Sun 8:30 a.m.-1 p.m., Tue 9 a.m.-7 p.m, Wed-Thu 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Sat 3:30-6:30 p.m. | 630 E. University Dr. Granger, IN 46530 | (574) 243-2020

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Nibs Stroupe

  • Where Once We Feared Enemies

    $16.95

    Whether we are conscious of it or not, we fear difference. That often unwarranted fear leads us to create enemies in our hearts and minds – and fear was no stranger to Oakhurst Presbyterian Church, as confessed by Pastor Nibs Stroupe: “We have listened to one another’s stories here, and we have discovered that the people we feared, those monsters we thought would destroy us – because of different skin colors, different genders, different sexual orientations, different economic categories – they are really our sisters and brothers, the folks for whom our hearts long.”

    In the 1960s the Oakhurst congregation was 900 members strong, but by the time Nibs Stroupe arrived in 1983, “white flight” had left less than 100 on the church’s dwindling membership rolls. Since then, Oakhurst has undergone an extraordinary transformation, re-inventing itself as a growing community that welcomes everyone. The congregation has attracted national attention for its radically inclusive and egalitarian diversity, which extends beyond racial integration to class, gender, sexual orientation, and theological perspective. How have people from such dissimilar backgrounds come together to create a harmonious and thriving whole? In what biblical vision is it rooted and shaped? By what theological resources is it fed and sustained? The heart of the answer to these questions lies in the exceptional sermons of Nibs Stroupe.

    Growing out of the experience of a multi-cultural congregation in which diversity is both valued and feared, these messages offer an uncompromising prophetic vision of the American church’s identity and mission. Stroupe firmly grounds a liberal social viewpoint within the biblical and theological traditions of the church, and he calls us to hear God’s claim on us in our place and in our time. Underlying his powerful sermons is the fundamental conviction that the barriers which separate us from our neighbors have been brought down in Jesus Christ. Where Once We Feared Enemies will be an indispensable addition to any pastor’s library. It is also inspiring and enlightening reading for anyone interested in the future of the American church, as well as its role in the continuing stories of race relations, civil rights, and peace and justice issues.

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  • O Lord Hold Our Hands

    $25.00

    1. We Have Known The Movement Of The City
    2. Oakhurst Is A Remarkable Place: Different Cultures Really Can Come Together
    3. A Primer On Race
    4. Life Together: How We Worship And Learn
    5. Out Into The World: The Importance Of Public Ministry
    6. Who Are These People?: Stories Of Our Members
    7. Seasons Of Celebration: The Details Of Multicultural Ministry
    8. Lord, I Want To Thank You: Theological Principles
    9. The Journey Is Our Home

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    Can people actually touch the reality that Paul talks about in his letter to the Ephesians, a reality where Christ has “broken down the dividing wall”? The experience of Oakhurst Presbyterian Church says, “Yes!”

    Over the last decade, Oakhurst Presbyterian Church in Decatur, Georgia, has been nationally recognized as a model of a successful multicultural church. Here, in O Lord, Hold Our Hands, pastors Nib Stroupe and Caroline Leach share their story-with all of its peaks and valleys-and, in doing so, provide a guide to multicultural ministry that any church can use to build or enhance its own ministry.

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