Subtotal: $
Checkout-
Covering the Cover: Solidarity
-
Solidarity in Forgiveness
-
Readers Respond: Issue 25
-
Family and Friends: Francis Schaeffer and L’Abri
-
We Must Not Stand By
-
Deep Solidarity
-
The Church Is Other People
-
Black Lives Matter and the Church
-
Traveling Inside
-
The Solidarity of Grief
-
Dinotopian Visions
-
Solidarity Means Giving Yourself
-
Acts 2 in Bolivia
-
Two Poems
-
Two Sonnets
-
The Prayers of the Chinese Nature Painters
-
Chaim Potok’s Wandering Jews
-
How to Read Dickens
-
A Communal Publishing House
-
Plough at One Hundred Years
-
Saint Macrina
Another Life Is Possible
Four Stories from 100 Years of Life Together
By Clare Stober
August 13, 2020
Available languages: 한국어
Two years ago I began work on a book to mark the Bruderhof’s hundredth anniversary this year. I’d long been interested in the idea of vocation – why and how does a person become convinced of a lifelong calling, with the self-sacrifice and self-surrender that this requires? For the Bruderhof centenary, then, my editors and I decided not to focus on the community’s century of history, but rather to tell the vocation stories of the men and women who had joined it. We ambitiously agreed on one hundred stories for one hundred years. I immediately began interviewing my fellow Bruderhof members, asking them to tell why they had chosen this way of life in full Christian community and getting them to share insights gleaned along the way. At the same time I accompanied the British photojournalist Danny Burrows, traveling to ten communities on three continents to capture what our life together looks like. The following four stories are excerpted from the resulting book of one hundred stories and Danny’s stunning photographs, titled Another Life Is Possible: Insights from 100 Years of Life Together.
Hyeran Jang
Through prayer and pilgrimage, a South Korean engineer finds her true calling.
Tom Potts
A Philadelphia businessman, troubled by the contradictions of capitalism, traveled to Paraguay to see if a life based on love was possible.
Rubén Ayala
A college student strives to carry on his father’s legacy of working for justice.
Bill Cleva
A New York professional searches for a comprehensive answer.
Explore more stories or order the book.
Already a subscriber? Sign in
Try 3 months of unlimited access. Start your FREE TRIAL today. Cancel anytime.