Synopsis
<p><strong>Outreach Magazine Resource of the Year Award winner</strong></p><p><strong>Golden Canon <em>Leadership</em> Book Award winner</strong></p><p><strong><em>Relevant Magazine</em>: Top 20 Best Overall Books winner</strong></p><p><strong>Englewood Review of Books: Top 20 Best Overall Books winner</strong></p><p><strong>Christian Manifesto Lime Award winner</strong></p><p>Andrew Marin's life changed forever when his three best friends came out to him in three consecutive months. Suddenly hewas confronted with the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community (GLBT) firsthand. And he was compelled to understand how he could reconcile his friends to his faith.</p><p>In an attempt to answer that question, he and his wife relocated toBoystown, a predominantly GLBT community in Chicago. And from his experience and wrestling has come his book, <em>Love Is an Orientation,</em> a work which elevates the conversation between Christianity and the GLBT community, moving the focus from genetics to gospel, where it really belongs.</p><p>Why are so many people who are gay wary of people who are Christians? Do GLBT people need to change who they are? Do Christians need to change what they believe? <em>Love Is an Orientation</em> is changing the conversation about sexuality and spirituality, and building bridges from the GLBT community to the Christian community and, more importantly, to the good news of Jesus Christ.</p>
About the Author
Andrew Marin is President and Founder of The Marin Foundation (themarinfoundation.org). He is author of the award winning book Love Is an Orientation: Elevating the Conversation with the Gay Community (2009), its interactive DVD curriculum (2011), the ebook Our Last Option: How a New Approach to Civility can Save the Public Square (2013), and the forthcoming Us Versus Us: The Untold Story of Religion & the LGBT Community (June 2016). He blogs at patheos.com/blogs/loveisanorientation, is a regular contributor to a variety of media outlets, and frequently lectures at universities around the world. Since 2010 Andrew has been asked by the United Nations to advise their various agencies on issues of bridging opposing worldviews, civic engagement, and Christian involvement in reconciliation. For twelve years he lived in the LGBT Boystown neighborhood of Chicago, and is currently based St. Andrews, Scotland, researching and teaching at the University of St. Andrews earning his PhD in Divinity. Andrew's research centers on the theology and praxis of social reconciliation between victims and their perpetrators. Andrew is married to Brenda, and you can find him elsewhere on Facebook (AndrewMarin01), Twitter (@Andrew_Marin), and Instagram (@andrewmarin1).
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