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Resource: Books (P40637-5) Practices of Faith #20: Lord, Have Mercy: Praying for Justice with Conviction and Humility     
Series: (P40637=) Practicing Our Faith
Author: Claire E. Wolfteich
Publisher: Jossey Bass Wiley , 2006
Length: 240 pages
Subjects: Christian Life; Christianity and culture; Justice; Prayer; Prayer -- Christianity. ; Prayer / Christianity; Spiritual life
Location: BV210.3 .W64 2006
# Copies: 1
ISBN/ISSN: 9780787982690
Description: FROM THE PUBLISHER:

Lord, Have Mercy offers a guide for those who want to move prayer beyond private
devotion and engage faithfully with the questions, decisions, policies, and
movements that shape our lives in society. This important book is designed to
help you think about how you pray about vital and often
confounding social and political questions. Lord, Have Mercy is filled
with stories from around the world that illustrate what prayer might mean and do
in difficult situations. Throughout this compelling book, Claire E. Wolfteich
explores how communities pray about social issues, especially where questions of
justice are at stake and where opinions differ about what constitutes justice or
what is an appropriate public faith witness. These stories confront theological
and spiritual dilemmas and show how individuals and groups have grappled with
them.

Lord, Have Mercy is written for anyone who seeks to thoughtfully connect faith
with political, social, and economic issues. It is for those who want to grow in
discernment of God's purposes in the world, who want to stand on the side of
justice, and who want to pray with conviction and humility.

Lord, Have Mercy is a new volume in the Practices of Faith series.


DESCRIPTION: Praise for Lord, Have Mercy

"Once in a while, I find a book about prayer that does something fresh. Claire
E. Wolfteich provokes us to rethink the very nature of prayer and how it
reshapes us as she discusses six examples of modern Christians confronting the
complexities of social engagement and how to make responsible choices in favor
of justice and human reconciliation."

Philip Sheldrake, professor, department of theology and religion,
University of Durham; author, Spaces for the Sacred

"Wolfteich provides carefully researched case studies from suburban Miami to the
turmoil of apartheid South Africa, analyzing the relation of prayer to various
human purposes. She guides the reader through the ambiguities of each case,
giving no easy answers, teaching by asking questions. But on another, more
personal level, the book is an ongoing conversation with the author. Her voice
comes through again and again quiet, intelligent,
unpretentious exposing her own vulnerabilities. We have here a book that
is both instructive and moving a rare thing."

Peter L. Berger, director, Institute on Culture, Religion, and World
Affairs, Boston University

"For Wolfteich, Christian spirituality is 'prayerful engagement humble,
not presumptuous; prophetic, not passive; yet always contemplative in the best
sense.' This is the bestguide I know for helping Christians understand how
prayer, in its many forms, is indispensable to social action."

Kathleen A. Cahalan, associate professor, practical theology, Saint
John's University School of Theology and Seminary
Age Groups: None specified.


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