By Virtue of Imagination
Abstract
This essay explores the dynamic links between experiences of impasse—when a government or a congregation or relationship has become stuck and can neither go forward nor retreat—and the imagination as a pastoral resource. When the need for institutional change meets resistance, religious communities experience impasse. When individual transformation is sidetracked by fear, the desired growth through formation and supervision may be thwarted. The biblical resource of lamentation appears as the graceful practice that can rescue believers from impasse and a mood of resentment, opening them to a future they have yet to imagine.Downloads
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