Soul of the Citizen: Prayers For A Divided Nation
by Mischa Field
Genre: Christian Nonfiction
Crisis
times call for leadership.
Corrupt
times call for integrity.
These
times call for a move of God, and a move of God calls for you.
Soul
of the Citizen: Prayers for a Divided Nation, by Mischa Field, is the
cry of a burdened heart refusing to give up on neighbor or
neighborhood or nation. It is a collection of prayers for leaders and
followers, for parents and children, for shepherds and flocks, and
for you and your enemy.
A
biblical scribe for modern times, Field offers the reader a word of
hope and a call to action. This book is for anyone looking to do
justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with God in a time drowning in
accusation and ambiguity.
If
you long to protect your peace in times of conflict, this book is for
you.
If
you long to live ethically and authentically in times of struggle,
this book is for you.
If
you are moved to pray that God would do a new thing in the life of
this nation, this book is for you.
Mischa Field is an ordained reverend who has practiced ministry in Brooklyn for 21 years. His writing explores the intersection of Divinity and Humanity: Faith, Identity, Culture, and the Soul. His heart for hurting people and broken institutions fuel his determination to rebuild both.
A graduate of Amherst College and Alliance Theological Seminary, with degrees in film, writing, and urban ministry, and a background in journalism, he finds consistent joy in the mysteries of faith, consistent humility in attempting to practice them, and constant wonder in God’s ability to accomplish perfect things with perfect combinations of imperfect people.
A native of Brattleboro, Vermont, he lives in Queens with Lori, his wife of 15 years. Soul of the Citizen is his first book.
Facebook * Twitter * Instagram * Bookbub * Amazon * Goodreads
DP: How did you come up with the title of the book?
MF: For me, the creative process generally involves detective work. I’ll get an inspiration, and then I have to discover what it means, and why it’s there. So the title “Soul of the Citizen” came to me, but I only learned over time what it meant. And one of the key revelations of that process was that God didn’t give me “Soul of the Christian.” As much as my lens may be Christian, this book is a collection of prayers for the people and institutions of this nation, because both are in desperate need of soul searching, and soul healing, as they navigate an identity crisis of cosmic proportions. So for me part of this book is an effort, from my particular lane, to serve as a kind of chaplain to the public.
I believe in the separation of church and state. The government makes a terrible church. And the church makes a terrible government. In a pluralistic society, we should all be able to speak from our convictions. We then should all act upon them in serving the greater good. The Apostle James said “Pure and genuine religion in the sight of God the Father means caring for orphans and widows in their distress and refusing to let the world corrupt you. (James 1:27, NLT)” He also said “faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead. (James 2:17, NIV).” These are tests many of us fail. We don’t take care of people in need – we are worried about ourselves. We are also more concerned with getting corrupted by the shadows we fear than we are worried about imbibing the spirit of the age. Culture wars don’t scare me. The pervasive rage that dominates our discourse does. We are increasingly smart, cynical, and confidently ugly in spirit, casually wishing death and destruction on our enemies, and gloating when they suffer. This is the corruption that concerned me as I wrote this book.
If we choose our leaders because they are entertaining, we cannot be surprised when in times of crisis they look to put on shows.
Soul of the Citizen is a series of meditations on leadership, service, ethics, justice, faith, culture, and the soul. I believe we need to tackle national problems on both the institutional and individual level. Systems need to change. And the people who create and sustain them need to change as well. I wrote this book to address both, but to consider the particular obligations we carry in society as people created in God’s image, for a grand and glorious purpose.
Many have spoken, in this season of a battle for the soul of the nation.
For me it starts with the soul of the citizen.
Follow the tour HERE for special content and a giveaway!
$20 Amazon
0 comments:
Post a Comment