From a liminal place
Book Description
Princeton theologian Sang Hyun Lee invites readers into a profound exploration of faith lived from the margins. Drawing from years of theological reflection and teaching, Lee examines how Asian Americans and other marginalized communities can discover unexpected spiritual richness in their position between worlds.
Rather than viewing marginalization as purely oppressive, Lee reveals how liminal spaces, those in-between places at society's edges, can become sources of creative transformation and prophetic insight. This boundary existence, he argues, offers unique opportunities for authentic Christian living that those at the societal center might never experience.
Lee grounds his theology in the life of Jesus, presenting Christ as the ultimate liminal figure, a marginalized Galilean whose ministry embodied boundary-breaking love. Through this lens, the cross becomes not just a symbol of suffering but the supreme liminal space where humanity encounters divine communion.
The author develops a systematic theology that speaks directly to Asian Americans while offering wisdom for all believers navigating mixed identities or peripheral positions. He demonstrates how those living between cultures can participate in God's ongoing work of justice and reconciliation, transforming their apparent disadvantage into spiritual advantage.
This theological framework extends beyond ethnic considerations to address anyone seeking to understand how faith flourishes in the margins. Lee presents liminality not as a problem to solve but as a calling to embrace, offering readers a fresh perspective on finding purpose and community in unexpected places.
Who Is This For?
📖 Reading Level: Medium (200-400 pages) (~6 hours)
📄 Length: 200 pages
What You'll Discover
- ✓ Explore Asian American theology
- ✓ Explore Aziaten
- ✓ Explore Religious aspects
- ✓ Explore Christianity
- ✓ Explore Social Marginality
- ✓ Explore Asian Americans
- ✓ Understand the nature of mind
- ✓ Explore Religious life