Seeing the Unseen: Beyond Prejudices, Paradigms, and Party Lines
A bishop and gun safety activist offers a way forward from opposing viewpoints.

Instead of dismissing those whose views and experiences are different from our own, the author argues that we must look directly at them and see the goodness that is inherent in all things. From the language we use to the imperative to understand and include, we have a duty to work through opposition and build community.

Bishop Beckwith describes it this way: "We are trained to think, yet the cultural emphasis on thinking has not be applied to our ability to see . . . We are not as well trained in seeing the world’s fullness—pain and joy, compassion and cruelty. We regularly receive glimpses of pain and joy, but they are often presented in such a way as to reinforce our thinking."

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Seeing the Unseen: Beyond Prejudices, Paradigms, and Party Lines
A bishop and gun safety activist offers a way forward from opposing viewpoints.

Instead of dismissing those whose views and experiences are different from our own, the author argues that we must look directly at them and see the goodness that is inherent in all things. From the language we use to the imperative to understand and include, we have a duty to work through opposition and build community.

Bishop Beckwith describes it this way: "We are trained to think, yet the cultural emphasis on thinking has not be applied to our ability to see . . . We are not as well trained in seeing the world’s fullness—pain and joy, compassion and cruelty. We regularly receive glimpses of pain and joy, but they are often presented in such a way as to reinforce our thinking."

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Seeing the Unseen: Beyond Prejudices, Paradigms, and Party Lines

Seeing the Unseen: Beyond Prejudices, Paradigms, and Party Lines

Seeing the Unseen: Beyond Prejudices, Paradigms, and Party Lines

Seeing the Unseen: Beyond Prejudices, Paradigms, and Party Lines

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Overview

A bishop and gun safety activist offers a way forward from opposing viewpoints.

Instead of dismissing those whose views and experiences are different from our own, the author argues that we must look directly at them and see the goodness that is inherent in all things. From the language we use to the imperative to understand and include, we have a duty to work through opposition and build community.

Bishop Beckwith describes it this way: "We are trained to think, yet the cultural emphasis on thinking has not be applied to our ability to see . . . We are not as well trained in seeing the world’s fullness—pain and joy, compassion and cruelty. We regularly receive glimpses of pain and joy, but they are often presented in such a way as to reinforce our thinking."


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781640655188
Publisher: Church Publishing, Incorporated
Publication date: 03/22/2022
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

MARK BECKWITH is a renowned activist who has appeared on media including radio, podcasts print. He is the retired Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Newark, where he served for twelve years. While there, he co-founded the Newark Interfaith Coalition for Hope and Peace, a network of religious leaders committed to reducing gang violence in the city. He co-founded Bishops United Against Gun Violence (2012), which has grown to a network of 100 bishops from across the church.
Since retirement, he has become part of the leadership team for Braver Angels, a movement that seeks to depolarize America by convening equal numbers of conservative and progressive people in workshops and actions that honor political and ideological difference and seek to find common ground. Bishop Beckwith lives in Jaffrey, New Hampshire.


Shane Claiborne is a prominent speaker, activist, and best-selling author. Shane’s books include his classic The Irresistible Revolution, and his newest book, Beating Guns. He currently resides in Philadelphia, PA.

Table of Contents

Foreword Shane Claiborne ix

Introduction 1

Part I What We Don't See

1 Learning to See 13

2 The Hospitality of Jesus 27

3 Being With 37

Part II Impediments to Seeing

4 Hate Has No Home Here 51

5 The Language of Seeing 63

Guns 65

War 69

Doubt and Cancel 73

Woke 76

Part III Paralysis of Polarity

6 Mandorla 81

7 Living the Mandorla 95

Martin Luther King Jr. 95

Braver Angels 98

Desmond Tutu 101

The Anastasis Icon 102

Part IV Seeing Our Traditions Differently

8 Creating Mandorla Spaces of Justice 109

9 Reflections on the Commandments 121

The Fourth Commandment 125

10 Wrestling with Family 131

11 Finding Mandorla Space in the Gun Debate 145

12 Finding Mandorla Spaces in Our Work 157

13 Institutional Sightlines 167

Conclusion: Darkness, Difference, and Delight 175

Acknowledgments 187

Bibliography 189

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