Andy Crouch





Andy Crouch

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Andy is the author of Culture Making: Recovering Our Creative Calling, winner of Christianity Today’s 2009 Book Award for Christianity and Culture and named one of the best books of 2008 by Publishers Weekly, Relevant, Outreach and Leadership. A senior editor at Christianity Today International, he has served as executive producer of the documentary films Where Faith and Culture Meet and Round Trip and was editorial director of the Christian Vision Project from 2005 to 2008. He is a member of the editorial board of Books & Culture, a senior fellow of the International Justice Mission’s IJM Institute, and serves on the board of Equitas Group, a philanthropic organization focused on ending child exploitation in Haiti and Southeast Asia. H...more


Andy Crouch isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but he does have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from his feed.

Over the last 15 years International Justice Mission has mobilized Christians to address the profound need for structural transformation in public justice systems around the world that, due to a combination of corruption (i.e., human sin turned systemic) and lack of resources, do not serve the poor. Generally the rich can find a way to get these systems (or parallel replacements for them) to wo...

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Published on December 22, 2011 18:03 • 5 views
Average rating: 3.84 · 437 ratings · 81 reviews · 8 distinct works
Culture Making: Recovering ...
3.9 of 5 stars 3.90 avg rating — 381 ratings — published 2008 — 7 editions
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The Church in Emerging Cult...
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3.2 of 5 stars 3.20 avg rating — 110 ratings — published 2003 — 2 editions
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Great American Craft Beer: ...
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3.55 of 5 stars 3.55 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 2010 — 2 editions
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The Good Beer Guide to New ...
4.33 of 5 stars 4.33 avg rating — 6 ratings — published 2006
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Where Faith and Culture Mee...
0.0 of 5 stars 0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2009
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Where Faith & Culture Meet ...
0.0 of 5 stars 0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2007 — 2 editions
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Worship Team Handbook
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3.22 of 5 stars 3.22 avg rating — 9 ratings — published 1998
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Letters To A Future Church
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3.33 of 5 stars 3.33 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2012
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“The language of worldview tends to imply, to paraphrase the Catholic writer Richard Rohr, that we can think ourselves into new ways of behaving. But that is not the way culture works. Culture helps us behave ourselves into new ways of thinking. The risk in thinking 'worldviewishly' is that we will start to think that the best way to change culture is to analyze it. We will start worldview academies, host worldview seminars, write worldview books. These may have some real value if they help us understand the horizons that our culture shapes, but they cannot substitute for the creation of real cultural goods. And they will subtly tend to produce philosophers rather than plumbers, abstract thinkers instead of artists and artisans. They can create a cultural niche in which 'worldview thinkers' are privileged while other kinds of culture makers are shunted aside. But culture is not changed simply by thinking.”
Andy Crouch



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