Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet

The “Other” is my Neighbour  

Brief volume offering invaluable insights into the biblical and theological dimensions of migration following extensive expert consultation and research. An ideal autumn study for preachers and study groups leading up to Advent

 

The other is my neighbour250The “Other” is my Neighbour 
Developing an Ecumenical Response to Migration
WCC Publications, Geneva, 2013
ISBN 978-2-8254-1605-1
Reviewed by Alec Gilmore

Following 16 months of extensive consultation, research and dialogue with regional ecumenical organisations, member churches, related ecumenical activists and theologians, this book is the product of a working group of theologians and a drafting committee to address the question ‘who is my neighbour?’ with a view to an ecumenical response to matters of migration.

Practical down-to-earth issues include how we see ourselves in relation to others, how we hold current economic powers which thrive on the abuse of human beings, and how to encourage and equip congregations to become inclusive communities.

Three sections explore the biblical and theological insights related to migration, identify the subsequent ecclesiological implications of migration on the ecclesial landscape and for the nature and mission of the church, and call for a renewed ecumenical response to migration in the light of the WCC 2013 Assembly theme, ‘God of life, lead us to justice and peace’.

Three underlying basic convictions are the sacredness of all human life and the sanctity of creation, the biblical values of love, justice and peace which require us to renew Christian response to the marginalised and excluded, and the biblical challenge to build inclusive community as we accompany the uprooted in service and witness.

Biblical insight moves us  from ‘Strangers on the Move’ (Genesis) to ’no room at the inn’ with a reminder that we are all ‘foreigners’, aliens and vulnerable, living between paradise lost and the heavenly Jerusalem — a ‘pilgrim community called to cross boundaries’ seeking to discover what it means to be ‘neighbour’ to the ‘other’.

Appendixes deal with migrant workers, displaced families, trafficking and economic emancipation, and family life (tension, exclusion, exploitation and racism).

An excellent tool, small enough to be easily manageable and deep enough to challenge and stimulate even the most informed and enthusiastic. An ideal autumn study for preachers and study groups leading up to Advent and a wholly different ‘feel’ for Christmas. But do the churches and their leaders have the stomach for it?

 

The Revd Alec Gilmore is a Baptist minister 





 

Baptist Times, 31/05/2015
    Post     Tweet
Wild Goose big book of liturgies and resources 3: Bread of hope 
'You will find resources here for situations which are not often signalled in the collections favoured by most Baptists'
Beyond Belief - a former fundamentalist examines the case for God 
'To read this book and take in what it says might actually turn out to be, for some, a faith-building rather than a faith-undermining exercise'
The Power of Ideas by Jonathan Sachs  
A compendium of Sachs' writings over a period of years; readable and full of wisdom, encouraging the reader to think and pray
Holding Onto Hope by Amy Boucher Pye and Leo Boucher 
A 'delightful' and 'beautiful' 40-day journey exploring the themes of hope and new life through short reflections and accompanying art
Island in the Sun: Growing Up in Jamaica 1948-1954 by Monica Carly 
'Fascinating account by the daughter of a Baptist minister invited to lead a theological college in Jamaica when she was a teenager'
A Landscape of Grief by Jenny Hawke
Moving and beautiful book in which the author shares her own journey following her husband's diagnosis of Motor Neurone Disease and subsequent death; written for those who are grieving
     Reviews 
    Posted: 01/03/2024
    Posted: 22/09/2023