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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Grace Ji-Sun KimPublisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers Imprint: Wipf & Stock Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.395kg ISBN: 9781532689253ISBN 10: 153268925 Pages: 152 Publication Date: 19 November 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"""For too long, a narrow Euro-American Christian vision of the Spirit has prevented people from seeing and experiencing the fullness of the Spirit. Grace Ji-Sun Kim invites us to imagine the Spirit anew. Kim inspires us to see how the Spirit moves us to offer loving, healing, and prophetic expressions of racial, environmental, and gender justice. This is one of the most important books on the Spirit I have ever read."" --Graham Joseph Hill, Stirling Theological College ""With her book Dr. Grace Ji-Sun Kim seals her reputation as an authority on pneumatology. Here she goes further than two previous books by offering us a profound theology of the manifestation of the Holy Spirit under three images, namely--light, wind, and vibration. Dr. Kim succeeds splendidly in making the Holy Spirit real to Christian life, no longer an ethereal and abstract entity but the powerful and personal divine force moving and shaking us to work for climate, gender, and racial justice. I strongly recommend this book not only for theology courses but also for spiritual reading."" --Peter C. Phan, Georgetown University ""Grace Ji-Sun Kim has written an engaging text that considers how to address important contemporary issues in light of an evolving, hybrid Christian pneumatology. . . . By emphasizing the worldwide nature of Christianity alongside an exploration of spirit's presence across religions, Kim pushes against an understanding of cultures as absolutely distinct. Noting both the permeability and interrelationship of cultures and the reality of a worldwide Christianity manifested in diverse geographies through diverse cultures, Kim challenges Christianity to embrace the reinvigoration that is available through the multiplicity within itself. As an exemplar of this reinvigoration, Kim discusses the Korean concept jeong, a sticky kind of love, which pushes against the transactional nature in many understandings of love in the United States."" --Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College" For too long, a narrow Euro-American Christian vision of the Spirit has prevented people from seeing and experiencing the fullness of the Spirit. Grace Ji-Sun Kim invites us to imagine the Spirit anew. Kim inspires us to see how the Spirit moves us to offer loving, healing, and prophetic expressions of racial, environmental, and gender justice. This is one of the most important books on the Spirit I have ever read. --Graham Joseph Hill, Stirling Theological College With her book Dr. Grace Ji-Sun Kim seals her reputation as an authority on pneumatology. Here she goes further than two previous books by offering us a profound theology of the manifestation of the Holy Spirit under three images, namely--light, wind, and vibration. Dr. Kim succeeds splendidly in making the Holy Spirit real to Christian life, no longer an ethereal and abstract entity but the powerful and personal divine force moving and shaking us to work for climate, gender, and racial justice. I strongly recommend this book not only for theology courses but also for spiritual reading. --Peter C. Phan, Georgetown University Grace Ji-Sun Kim has written an engaging text that considers how to address important contemporary issues in light of an evolving, hybrid Christian pneumatology. . . . By emphasizing the worldwide nature of Christianity alongside an exploration of spirit's presence across religions, Kim pushes against an understanding of cultures as absolutely distinct. Noting both the permeability and interrelationship of cultures and the reality of a worldwide Christianity manifested in diverse geographies through diverse cultures, Kim challenges Christianity to embrace the reinvigoration that is available through the multiplicity within itself. As an exemplar of this reinvigoration, Kim discusses the Korean concept jeong, a sticky kind of love, which pushes against the transactional nature in many understandings of love in the United States. --Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College """""For too long, a narrow Euro-American Christian vision of the Spirit has prevented people from seeing and experiencing the fullness of the Spirit. Grace Ji-Sun Kim invites us to imagine the Spirit anew. Kim inspires us to see how the Spirit moves us to offer loving, healing, and prophetic expressions of racial, environmental, and gender justice. This is one of the most important books on the Spirit I have ever read."""" --Graham Joseph Hill, Stirling Theological College """"With her book Dr. Grace Ji-Sun Kim seals her reputation as an authority on pneumatology. Here she goes further than two previous books by offering us a profound theology of the manifestation of the Holy Spirit under three images, namely--light, wind, and vibration. Dr. Kim succeeds splendidly in making the Holy Spirit real to Christian life, no longer an ethereal and abstract entity but the powerful and personal divine force moving and shaking us to work for climate, gender, and racial justice. I strongly recommend this book not only for theology courses but also for spiritual reading."""" --Peter C. Phan, Georgetown University """"Grace Ji-Sun Kim has written an engaging text that considers how to address important contemporary issues in light of an evolving, hybrid Christian pneumatology. . . . By emphasizing the worldwide nature of Christianity alongside an exploration of spirit's presence across religions, Kim pushes against an understanding of cultures as absolutely distinct. Noting both the permeability and interrelationship of cultures and the reality of a worldwide Christianity manifested in diverse geographies through diverse cultures, Kim challenges Christianity to embrace the reinvigoration that is available through the multiplicity within itself. As an exemplar of this reinvigoration, Kim discusses the Korean concept jeong, a sticky kind of love, which pushes against the transactional nature in many understandings of love in the United States."""" --Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College" For too long, a narrow Euro-American Christian vision of the Spirit has prevented people from seeing and experiencing the fullness of the Spirit. Grace Ji-Sun Kim invites us to imagine the Spirit anew. Kim inspires us to see how the Spirit moves us to offer loving, healing, and prophetic expressions of racial, environmental, and gender justice. This is one of the most important books on the Spirit I have ever read. --Graham Joseph Hill, Stirling Theological College With her book Dr. Grace Ji-Sun Kim seals her reputation as an authority on pneumatology. Here she goes further than two previous books by offering us a profound theology of the manifestation of the Holy Spirit under three images, namely--light, wind, and vibration. Dr. Kim succeeds splendidly in making the Holy Spirit real to Christian life, no longer an ethereal and abstract entity but the powerful and personal divine force moving and shaking us to work for climate, gender, and racial justice. I strongly recommend this book not only for theology courses but also for spiritual reading. --Peter C. Phan, Georgetown University Grace Ji-Sun Kim has written an engaging text that considers how to address important contemporary issues in light of an evolving, hybrid Christian pneumatology. . . . By emphasizing the worldwide nature of Christianity alongside an exploration of spirit's presence across religions, Kim pushes against an understanding of cultures as absolutely distinct. Noting both the permeability and interrelationship of cultures and the reality of a worldwide Christianity manifested in diverse geographies through diverse cultures, Kim challenges Christianity to embrace the reinvigoration that is available through the multiplicity within itself. As an exemplar of this reinvigoration, Kim discusses the Korean concept jeong, a sticky kind of love, which pushes against the transactional nature in many understandings of love in the United States. --Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College Author InformationGrace Ji-Sun Kim obtained her PhD from the University of Toronto and is presently Associate Professor of Theology at Earlham School of Religion. She is the author or editor of seventeen books, most recently, Intersectional Theology co-written with Susan Shaw, Healing Our Broken Humanity co-written with Graham Joseph Hill, Embracing the Other, and Contemplations from the Heart. She is the co-editor with Joseph Cheah of a book series, Asian Christianity in the Diaspora, and is an ordained Presbyterian Church (USA) minister. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |