Synopsis
<p><strong>A Collection of Lenten Devotions from IVP Authors</strong></p><p>Injustice is rampant around us. It is also present within us. To better confront oppression in the world, we must own that reality and look to Christ our liberator. Lent is the opportune time for this as we contemplate his suffering together.</p><p>With selections from a diverse range of IVP books, <em>A Just Passion</em> has been curated to hold in tension the immense weight and hope of the Lenten season. This collection of short readings, breath prayers, and Scripture passages from the <em>First Nations Version</em> guides readers through a six-week journey of repentance, lament, worship, and healing.</p>
About the Authors
<p>Ruth Haley Barton (DD, Northern Seminary) is founder of the Transforming Center, a ministry dedicated to strengthening the souls of pastors, leaders, and the communities they serve. Trained at the Shalem Institute and the Loyola University Chicago Institute of Pastoral Studies, she is a seasoned spiritual director, teacher, and retreat leader who has served on the pastoral staff of several churches. Ruth is the author of numerous books on the spiritual life, including <em>Strengthening the Soul of Your Leadership</em>, <em>Invitation to Solitude and Silence</em>, <em>Sacred Rhythms</em>, and <em>Embracing Rhythms of Work and Rest</em>.</p>
<p>Sheila Wise Rowe (Tufts University, Cambridge College, M.Ed.) is a truth-teller who writes about faith and emotional healing. She advocates for the dignity, rights, and healing of abuse and racial trauma survivors and offers training and support to them and also emerging and established leaders. Sheila has lived in the USA; Paris, France; and Johannesburg, South Africa. For over twenty-five years she’s been a counselor, educator, writer, spiritual director, and speaker. She’s a member of the Community Ethics Committee of Harvard Medical School, a resource for its teaching hospitals. Sheila is a member of Entrusted Women, Spiritual Directors of Color, and Redbud Writers Guild. Her book <em>Healing Racial Trauma</em> was awarded a 2020 <em>Foreword</em> INDIES Book of the Year Award, <em>Christianity Today</em> Book Award, and a <em>Publishers Weekly</em> starred review. Her other books include <em>Young, Gifted, and Black</em>; <em>Healing Leadership Trauma</em> (co-authored with her husband, Nicholas Rowe); and <em>Seeds of Racial Healing</em>. </p>
<p>Tish Harrison Warren is a priest in the Anglican Church in North America. She writes a weekly newsletter for the <em>New York Times</em> and is a columnist for <em>Christianity Today</em>. She is also the author of <em>Prayer in the Night</em> and<em>Liturgy of the Ordinary</em>. She lives with her husband, Jonathan, and their three children in the Austin, Texas, area.</p>
<p>Terry M. Wildman (Ojibwe and Yaqui) is the lead translator, general editor, and project manager of the <em>First Nations Version</em>. He serves as the director of spiritual growth and leadership development for Native InterVarsity. He is also thefounder of Rain Ministries and has previously served as a pastor and worship leader. He and his wife, Darlene, live in Arizona.</p>
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