You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
None
"The earliest colonial ancestors bearing the name of Griggs, settled in Massachusetts, Virginia and North Carolina. The New England families descended from George and Thomas who arrived from England about the year 1635. The Virginia emigrants were transported by different individuals and each Griggs settled in a different county. From Virginia the descendants of the colonists moved to Putnam County, Georgia, and from thence scattered through the Southern states and later to the West and Southwest."--Preface.
When asked about his work for social change, one Presbyterian elder and activist sighed, "You always have the feeling that you're attacking an iceberg with an ice pick. . . . But still, some people do listen, and it does some good. As they say, even glaciers move every now and then." The work for social change is long, arduous, and yields only the smallest of results. What sustains religious social activists while they chip away at social change? This book examines the practice of social activism from the inside out, exploring how activists are affected by their participation in the public sphere. Drawing on the fields of practice theory, social movement theory, and theologies of sin and hope, this book presents an interdisciplinary look at a complex phenomenon, and concludes with proposals for the nourishment of social activism within the church.