Progressive faith is at a crossroads. Liberal pulpits ring with grand sermons about the arc that bends toward justice, and about progress “onward and upward forever.” Meanwhile, the people in the pews str...

Buy Now From Amazon

Progressive faith is at a crossroads. Liberal pulpits ring with grand sermons about the arc that bends toward justice, and about progress “onward and upward forever.” Meanwhile, the people in the pews struggle to attend to the suffering of their souls and the tragic aspects of life. In this engaging polemic, using stories and metaphor, Nancy McDonald Ladd issues a call for change. Speaking from a rising generation of clergy and lay leaders who formed their commitments to liberal religion at the end of the optimistic modernist age, she shows how the religious life is not characterized by endless human advancement but by lurching movement, crisis management, and pain.

With humor and humanity, Ladd calls religious progressives to greater authenticity and truth-telling rather than blind optimism. She charts a course forward that includes reclaiming rituals of atonement and lament and becoming more vulnerable and accountable in our relationships. She shows how, together, we might build a necessary and greater resilience among ourselves and for the generations to come.



Similar Products

An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States (REVISIONING HISTORY)Testimony: The Transformative Power of Unitarian UniversalismThe Gadfly Papers: Three Inconvenient Essays by One Pesky MinisterHow to Lead When You Don't Know Where You're Going: Leading in a Liminal SeasonHow to Be an AntiracistChrist in Crisis: Why We Need to Reclaim JesusThe Unitarian Universalist Pocket Guide: Sixth Edition