Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet


Mission in Marginal Places: The Stories 


Excellent book telling stories of mission which challenges our preconceptions, especially about what constitutes success

 


Mission Marginal Places The StMission in Marginal Places: The Stories
By Paul Cloke and Mike Pears (eds)
Paternoster
ISBN: 978-1-78078-185-3
Reviewed by: Rosa Hunt


This is the third in what should be a series of six books about mission in marginal places. The first two in the series dealt with the theory and the praxis, and this book tells us stories about mission.

Everyone likes a good story, and sure enough, this book did not disappoint. I started reading it on the bus coming home from college, and the first story I read was about a woman travelling on a bus and her experience of being present to the passengers and drivers when a conflict arose. So I was instantly hooked, and immediately started to consider whether I also was being present to my fellow travellers in that tightly bounded space whose membership is forever changing as people board and disembark.

Real life mission situations are messy. They seldom have clear lines of development, and they almost never have unambiguous success criteria. A story faithfully told can capture this messiness and preserve the open-ended nature of mission. This is what we get in this book – faithfully told stories of a wide variety of situations where Christians have attempted to engage with the wider world, whether that is on a bus, or in an anarchist and squatter community, or with a paedophile in prison, or a meal with a group of Iranian men or drinking chai in Calais’ Jungle - and so many more.

After every three or four stories, the editors (Mike Pears and Paul Cloke) present an “editorial conversation” which draws together the previous stories under an umbrella. These umbrella categories are: moments of ‘seeing’, encountering other worlds, “Guest or host?”, creative tension and “Who is my neighbour?”. This provides some sort of structure to the book, without artificially forcing the stories and the marginal communities they describe into shapes which they can’t sustain.

This is an excellent book – like most good books, it’s easy to read and hard to forget. It challenges our preconceptions about mission, and perhaps especially about what constitutes success. I would recommend it wholeheartedly to anyone involved in mission in marginal places. That’s you. Or, at least, if you’re a follower of Jesus, that should be you. 



Rosa is minister of Capel Salem, a bilingual Baptist Church in Tonteg, South Wales. She is also Co-Principal of South Wales Baptist College



 
Baptist Times, 03/01/2020
    Post     Tweet
Related Articles
A Landscape of Grief by Jenny Hawke
Moving and beautiful book in which the author shares her own journey following her husband's diagnosis of Motor Neurone Disease and subsequent death; written for those who are grieving
The Contemporary Woman by Michelle Guinness  
This reflection on womanhood has some fine moments but is ultimately a mixed offering
God’s Not Like That by Bryan Clark  
Clark writes about how families influence views of God and contains much common sense - but does not address non traditional family situations in any depth
Deepening your walk with Jesus
John Mark Comer's new book is “a summary and synthesis of ancient Christian orthodoxy” for a 21st-century audience, which works hard to make following Jesus practical and accessible in our modern day, writes Chris Goswami
My Big Story Bible by Tom Wright 
'Wright is retelling the stories in an accessible way in something closer to the whole Bible, with his inclusions of the books of the prophets and the New Testament letters'
Clever Cub Forgives a Friend, and Invites Someone New, by Bob Hartman  
Latest titles in series which takes the world of the child seriously and then tries to choose appropriate stories from the Bible to address their experiences - relevant and readable
     Reviews 
    Posted: 01/03/2024
    Posted: 22/09/2023