
Embracing Justice
The Archbishop of Canterbury's Lent Book 2022
Isabelle Hamley(Author)
SPCK Publishing
Published on 16. December 2021
Book
Paperback/Softback
224 pages
978-0-281-08654-2 (ISBN)
Description
'In a world where justice is too often about power, Isabelle Hamley shows that God's justice brings transformation, healing and hope for all.' JUSTIN WELBY
What is justice? It's a question we encounter everywhere in life and that over the last years has increasingly demanded an answer.
In Embracing Justice, Isabelle Hamley invites us on an exhilarating journey through Scripture to discover how we, as churches, communities and individual Christians, can seek and practice justice even when enmeshed in such a fractured world.
Full of practical encouragement, the Archbishop of Canterbury's Lent Book for 2022 brilliantly weaves together biblical texts, diverse voices, contemporary stories, and personal and group meditations to reveal liberating and imaginative ways in which me may grow in discipleship - and more fully reflect the justice, mercy and compassion of Christ in our lives.
With six chapters to take you from Ash Wednesday to Easter Sunday, this Lent devotional for 2022 is essential reading for anyone interested in the issues of justice - from climate and economic justice to gender and racial equality - that are increasingly at the forefront of global consciousness, and the role that Christians and the Church must play in them.
Suitable for use both as a single study for individuals and for small groups to prepare for Easter, Embracing Justice will encourage, inform and motivate anyone looking for Christian books about justice. It will help you understand justice from a biblical perspective, and inspire you to seek it in every aspect of your life.
Although the world is broken, unequal and violent, the call to reflect God's own justice and mercy continues to sound like a steady drumbeat, impossible to ignore. Company with Isabelle Hamley this Lent, and discover that we can all join God's mission of transformation and embrace his justice.
What is justice? It's a question we encounter everywhere in life and that over the last years has increasingly demanded an answer.
In Embracing Justice, Isabelle Hamley invites us on an exhilarating journey through Scripture to discover how we, as churches, communities and individual Christians, can seek and practice justice even when enmeshed in such a fractured world.
Full of practical encouragement, the Archbishop of Canterbury's Lent Book for 2022 brilliantly weaves together biblical texts, diverse voices, contemporary stories, and personal and group meditations to reveal liberating and imaginative ways in which me may grow in discipleship - and more fully reflect the justice, mercy and compassion of Christ in our lives.
With six chapters to take you from Ash Wednesday to Easter Sunday, this Lent devotional for 2022 is essential reading for anyone interested in the issues of justice - from climate and economic justice to gender and racial equality - that are increasingly at the forefront of global consciousness, and the role that Christians and the Church must play in them.
Suitable for use both as a single study for individuals and for small groups to prepare for Easter, Embracing Justice will encourage, inform and motivate anyone looking for Christian books about justice. It will help you understand justice from a biblical perspective, and inspire you to seek it in every aspect of your life.
Although the world is broken, unequal and violent, the call to reflect God's own justice and mercy continues to sound like a steady drumbeat, impossible to ignore. Company with Isabelle Hamley this Lent, and discover that we can all join God's mission of transformation and embrace his justice.
Reviews / Votes
In a world where justice is too often about power, Isabelle Hamley shows that God's justice brings transformation, healing and hope for all. -- Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury on Embracing Justice Offers a serious-minded exploration of the different stories of justice in the Bible . . . Hamley's approach to scripture . . . allowing its narratives to reshape our imagination - is a model of theological method . . . attractively written and non-technical. * Church Times on Embracing Justice * A comprehensive and plain-speaking call for social justice in all its forms . . . deserves a wide audience . . . salutary and valuable. * Transforming Ministry * At last, an authoritative and comprehensive study of the connection between faith and mental health which doesn't shy away from making helpful practical applications. I commend it very warmly indeed. -- Bishop James Newcome on 'The Bible and Mental Health' edited by Isabelle Hamley and Christopher C H Cook Full of insight, intellectually robust, and consistently honest about the fragile spaces we inhabit, its authors explore from multiple angles how God can be present within frailty, not beyond it. -- The Revd Dr Alison J Gray, FRCPsych on 'The Bible and Mental Health' edited by Isabelle Hamley and Christopher C H Cook Full of insight, intellectually robust, and consistently honest about the fragile spaces we inhabit, its authors explore from multiple angles how God can be present within frailty, not beyond it. -- John M.G. Barclay FBA on 'The Bible and Mental Health' edited by Isabelle Hamley and Christopher C H CookMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Edition type
New edition
Product notice
Paperback (UK-trade)
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 136 mm
Thickness: 29 mm
Weight
225 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-281-08654-2 (9780281086542)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
12/2021
1st Edition
SPCK Publishing
€11.49
Available for download
Person
Isabelle Hamley is Theological Adviser to the House of Bishops and was formerly Chaplain to the Archbishop of Canterbury. Isabelle has written a number of recognised books on questions of justice, mercy and restoration, having been a probation officer before ordination and ministering subsequently amidst the diversity of parish life.
Content
Foreword by the Archbishop of Canterbury ix
Acknowledgements xii
Approaching justice 1
1 Paradise lost: In search of original justice 5
Justice in creation: Genesis 1-2 5
When good goes bad: Genesis 3 14
In search of original justice 27
2 From bondage to freedom: Exodus and liberation stories 37
Exodus 1: Inequality, injustice and violence 39
God's response: Hearing, seeing, acting 44
Transforming people 53
Exodus as a prophetic book 64
3 Building communities of justice: Legal systems and community justice 78
The laws of the Old Testament 84
The marks of a just community 96
Living in a broken world 106
When justice fails 113
4 Justice and incarnation: Restoring the image of God 120
The centrality of the Incarnation 121
Learning to see 129
Seeing the big picture 136
Pursuing justice in the refugee camps of Lebanon 140
Humanizing the other 144
5 Justice in the shape of a cross 149
Justice in the ministry of Jesus 150
A radical reconfiguration of power 158
The cross as the unexpected embodiment of justice 163
Justice, resurrection and ascension 173
6 'Do this to remember me': Holy Communion and the reshaping of the imagination 179
Discerning the body 183
The practice of truth-telling 187
Take, eat, this is my body 193
What now? 199
Bibliography 201
Acknowledgements xii
Approaching justice 1
1 Paradise lost: In search of original justice 5
Justice in creation: Genesis 1-2 5
When good goes bad: Genesis 3 14
In search of original justice 27
2 From bondage to freedom: Exodus and liberation stories 37
Exodus 1: Inequality, injustice and violence 39
God's response: Hearing, seeing, acting 44
Transforming people 53
Exodus as a prophetic book 64
3 Building communities of justice: Legal systems and community justice 78
The laws of the Old Testament 84
The marks of a just community 96
Living in a broken world 106
When justice fails 113
4 Justice and incarnation: Restoring the image of God 120
The centrality of the Incarnation 121
Learning to see 129
Seeing the big picture 136
Pursuing justice in the refugee camps of Lebanon 140
Humanizing the other 144
5 Justice in the shape of a cross 149
Justice in the ministry of Jesus 150
A radical reconfiguration of power 158
The cross as the unexpected embodiment of justice 163
Justice, resurrection and ascension 173
6 'Do this to remember me': Holy Communion and the reshaping of the imagination 179
Discerning the body 183
The practice of truth-telling 187
Take, eat, this is my body 193
What now? 199
Bibliography 201