Next Sunday An honest dialogue about the future of the church

Nancy Beach

Book - 2022

"As the church reckons with the abuse, racism, patriarchy, and unchecked power that have marked evangelicalism for too long, Nancy, a boomer and key player in the megachurch movement, and Samantha, a millennial wondering if the church's foundations still hold, have a vulnerable conversation about what the church has been-and what it can be"--

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Subjects
Published
Downers Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Nancy Beach (author)
Other Authors
Samantha Beach Kiley, 1989- (author)
Physical Description
xii, 178 pages : illustration ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781514003022
  • Introduction
  • 1. Turn-and-Greet Terrors or Does Anyone Actually Care That I'm Here?
  • Creating Genuine Community
  • 2. Train Up a Child in the Way She Should Go, and She Will Never Forget the Hand Motions
  • Being Kidcentric
  • 3. Monday Through Saturday
  • Having an External Focus
  • 4. You Had to Be There
  • Concerning the Hour on Sunday
  • 5. When Harry Works with Sally
  • Men and Women Leading Well Together
  • 6. The Mess We've Made
  • The Church's History of Exclusion and Oppression
  • 7. Behind the Curtain
  • Creating a Healthy Culture
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"What will be most important for local churches going forward if they hope to thrive and not merely survive?" ask leadership coach Beach (An Hour on Sunday) and her daughter Kiley, a pastor, in this thought-provoking treatise on the future of evangelicalism. They alternate sharing their perspectives on such topics as how to generate community among parishioners, appealing to younger generations, and how to elevate more women to leadership roles. Beach urges readers to emulate Jesus's "passionate love for those on the margins" to make the evangelical church more inclusive for people of color and LGBTQ individuals. Kiley, meanwhile, recounts debates with her husband about whether the church had done more harm than good and suggests that the church approach injustice with "humility, repentance, and a willingness to listen, be led, and take sacrificial action." The multigenerational perspectives of Beach and Kiley complement each other and buoy their thoughtful analysis of pressing issues facing the church. Evangelical reading groups looking for a well-argued and inclusive conversation starter would do well to pick this up. Agent: Alex Field, Bindery Agency. (June)

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