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The Church with AIDS: Renewal in the Midst of Crisis

The Church with AIDS: Renewal in the Midst of Crisis Amazon Price: $19.95
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By: Westminster John Knox Press
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Winds of Fury, Circle of Grace: Life After the Palm Sunday Tornadoes

Dale Clem

Winds of Fury, Circle of Grace: Life After the Palm Sunday Tornadoes Dale Clem List Price: $11.00
By: Abingdon Press
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

A touching memoir of terrible loss and gradual healing. 4 out of 5 stars.
5 of 5 people found this review helpful.

No one in northeast Alabama will ever forget Palm Sunday 1994. When deadly tornadoes ripped through northern Calhoun County, killing nearly two dozen people, a spring Sunday dedicated to beginning the holiest week of the Christian year became instead a stormy day of pain and loss. And yet, as the Rev. Dale Clem's memoir "Winds of Fury, Circles of Grace" demonstrates, the terrifying storms could not blow away the faith and devotion that would testify in no uncertain terms to a love and spirit that transcends disaster and death.

As the Rev. Kelly Clem led Palm Sunday services, including a children's pageant in which their 4-year-old daughter Hannah took part, Dale Clem was hundreds of miles away, leading a youth group on a spring break service trip to Oklahoma. The first report Clem received was sketchy, a message received from a cell phone call. "There's been a tornado," he was told. "It hit your wife's church... Kelly is in the hospital, the girls are okay; you need to call home." In the time it took for him to find his wife - interminable time - fear grew. No one had news about Hannah. Finally he was able to speak to Kelly, who told him: "Hannah is dead."

It was the beginning of a long day, a long week - a long year - of tears and mourning. "Winds of Fury, Circles of Grace" chronicles that year with touching honesty, neither shying away from sorrow nor forgetting joy. Clem captures the grief of a small congregation in a small town, where relationships are strengthened both by proximity and faith. He recounts unpleasant moments, such as hurtful and hateful notes received from zealots equating Kelly's ministry and the priesthood of women to Sodom and Gomorrah. And he shares many happy memories of Hannah - "Have I ever told you that I love you?" he would ask Hannah and her younger sister Sarah, and Hannah would giggle, "Oh, Daddy, you tell me that all the time."

The spirit of Hannah Clem is ever-present, dancing through these pages as she did through her life on earth, helping her father tell his tale of loss and redemption. Clem intersperses the chronological account of that Holy Week in 1994 - a week in which the message of death and resurrection resonated among the Piedmont hills - with good basic advice on confronting and accepting grief and healing. He begins this task with a quote from T.S. Eliot: "I said to my soul, be still, and wait.../So the darkness shall be the light,/and the stillness the dancing." He speaks to everyone who has known the darkness of death - encouraging by example, unafraid to recount his moments of weakness and weeping and glad to witness to a faith in life and in Christ which ultimately led both Clems through the valleys and shadows of the first year to a place of new hope and understanding.

A Ministry of Consolation: Involving Your Parish in the Order of Christian Funerals (Ministry series)

Mary Alice Piil, Joseph Degrocco, Rose Mary Cover

A Ministry of Consolation: Involving Your Parish in the Order of Christian Funerals (Ministry series) Mary Alice Piil, Joseph Degrocco, Rose Mary Cover List Price: $14.95
By: Liturgical Press
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Editorial Review:

This book calls the Christian community to a new understanding of its role upon the death of its members. It explains why and how members of a parish Ministry of Consolation should be involved before, during, and after each of the key liturgical moments in the Funeral Rites: the Vigil Service, the Funeral Mass, and the Rite of Committal. Beginning from a discussion of the mystery of Christian death and moving to a renewed understanding of the role of the entire community in the Funeral Rites, this book gives practical, concrete, step-by-step instructions for beginning a parish Ministry of Consolation centered around the Order of Christian Funerals.

Pastoral Care in Hospitals

Neville A. Kirkwood

Pastoral Care in Hospitals Neville A. Kirkwood List Price: $14.95
By: E.J. Dwyer
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Best Hospital Ministry Book 5 out of 5 stars.
18 of 18 people found this review helpful.

As a new hospital chaplain I found this book extremely valuable. While there are only a few books specific to hospital ministry, this is probably the best introductory work. It covers a good variety of topics like the critical examination of self, proper use of prayer, patient's needs etc. I found the information quite useful. I have implemented some of the techniques in my ministry work. If you are looking for one book on hospital ministry this would be your best bet. I also recommend "The compassionate visitor" and 'The Hospital Visitation manual.

