Mark R. Glanville and Luke Glanville offer a new approach to compassion for displaced people: a biblical ethic of kinship. Challenging the fear-based ethic that often motivates Christian approaches, they demonstrate how this ethic is consistently conveyed throughout the Bible and can be practically embodied today.
Mark R. Glanville Livres
Le Dr. Mark R. Glanville est Professeur Associé de Théologie Pastorale au Regent College de Vancouver et un expert de l'Ancien Testament (Bible Hébraïque). Ses recherches récentes explorent les dynamiques de parenté et d'éthique dans l'Ancien Testament. Glanville apporte une perspective unique, ayant précédemment exercé le ministère pastoral pendant 14 ans au Canada et en Australie, combinant un ministère réfléchi axé sur la justice avec une érudition biblique rigoureuse. Il est également pianiste de jazz formé et actif sur la scène jazz de Vancouver.




Family provides community, identity, and shared values. In the book of Exodus, God frees Israel from slavery to Egypt. But they are not left as orphans. Rather, the redeemed are made into a new family--God's family. In Freed to be God's Family, Mark R. Glanville argues that the central motif of Exodus is community. God wants a healthy, dynamic relationship with the redeemed. As family members, Israel is called to learn God's ways and reflect God's character to the world. Freed to be God's Family is a concise and accessible guide to the message and themes of Exodus. Each chapter keeps the big picture central and provides probing questions for reflection and discussion.
Adopting the Stranger as Kindred in Deuteronomy
- 332pages
- 12 heures de lecture
Focusing on the theme of social integration, this book explores how Deuteronomy addresses the plight of displaced individuals, urging communities to embrace them as kin. Mark R. Glanville highlights the creative potential within communities to support and include vulnerable populations through social laws, judicial procedures, communal gatherings, and covenant renewal. By advocating for the inclusion of the stranger, Deuteronomy challenges modern nation-states to rethink their approach to displacement, emphasizing both opportunity and responsibility in fostering inclusivity.
Though the post-Christian cultural turn can be disconcerting, it is also a uniquely exciting time to reimagine churches. Building on the dynamic traditions of jazz music and Christian community, biblical scholar and jazz musician Mark Glanville unfolds a biblical, practical, and inventive vision for building the churches we long for.