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BV4599.5.C44 J66 2016
17-413
2020-07-29 00:00:00
2020-01-30
2017-06-01
BK
41115
41115
ocn934677049
OCoLC
20170601145230.0
160225s2016 tnu b 000 0 eng
2016009795
9781501825774
paperback
1501825771
paperback
40026171025
(OCoLC)934677049
DLC
eng
rda
DLC
YDX
YDXCP
BTCTA
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BV4599.5.C44
J66 2016
262.001/7
23
Jones, L. Gregory,
author.
Christian social innovation :
renewing Wesleyan witness /
L. Gregory Jones.
Nashville :
Abingdon Press,
[2016]
x, 118 pages ;
22 cm
text
rdacontent
unmediated
rdamedia
volume
rdacarrier
Includes bibliographical references.
Introductory overview: Rediscovering Christian social innovation -- The end is our beginning: living with a clear sense of purpose -- Love made me an inventor: practicing traditioned innovation -- Cultivating practical wisdom: forming Christians for innovation -- Concluding postscript: A child's blessing.
Everybody seems interested in innovation and entrepreneurship these days. Start-ups are generating new jobs, creating wealth and providing solutions to longstanding problems. People are also aware that old-line social institutions need innovative approaches that provide renewal, re-establish trust and cultivate sustainability. What do faith communities have to do with innovation and entrepreneurship? Faith communities have their own need for innovation, demonstrated in a growing interest in starting new churches, developing "fresh expressions" for gatherings of community and discussions about how to cultivate a renewed sense of mission. But do faith communities have anything unique to contribute to conversations about innovation and entrepreneurship, especially in "social entrepreneurship"? At first glance, the answer seems to be "no." Burgeoning literature on social entrepreneurship barely mentions the church or other faith-based institutions -- and when it does they're often described as part of the broken institutional landscape. Recently much of the most innovative and entrepreneurial work in these sectors has been done apart from faith communities, whether through secular non-governmental organizations (e.g., Teach for America, Knowledge is Power Program schools) or for-profit businesses (e.g., hospitals and hospices). Indeed, it is now often assumed that faith and faith communities either are irrelevant to social innovation and entrepreneurship or are a significant obstacle. We believe too many people in faith communities, and faith-based organizations themselves, turned inward. They became preoccupied with managing what already existed rather than focusing on innovative renewal of their organizations and entrepreneurial approaches to starting new ones. However, Christian social innovation, at its best, depends on a conception of hope different than the optimism that often characterizes secular endeavors, a hope that acknowledges personal and social brokenness. Further, faith communities, at their best, have embodied perseverance, often bringing people together across generations and diverse sectors to imagine how common effort and faith might overcome obstacles. Although some faith communities have lost the "at-their-best" focus, new conversations and experiments are emerging beyond the goal of starting new congregations. But they tend to be "and" conversations: faith and innovation, faith and entrepreneurship, faith and leadership. We don't think this goes deep enough. Faith might truly "animate" social innovation and entrepreneurship. In this perspective, faith is not held at a distance from the activities of life but is instead its vital force, providing the imagination, passion and commitment that lead to transformation.
United Methodist Church (U.S.)
Doctrines.
Change
Religious aspects
Christianity.
Church and the world.
Social entrepreneurship.
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