{"id":56592,"date":"2024-09-26T08:00:55","date_gmt":"2024-09-26T08:00:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/ccv\/?p=56592"},"modified":"2024-09-25T16:48:35","modified_gmt":"2024-09-25T16:48:35","slug":"the-manuscript-is-in-lets-celebrate","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/ccv\/2024\/09\/26\/the-manuscript-is-in-lets-celebrate\/","title":{"rendered":"The Manuscript is in! Let’s celebrate!"},"content":{"rendered":"
Written by Kristina Frug\u00e9\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n Two Just two years shy of that special gathering this very book has come to be. Well, nearly. <\/strong><\/p>\n The manuscript was submitted to our publisher early in September and now we will work with them to take the final steps of transforming our authors\u2019 ideas, stories and whole-hearted requests into a book that can be shared broadly. So much has transpired within those two years – an author application process, two writing retreats to launch and further along the writing community, collaboration with an illustrator bringing to life themes of the book, multiple rounds of editing drafts, countless cups of coffee and hours at laptops, and final revisions to compile the completed manuscript over the summer.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Each chapter provides an invitation to a table. Chapter one describes what <\/span>courageous curiosity <\/span><\/i>looks like and proposes this posture as a necessary mindset for the church and young adults as we approach the present day challenges lifted up in this book. Chapter two orients us to the young adult experience, too often shaped by<\/span> tokenization<\/span><\/i>. It offers an alternative approach rooted in relationship; one where young adults are valued co-creators for our shared future.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Chapter three<\/span> (our climate catastrophe)<\/span><\/i>, chapter four <\/span>(grief and lament)<\/span><\/i> and chapter five <\/span>(mental health) <\/span><\/i>work together to paint the bigger picture of our times. Together these three chapters name the very hard realities that shape our human experience, while also offering guidance for finding our way in the ruins.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Chapters six <\/span>(abuse of power)<\/span><\/i>, seven <\/span>(marginalization, inclusion and liberation)<\/span><\/i>, and eight <\/span>(sex, shame and intimacy) <\/span><\/i>reveal some of the particular ways young adults have been grieving as our churches have contributed to harm and avoided confronting the ways change is needed. The themes of these chapters are inherently intertwined.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Chapter nine brings us back to the importance of <\/span>community,<\/span><\/i> and how the church can more fully embody a community defined by the centrality of Jesus. Chapter ten <\/span>(beyond the walls)<\/span><\/i> further fleshes out the faithful next steps for our church communities. Being centered on Jesus, in fact, means our churches are called to be decentered towards our neighbors, becoming trustworthy partners in God\u2019s mending work in the world. Finally, chapter eleven <\/span>(scarcity and abundance) <\/span><\/i>lifts up a more adequate and faithful narrative from which we can enter into the challenges before us. A narrative rooted in reclaiming \u201cenough\u201d that roots us in God\u2019s abundance, mending our relationships – with God, with each other, and with the earth.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Editing and stewarding this process has been perhaps one of the largest professional projects of my career, certainly the one with the most moving pieces! I am so proud of what this team created together and deeply grateful for all of those who helped bring this project to fruition. The list is too long to name in this blog post, but as we get closer to releasing the book to the public, you will hear more about it and the many hands and hearts behind it.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n
<\/a> years ago we hosted 50 young adults from around the US at Augsburg for a weekend of storytelling and listening. The reason for this gathering was to unearth the common hopes, concerns and desires young adults hold for the church and the world we share. In sifting through the stories shared, we hoped to distill themes that might give shape to a book we wanted to create – one written by young adults to the church. This book was one of the ways Riverside Innovation Hub<\/a> was committed to stewarding what we learned in our first five years of the Lilly Endowment\u2019s Young Adult Initiative. After working with congregations and young adults in our inaugural round of the Riverside Innovation Hub, supported through the Lilly Endowment, we were granted additional funding and time to share the wisdom and learnings that emerged. Who better to speak those truths than the young adults themselves?\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n
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