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OverviewIn a quest for inclusion amid feminist, womanist, and mujerista discourses, Hertig's ""yinist"" spirituality is a novel atttempt to lift up the voices of female, Asian American voices in Christian ecological theology. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Young Lee HertigPublisher: Orbis Books (USA) Imprint: Orbis Books (USA) Dimensions: Width: 13.70cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.227kg ISBN: 9781626983359ISBN 10: 1626983356 Pages: 176 Publication Date: 29 August 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"""Hertig's work fills a theological lacuna and addresses an ecclesial crisis: the lacuna is the dearth and marginalization of Asian American feminist evangelical theological voices, and the crisis is the lack of ministerial leadership models that respond to prevailing gender and racial challenges faced by and within Asian/Korean immigrant churches. Asserting implications for theological education, ministerial leadership development, and a renewed spiritual attunement to primordial human-nature harmonies, The Tao of Asian American Belonging beckons our contemplation, debate, and embrace."" --Mai-Anh Le Tran, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary ""Taoism, Christianity, Asian/Asian American women's experiences, new epistemological turns, a comprehensive and holistic way of life, and an invitation for all humanity and creation-- all offered through a 'yinist' spirituality. I know of no other person, except Young Lee Hertig, who has the capacity and capaciousness to forge such a path."" --Dwight N. Hopkins, author, Being Human: Race, Culture, and Religion ""Young Lee Hertig's 'yinist' spirituality draws on the mutuality of yin-and-yang pervasive in East Asian thinking to recover Hebraic holism, Jesus's upside-down, basileia, and the Pauline ecclesiology of weakness and marginality in order to revitalize theological education and the North American church in our global twenty-first century."" --Amos Yong, professor of theology and mission, Fuller Seminary" ""Hertig's work fills a theological lacuna and addresses an ecclesial crisis: the lacuna is the dearth and marginalization of Asian American feminist evangelical theological voices, and the crisis is the lack of ministerial leadership models that respond to prevailing gender and racial challenges faced by and within Asian/Korean immigrant churches. Asserting implications for theological education, ministerial leadership development, and a renewed spiritual attunement to primordial human-nature harmonies, The Tao of Asian American Belonging beckons our contemplation, debate, and embrace."" --Mai-Anh Le Tran, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary ""Taoism, Christianity, Asian/Asian American women's experiences, new epistemological turns, a comprehensive and holistic way of life, and an invitation for all humanity and creation-- all offered through a 'yinist' spirituality. I know of no other person, except Young Lee Hertig, who has the capacity and capaciousness to forge such a path."" --Dwight N. Hopkins, author, Being Human: Race, Culture, and Religion ""Young Lee Hertig's 'yinist' spirituality draws on the mutuality of yin-and-yang pervasive in East Asian thinking to recover Hebraic holism, Jesus's upside-down, basileia, and the Pauline ecclesiology of weakness and marginality in order to revitalize theological education and the North American church in our global twenty-first century."" --Amos Yong, professor of theology and mission, Fuller Seminary Author InformationYoung Lee Hertig is co-founder and executive director of ISAAC (Innovative Space for Asian American Christianity) and AAWOL (Asian American Women on Leadership). An ordained Presbyterian clergy, she has taught courses on spirituality, sustainability, and diversity at Azusa Pacific University, Fuller Theological Seminary, and United Theological Seminary. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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