer Time Travels: Resonance as Carrying the Child

16. To Become a Child: Matthew 18 and the Congregation That Is Carried

17. Ending with a Little Erotic Ecstasy

Index

Back Cover

Preface

While in the middle of writing this book I had a return flight from Amsterdam to Minneapolis. Ive taken this Delta flight many times. Usually, around hour six of eight it becomes painfully too long. I just want it to end. Those last two hours are the worst. When this occurs, Im usually on movie four and my body aches and thirsts to climb out of the metal tube Im stuck in going 600 miles an hour.

Yet this particular day I decided to do something outside my nature. I decided to pass on TV. I made the choice to format footnotes in this manuscript instead of watching The Avengers . As youll notice from paging through this book, there are a lot of footnotes. Too manyI apologize for that! Im a little bit addicted to footnotes. But thats not my point. This isnt a call for a footnote intervention. My editor has already initiated those procedures.

My point is this: for the first time, my experience of flying between Amsterdam and Minneapolis was quick. It felt nothing like eight hours. If asked to guess (and unable to see the moving flight map in front of me), I wouldve assumed it took us only two or three hours to get home. I would have believed it if the pilot had said over the intercom, Folks, bad news and good news. The bad first: it appears we slid into a wormhole (we have no idea what this will do to your being long-term). But good news: it just so happens that this wormhole got us to Minneapolis in a scant two hours and forty-five minutes. It was honestly the best international flight of my life (because the wormhole was only in my imagination).

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