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Creating Shared Resilience : The Role of the Church in a Hopeful Future - David M. Boan

Creating Shared Resilience

The Role of the Church in a Hopeful Future

By: David M. Boan, Josh Ayers, Alia Abboud (Foreword by)

Paperback | 14 March 2020

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The development community is increasingly aware of tensions and challenges inherent in relief work – and the need for sustainable solutions for communities experiencing poverty and crisis. How can the local church help to create and maintain such resilient communities? 

Boan and Ayers utilize their extensive experience working within the humanitarian sector, and in cooperation with local churches, to examine the evidence for effective partnerships between development agencies and local faith communities. The authors provide practical guidance on how church leaders can forge stronger relationships with NGOs, donors, and government while reinforcing, rather than compromising, the unique calling of the church. They explore resilience as an inherently communal characteristic and one located at the heart of the church’s historic calling to build community, strengthen faith, and shelter those in need. This is an excellent resource for anyone desiring to understand the value of local faith communities in battling poverty and helping communities survive and thrive amidst the impact of climate change and natural disasters.

Industry Reviews

Creating Shared Resilience is a book of reality, addressing critical issues for communities in need and clearly showing the reality from different perspectives by presenting living and tangible interventions from around the globe. This book takes us beyond what we read in reports and documents to where we can touch the truth.

Rev Christo Greyling
Faith and External Engagement, World Vision International

In Creating Shared Resilience Boan and Ayers bring exceptional clarity to the central role of local faith communities in the midst of suffering. The authors point us to a first principle we often fail to remember, namely that “structures are vulnerable because people are vulnerable.” It is the task of local faith communities to create those structures of resilience that will transform societies before, during, and after disasters. 

George Kalantzis, PhD 
Wheaton College, Illinois, USA

A book that is as timely as it is necessary, David Boan and Josh Ayers present a well-supported and thoughtful look at how the Local Faith Community can meet the needs of a hurting world while continuing to retain their identity in Christ. By focusing on spiritual growth, in addition to physical and psychological well-being, Boan and Ayers present a holistic model of resilience that is unique and easily adaptable to the many and diverse needs of a broken world.

Elizabeth List, PsyD
Northwest Nazarene University, Nampa, Idaho, USA

David Boan and Josh Ayers both have extensive on-the-ground experience in disaster risk reduction and response, which makes them well suited to tackle the topic of shared resilience. By the very worlds they span, they achieve their goal of bringing the often divergent worlds of theology, ecclesiology and humanitarian aid and development together.

Andre Van Eymeren
Managing Director, Centre for Building Better Community

The faith community will have to be responsible and respectful of others as we engage in a servant leader manner in the community God has called us to serve. We can be part of the whole process of restoration and healing by sharing spaces with all other stakeholders in the community. May a continued conversation happen within the local faith communities who are involved in the serious calling of making life easy especially for the needy and the marginalized.

Junel Chavez
Department of Social Welfare and Development Area Based Standard Network

This excellent book bridges between theology and ecclesiology, and humanitarian relief and development, examining the question of whether and how churches can be agents of long-term change for justice and compassion by strengthening their local community systems and building resilience. Grounded in the theology of integral mission, the book is both a guide for churches about community transformation but also a guide for transformation within the church itself. 

Jean Duff, MPH
Joint Learning Initiative for Faith and Local Communities

Living in a context where climate change, poor governance, and conflicts are slowly defining the destiny of people living in poverty, I find the resilience model that this book is proposing very helpful to faith leaders who are working hard to build resilient communities. This book shows that change happens when communities work together to build collaborative relationships that seek to build community resilience. 

Martin Kapenda
Micah, Zambia

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