Editorial Review:

Hospital visitation is never easy. Bringing comfort and concern to the bedside of someone who is sick or dying is difficult for lay people and clergy alike. In this practical guide, based on many years of experience as a hospital chaplain, Neville Kirkwood shares his wisdom about the art of visitation. In non-technical language, Kirkwood helps lay and clergy visitors understand what actions, words, and practices may be helpful versus harmful. He guides readers through the temptations visitors face -- attempts to problem-solve, to talk too much, to be too personal or not personal enough -- and provides them with a theology of visitation that can guide their efforts to help patients and friends. A variety of exercises and a section of prayers for very specific circumstances one might encounter in the hospital make this a must-have resource for all who work with the sick and dying.

Ministry to Persons With Chronic Illnesses: A Guide to Empowerment Through Negotiation (Guides to Pastoral Care)

John T. Vanderzee

Ministry to Persons With Chronic Illnesses: A Guide to Empowerment Through Negotiation (Guides to Pastoral Care) John T. Vanderzee List Price: $9.99
By: Fortress Pr
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Ministry of wholeness 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

John Vanderzee is has been chaplain at the hospital in my community (Bloomington, Indiana) for the past fifteen years. Currently I am working with him as I take an internship in chaplaincy, and I came across his book among the books in the office at the hospital. It fits very well with the populations I work with both in the internship as well as my regular chaplaincy in a retirement centre in Bloomington. Vanderzee speaks of the distinct nature of chaplaincy vs. parish ministry, but that there are some people (both staff and regularly returning patients) in the chaplaincy setting who become familiar; I have discovered this is true in my own setting.

Situations of chronic illness and long-term disability are becoming more widespread as population ages, but health care is still primarily focused upon shorter-term kinds of health concerns. Hence, chronic illness is less understood. However, there are ways in which it can be contemplated. Vanderzee works from a Protestant/Reformed basis (as he is a Presbyterian minister), but writes broadly enough to fit chaplains of other denominational and faith traditions.

Vanderzee looks at the shift of illness and health issues during the course of the past century, where infectious illness is less of a menace, but chronic conditions (cancer, heart disease, etc.) have become more prevalent. Vanderzee gives a brief analysis of different definitions and characteristics of chronic illness conditions, and looks at the kinds of spiritual implications that might arise. He lists different kinds of literature available (inspirational, power-of-positive-thinking, personal accounts, etc.) but states that 'the lack of attention given to chronic illness in pastoral literature reflects a general cultural obliviousness to the growing magnitude of chronic illness as a health care problem.'

Vanderzee uses case studies as well as academic studies to carry forth his critique of the modern medical model of care and his development of a more effective model for ministry to those who have long-lasting conditions. Most healthy people see illness as 'an unwelcome interlude' and are not prepared physical, emotionally or spiritually for the implications or reality of living with pain or disability. Vanderzee looks at biblical and church-traditional ways of seeing suffering, and looks for pastoral responses to critical questions that may be brought up, both by the suffering as well as those around the sufferers (which can include the pastoral visitors themselves).

Vanderzee sets up a paradigm of negotiation as a way of dealing with the situation that has both theoretical and practical advantages. Admittedly challenging, Vanderzee explores the ways in which this might work to provide holistic support in context of a faith community. Negotiation involves the interpersonal relationships, the environmental context, and the theological understanding, not only of the one suffering, but also of those around the person. Illustrating his points through people such as Meg, Cathy and Gene, Vanderzee shows how their decisions, actions and feelings can be understood in typical as well as new interpretations. For example, Vanderzee writes that 'Meg's theological negotiation resembles the Kubler-Rossian activity of bargaining', but goes on to show key differences in the way it takes place, as well as its result.

In terms of congregational settings, perhaps the statement that most stood out for me was this - 'What chronically ill and disabled persons are asking of their faith communities is that we get close enough to them to be willing to risk the discomfort that proximity generates.' This is much more than doing occasional (even regular) hospital visits. It means to look for ways in which the chronic sufferers can be fully part of the community, and their voices can be heard in and through their experiences. There is interpersonal, environmental and theological negotiation to be done at this level, too.

For those in pastoral roles, finding one's style is important. 'Negotiation as a pastoral style confirms that while curative healing may not be forthcoming, wholeness can still be experienced through flexibility, creativity and service to others.' The concepts introduced here are well worth considering for those ministers, lay or clerical, who seek to provide a more full ministry of integrity to those whose suffering is real and unlikely to be completely cured by medical sciences.

