Barbara J. Elliott, Street Saints: Renewing America’s Cities. Templeton Foundation Press, 2004.
Referenced in: Social Ministry Among the Urban Poor, Urban Ministry
LifeandLeadership.com Summary
The publisher’s description below provides an excellent summary of this text. It is a wonderful treasury of stories of people of faith, faith-based organizations, and churches that are making a difference in America’s cities. Some of the persons and organizations covered are well-known – John Perkins, Kirbyjon Caldwell, Pura Vida – but others are not. It is perhaps the best and most responsibily written collection available of real stories of urban transformation. These stories will encourage, inspire, and instruct people who have a passion to “seek the welfare of the city.”
From the Publisher
Based on eight years of hands-on experience and more than 300 interviews, Street Saints is both a book of motivational stories about unsung heroes and a sociological study of the faith factor, documenting faith-based programs that are treating social maladies in America. This book takes readers on a tour of communities and institutions in America where faith-based initiatives are making a difference. It offers inspiration, role models and guidelines for people who would like to give back to their own communities.
Section 1 introduces street saints, people who are willing to go where there is pain and suffering and be a presence of healing with love. They are people of faith who are solving problems such as a woman who has reclaimed a city-block from drug dealers and a pastor who walks into gang confrontations to defuse them. Although of diverse races, religions and socio-economic backgrounds, they are alike in their motivation to transform individuals.
Section 2 offers a tour of programs with an examination of what works and why. Examples include: prison rehabilitation programs, a program that cares for abused toddlers, one that mobilizes thousands of mentors for at-risk children by pairing a church with an elementary school, drug treatment and welfare-to-work programs that move people into self-sufficiency and programs that help mentally and physically handicapped people support themselves with micro-enterprises.
Section 3 focuses on three cities – Pittsburgh, Memphis, and Fresno – where people of faith are mobilizing resources to transform entire communities.
Section 4 presents the historical framework that puts social entrepreneurship into a broader vision of the soul of America. An appendix provides contact information for those who want to emulate the examples provided in the book.
About the Author
Barbara J. Elliott is a philanthropic advisor with the Legacy Group. She is the founder of the Center for Renewal, which serves the leaders of faithbased groups. President George W. Bush gave her an award for Human Rights in 2001, honoring her work with refugees and the poor. She is the author of Candles Behind the Wall Heroes of the Peaceful Revolution that Shattered Communism, and scores of articles on civic renewal. Barbara Elliott lives in Houston, Texas.
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See Other Resource Guides on Christian Social Ministry:
- Theological and Philosophical Foundations of Social Ministry
- Spirituality for Ministry of Social Compassion and Justice
- Strategies For Christian Social Ministry
- Perspectives and Strategies For Social Ministry Among the Urban Poor, Urban Ministry
- Christian Perspectives on Political Theory and Church-State Relations
- Christian Perspectives on Economics and Public Policy
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