Who comes in the name of the Lord?
Book Description
Harold J. Recinos presents a transformative vision for contemporary Christianity that challenges believers to rediscover their spiritual calling beyond traditional church walls. Drawing from biblical foundations, this work explores how authentic faith emerges not from positions of power and privilege, but from engagement with society's most vulnerable communities.
Recinos argues that mainline Christianity's renewal depends on embracing the margins rather than avoiding them. He demonstrates how God consistently chooses to work through places and people that society dismisses as insignificant or worthless. By examining Jesus's origins in Nazareth, a community looked down upon by the religious establishment, the author reveals a pattern of divine preference for the overlooked and undervalued.
The book invites Christians to step beyond comfortable institutional boundaries and discover their true cultural mission through direct involvement with marginalized populations. Recinos suggests that this engagement with barrio communities offers mainline churches their most promising path forward, creating opportunities for genuine spiritual transformation and cultural healing.
Rather than retreating from society's challenges, this work calls believers to find God actively present in the struggles of the poor and displaced. Through this lens, readers discover how authentic Christian witness emerges from solidarity with those whom society has forgotten, offering both personal spiritual growth and meaningful social engagement that reflects the heart of the Gospel message.
Who Is This For?
π Reading Level: Short (< 200 pages) (~4 hours)
π Length: 158 pages
What You'll Discover
- β Explore Religion
- β Explore Hispanic Americans
- β Explore Church work with Hispanic Americans
- β Explore Protestant churches