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The Stones That the Builders Rejected: Development of Ethical Leadership from the Black Church Perspective Fluker Walter Earl
The Stones That the Builders Rejected: Development of Ethical Leadership from the Black Church Perspective
Fluker Walter Earl
Brief Description: Six eminent black scholars, women and men, examine the black church's distinctive socio-cultural location and long history of producing quality leadership, affirming the church tradition as a prime candidate for offering leadership to the world. Biographical Note: Walter E. Fluker is Project Director of the National Resource Center for the Development of Ethical Leadership from the Black Church Tradition at Colgate Rochester Divinity School. Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Publisher Marketing: Six eminent black scholars, women and men, examine the black church's distinctive socio-cultural location and long history of producing quality leadership despite inadequate material and social resources. They build on the hypothesis that it is precisely this distinctiveness that makes the black church tradition a prime candidate for offering direction for the development of leaders for today's national and global communities. While using distinct methodological approaches for understanding ethical leadership, all of the contributors express the need to return to some of the powerful resources of the past as a way of rethinking appropriate forms and styles of leadership in the lives of African Americans and the nation at large. Publisher Marketing: This book's title, "the stones that the builders rejected" (Psalm 118:22), refers to "history's black absent ones" who may indeed have much more to say about the nature of moral discourse and redemption of America's soul than has previously been acknowledged. In the book, six outstanding black scholars, women and men, build on the hypothesis that, because of its distinctive socio-cultural location and long history of producing quality leadership despite inadequate material and social resources, the black church tradition is a prime candidate for offering direction for the development of leaders for today's national and global communities. Contributors include: Peter Paris, Princeton Theological Seminary; Marcia Y. Riggs, Columbia Theological Seminary; Clarice J. Martin, Colgate Rochester Divinity School; Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, Colby College; Carolyn C. Denard, Georgia State University; and Michael Eric Dyson, Columbia University. While the authors offer distinct methodological approaches for understanding ethical leadership, all express the need to return to some of the powerful resources of the past as a way of rethinking appropriate forms and styles of leadership in the lives of African Americans and the nation at large. The editor, Walter E. Fluker, is Project Director of the National Resource Center for the Development of Ethical Leadership from the Black Church Tradition at Colgate Rochester Divinity School.
Contributor Bio: Fluker, Walter E Fluker is professor of philosophy and religion and executive director of the Leadership Center at Morehouse College. He is also president/founder of Vision Quest Association, Inc.
128 pages
| Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
| Released | September 1, 1998 |
| ISBN13 | 9781563382352 |
| Publishers | Continuum International Publishing Group |
| Genre | Theometrics > Mainline |
| Pages | 128 |
| Dimensions | 142 × 214 × 9 mm · 176 g |
| Language | English |
| Editor | Fluker, Walter E. |