Vanderzee concludes with an outline of a Lenten study on the topic, as well as model liturgies for healing services which can be used and adapted by others. There is a good bibliography that, while a bit dated now, gives some good guidelines for further study.

The Samaritan's Imperative

Michael J. Christensen

The Samaritan's Imperative Michael J. Christensen Amazon Price: $21.00
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Healing

Francis Macnutt

Healing Francis Macnutt List Price: $19.00
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 20 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

The Definitive Work 5 out of 5 stars.
9 of 9 people found this review helpful.

MacNutt has compiled the definitive work in Christian healing. Any church with or without a healing ministry would profit from a study of this book

Part one walks us through the usually explanations and rationale that a lot of people need as preparation for healing if they've grown up in naturalistic, materialistic educational systems. We need to be reminded of the plausibility that the transcendent God we believe in really does transcend. The only thing I might have found interesting that isn't included here would be a brief background of the philosophical foundations of modernity and rationalism, although it might not have been appropriate for MacNutt's intended audience.

Part two is an essential reminder of the necessity of faith and loving when it comes to healing. The book strikes a good balance between the theological, the practical, and the exhortative.


Part three is perhaps the most useful part of the work. It divides healing into four categories: forgiveness, emotional healing, physical healing, and exorcism. It gives careful analysis of each situation and practical approaches to prayer. I appreciate that when he comes to exorcism, he is neither dramatic nor shy.

Part four is a bit of a mishmash of last details. He gives twelve reasons why people may not be healed, talks about the presence of healing in the (seven) sacraments, and gives due consideration to the importance of secular medical care in addition to prayer.

Having watched a healing ministry be established and flourish at a church, I now wish retrospectively that this was the foundational text. Pragmatically, it is at least the notes on the growth of a healing ministry in a well-written, complete, and balanced form.

Editorial Review:

Does healing happen today? Why is there prejudice against the healing ministry? Why are some people not healed? These topical and vital questions are just some of the issues addressed by Francis MacNutt in Healing. A wide-ranging and broad-based overview, it is essential reading for all involved in the healing ministry. 'Prayer for healing is so central to the gospel,' writes MacNutt, 'that it should be an integral part of the life of every community of believers. My heart cries out to see it restored to the place it had in the early Christian church.'

Getting Past the Pain: Making Sense of Life's Darkness

William Powell Tuck

Getting Past the Pain: Making Sense of Life's Darkness William Powell Tuck Amazon Price: $10.20
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Forgiving God: A Woman's Struggle to Understand When God Answers No

Carla Killough McClafferty

Forgiving God: A Woman's Struggle to Understand When God Answers No Carla Killough McClafferty List Price: $12.99
By: Discovery House Publishers
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

This book helps others understand 5 out of 5 stars.
7 of 7 people found this review helpful.

If you have lost a child to a home accident, this book may help you deal with your grief and understand that you are not alone.

Carla McClafferty's son Corey had fallen out of a swing at home and ended up dying. She shares her disbelief, the agony of the hospital stay and her anger in God for not answering her prayers to save her child.

This is a really emotional book that will bring tears to anyone's eyes. If you know someone who has lost a child and want to help, but don't fully understand the pain of that loss, consider purchasing this book!

extremely disappointing 1 out of 5 stars.
3 of 7 people found this review helpful.

I personally do not believe that it was God who told the author "NO". Did Jesus ever tell someone "NO!" when they asked for healing? I can't find it in the Bible anywhere. I actually find it quite offensive that the author would even mention that God was in any way responsible for the death of her child. Yes, her child is right now in God's presence, but it was not God who "took" this child from her.

God is a good God. He's not the one responsible for the horrible things that happen in our lives. He is NOT "taking" babies from people, causing hurricanes, or "allowing" people to have cancer for a "reason". That stuff is caused by the fall of man and satan himself.

James 1:13
"Let no man say when he is tempted [tested or tried] that he is tempted [tested or tried] by God.."


Why would you need to forgive the God who is perfect and has never done anything wrong?

Editorial Review:

God said "no" to Carla McClafferty's desperate prayers for her dying toddler, and her spiritual life plummeted. But God showed her who He is during those dark days. Forgiving God offers hope and comfort to the grief-stricken.

Ministry to Outpatients: A New Challenge in Pastoral Care (Guides to Pastoral Care Series)

Herbert Anderson, Lawrence E. Holst, Ronald H. Sunderland

Ministry to Outpatients: A New Challenge in Pastoral Care (Guides to Pastoral Care Series) Herbert Anderson, Lawrence E. Holst, Ronald H. Sunderland List Price: $9.95
By: Augsburg Fortress Pub
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