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Resource: Books (AL30511.0000) Managing Polarities in Congregations: Eight Keys for Thriving Faith Communities     
Author: Oswald, Roy M.
Publisher: Alban,The Institute Inc, 2009
Length: 246 pages
Heading: 070 — Conflict
Subjects: Church; Church controversies
Location: BV600.3 .O74 2009
# Copies: 1
ISBN/ISSN: 9781566993906
Description:

Congregations often find themselves in power struggles over two opposing
views.  People on both sides believe strongly that they are right.  They also
assume that if they are right, their opposition must be wrong---classic
"either/or" thinking.  A polarity is a pair of truths that need each other over
time.  When an argument is about two poles of polarity, both sides are right
and need each other to experience the whole truth.

This phenomenon has been recognized and written about for centuries in
philosophy and religion.  It is as the heart of Taoism, where we find the
familiar polarity of yin and yang energy.  In the past fifty years, business
leaders have come to appreciate the phenomenon, often called dilemma or
paradox.  No matter what it is called, the research is clear:  leaders and
organizations that manage polarities well out perform those who don't.

Together, long-time Alban Institute consultant Roy Oswald and colleague Barry
Johnson, who developed the concept of Polarity Management, explore eight
polarities that thriving congregations manage well, including Tradition &
Innovation, Spiritual Health & Institutional Health, Inreach & Outreach, and
Nurture & Transformation.  Thriving congregations tap the inherent tension in
polarity.  Oswald and Johnson show readers how their congregations can manage
polarities more intentionally, effectively, and sustainably.

Age Groups: None specified.


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