Unclean : meditations on purity, hospitality, and morality
(2011)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2011
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781621890102 (electronic bk.) MWT12319140, 1621890104 (electronic bk.) 12319140
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

I desire mercy, not sacrifice. Echoing Hosea, Jesus defends his embrace of the unclean in the Gospel of Matthew, seeming to privilege the prophetic call to justice over the Levitical pursuit of purity. And yet, as missional faith communities are well aware, the tensions and conflicts between holiness and mercy are not so easily resolved. At every turn, it seems that the psychological pull of purity and holiness tempts the church into practices of social exclusion and a Gnostic flight from the world into a too spiritual spirituality. Moreover, the psychology of purity often lures the church into what psychologists call The Macbeth Effect, the psychological trap that tempts us into believing that ritual acts of cleansing can replace moral and missional engagement. Finally, time after time, wherever we see churches regulating their common life with the idiom of dirt, disgust, and defilement, we find a predictable wake of dysfunction: ruined self-images, social stigma, and communal conflict. In an unprecedented fusion of psychological science and theological scholarship, Richard Beck describes the pernicious (and largely unnoticed) effects of the psychology of purity upon the life and mission of the church

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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