In anticipation of the midterm elections, a workbook helps readers of the "New York Times" bestselling "God's Politics" put their faith into action. Drawing on the author's decades of experience leading workshops on faith and politics, it is about moving past the politics of complaint toward positive change.
After fifteen weeks on the "New York Times" Bestseller list, "God's Politics" not only changed the conversation about faith and politics in this country, it began a movement. All across the country, wherever Jim Wallis spoke, people were frustrated by tax cuts and budgets that widened the gap between rich and poor, aggravated by the government's lack of response to natural disasters, wearied of misinformation and the ongoing war in the Middle East, and exasperated by the impractical political rhetoric about sexual abstinence in lieu of policies that would strengthen more broadly family values and community health.
Folks began asking what they could do to promote peace, economic justice, racial equality, and the sanctity of life. They wanted to know how they could influence government policies to better reflect their moral values. In response, Wallis and the editors of "Sojourners" magazine offer "Living God's Politics," a reader's guide for putting the lessons of "God's Politics" into action. Who will change our government's policies to better integrate "our" values? We're the ones we've been waiting for, and this book offers us the tools and techniques to change the political landscape for the better.