Circle of Hope explained

Circle of Hope should not be confused with Circle of Hope Girls Ranch.

Circle of Hope: A Reckoning With Love, Power and Justice in an American Church
Author:Eliza Griswold
Country:United States
Language:English
Publisher:Macmillan Publishers[1]
Release Date:2024
Pages:352
Isbn:9780374601683

Circle of Hope: A Reckoning With Love, Power and Justice in an American Church is a 2024 book by journalist Eliza Griswold, published by Macmillan. Griswold embeds herself with the Evangelical Christian congregation Circle of Hope in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and interviews pastors and church members to document how political disagreements, ideological differences and conflicts about church policy led to fractures amongst congregants and eventually the closure of the church.

The book was a finalist for the 2024 National Book Award for Nonfiction.[2]

Narrative

The Circle of Hope congregation was founded in 1996 by pastors, and husband and wife, Rod and Gwen White. The congregation was part of the socially progressive Jesus Movement (also known as "Jesus Freaks"), which are a branch of evangelicalism known as Anabaptists. The Anabaptist branch is known for its apolitical stance, strong pacifist views and eschewing material wealth in favor of modest living. Church members were known to have melted guns and used them to make garden tools. Members of the congregation were also strongly devoted to service; serving food to the local community, providing support for the local poor or homeless and paying reparations to its black members.

Rod and Gwen eventually transferred leadership of the congregation to their son Ben, and three other pastors; Julie, Rachel and Jonny. After the Covid pandemic in 2020 the church focused more on anti-racist initiatives and became LBGTQ affirming. Eventually, the ideological differences amongst the congregants and pastors grew, amidst growing divides in the United States. These differences led to fractures in the congregation and the eventual closing of the church.

Reception

Writing for the New York Times, political commentator David French stated that the book provided salient commentary of how political divides in the United States can work to undermine progress or to destroy good institutions. French also stated Griswold devoted full chapters to each of the pastors and also large parts of the book to congregants, treating each with "humanity and empathy" rather than sensationalizing the rifts.[3] Writing for Christianity Today, Kate Lucky stated that this is not a book about "hijacked agendas and 'reply alls'", rather it is a book about how divergent ideals can work to undermine the Church. Lucky also stated that Griswold was inclusive of the pastors and church members and their views; allowing them to share their stories.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Circle of Hope . us.macmillan.com . Macmillan Publishers.
  2. Web site: 2024 National Book Awards Finalists Announced . National Book Foundation . 1 October 2024.
  3. Web site: French . David . The Church Preached Love and Tolerance. Then Racial Politics Tore It Apart. . Nytimes.com . New York Times.
  4. Web site: Lucky . Kate . What Churches Lose When They Fight like the World Fights . ChristianityToday.com . Christianity Today . 8 August 2024.