Living Faith: How Faith Inspires Social Justice

by Curtiss Paul DeYoung

Paperback, 2007

Status

Available

Description

What impels a Mohandas Gandhi or a Martin Luther King, Jr.? How does religious experience animate a lifetime of dedication and drive for social justice? In this instructive and inspiring account, Christian ethicist Curtiss DeYoung profiles three of the most dynamic and influential religious activists of the twentieth century: Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Malcolm X, and Aung San Suu Kyi - each from a different generation, a different faith community, and a different continent. His portraits show how their mystic faith drove them to justice commitments and beyond customary boundaries between people from other traditions, countries, and ways of life. Living Faith is more than a set of inspiring portraits. It also powerfully analyzes how these figures - along with such other luminaries as Rigoberta Mench , Nelson Mandela, Winona LaDuke, Fannie Lou Hamer, Elie Wiesel, Thich Nhat Hanh, and the Dalai Lama - shared a fiery core experience and common characteristics that empowered their lives and work.… (more)

Publication

Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press (2007), 186 pages

Language

Original publication date

2007

ISBN

9780800638412

Barcode

15352

Contents

Mystic-activists: an introduction --
The just shall live by faith --
Dietrich Bonhoeffer: "the view from below" --
A worldview from the margins --
Malcolm X: "recognizing every human being as a human being" --
An identity rooted in humanity --
Aung San Suu Kyi: "a revolution of the spirit" --
The ethics of revolution --
A lived faith --
Reconciliation and religion in the twenty-first century --
Brief biographical sketches of twentieth-century mystic-activists.
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