No Congregation Is an Island

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A01=Jennifer M. McClure Haraway
African American Baptists
Association of Related Churches
Author_Jennifer M. McClure Haraway
baby boomers
Birmingham
Black Baptists
bridges
burnout
Category=JBSR
Category=QRM
Category=QRVS2
Category=QRVS3
central Alabama
christian
christianity
churches
Churches of Christ
clergy
collaborations
conflict
congregational ministry
congregations
Covid-19
disciples of christ
Episcopal
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
gifts for pastors
gifts for seminary graduates
Latter-day saints
Methodists
millenials
ministers
ministry
pastors
Pentecostal
Peter Steinke
Presbyterian Church
Protestantism
race
racial marriers
relationships
Roman Catholic
social networks
social science
sociology
Southern Baptists

Product details

  • ISBN 9781538180464
  • Weight: 413g
  • Dimensions: 159 x 237mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Aug 2023
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In difficult times, relationships provide tangible help, advice, resources, and emotional support. This is true not only for individuals but also for religious congregations. U.S. congregations are experiencing many opportunities and challenges because of dramatic shifts in the American religious landscape as well as the lingering effects of the pandemic. For ministers and leaders at congregations, these changes may have sparked feelings of anxiety, uncertainty, and disorientation. Fortunately, relationships with other congregations and religious groups can have a positive impact on how congregations are responding to the opportunities and challenges they face in an uncertain future.
In this book, Jennifer McClure draws on conversations with congregational ministers and leaders from central Alabama to share stories about the various kinds of relationships they have and what difference those relationships make, using this case study to make larger points about the broader congregational landscape in the United States. McClure focuses on several kinds of relationships: relationships primarily within religious groups, relationships exclusively within distinctive religious groups, relationships between religious groups, relationships within racial groups, and relationships between racial groups.
For ministers and congregational leaders who are feeling stressed, overwhelmed, and perhaps bewildered by all the changes that have taken place in their congregations and communities, this book is a timely and important resource to find support, ideas, and collaborations through relationships with other clergy members and congregations.

Jennifer M. McClure Haraway is a sociologist of religion who studies local congregations. She is an associate professor of religion and sociology at Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama. She also develops congregational resources with the Association of Religion Data Archives and serves as the congregational research strategist at Samford’s Center for Congregational Resources. Find her on Twitter at @jenniferm2clure and on Google Scholar.

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