Cover Image: Finding Holy in the Suburbs

Finding Holy in the Suburbs

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Member Reviews

This book is extremely relatable to me - my husband is in ministry in the suburbs. Ashley's writing is honest and understandable. This book is both encouraging and convicting!

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Nothing original: God is anywhere and everywhere, no matter the neighbourhood. I didn't realte to her background and her life, but I tried to take away snippets for my non-suburbian life.

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I enjoyed this book, and felt that the author had many good points about creating community in the suburbs. Having lived in all three areas she discusses (urban, rural, and suburbs), I felt like she was too judgmental, at times, about people that live in the suburbs. Although I would recommend this book, I would be careful about who I would recommend it to.

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A great book for those of us living in the suburbs. 6 years ago my husband and I were faced with the choice between moving overseas as missionaries or living as missionaries right here in the neighborhood we'd lived in for 4 years already. God led us to stay where we were, dig in, and be there for those in the suburbs.

This book will challenge you, awaken you, and guide you. Each chapter ends with 5 or 6 practices to try out, which will be very helpful to anyone wanting to wake up to their lives and the lives of those around them. I'd love to read this book with a small group.

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A thoughtful, well-referenced read on our tendency to forget about the mission field in our own backyards. I don't live in the suburbs, and still found myself relating to much of this book. What exactly are we chasing? Discussion questions after each chapter, making this an excellent book club choice.

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Ashley really nails down the already/not yet of suburb life. We live in a homogenous, safe little community, where it's easy to pretend that everything is perfect. It's easy to feel like there is no mission field here, no calling to be God's people. But Ashley teases out both the hard and the blessing of living a suburban life as a Christian. Worth picking up.

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Although I love the idea behind this book, the heartbeat of the message, I was lost along the way. Starting off strong, the chapters begin to taper off and no longer hold interest.

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Takeaway: As Christians who believe in embodiment, we are Christians in a place, not just abstractly.

When I was in college I thought I was called to the city. I had a mentor prophesy over me that I was called to the city and pray that I would fulfill that calling. That mentor was later found in significant sin and left (quietly) in disgrace. I loved Chicago, where I spent more than than any other place in my life and where I still work. But in 2006 I moved to suburban Atlanta and now have lived in this house longer than any other home I have lived in. I honestly doubt that I will ever live inside a city like Chicago again. In large part because I have family. It isn’t that I would not take my children to a city, but that extended family structures matter and I am in an extended family structure that is suburban.

Over the past few years I have been changing in my attitude toward suburbs. In part DL Mayfield has given voice to some of why I have changed. She lives in community with recent immigrants and those in poverty in suburban Portland OR. In Portland, and much of the rest of the country, the suburbs are increasingly where the poor live. Nationally, more poor people live in the suburbs than either urban or rural areas. In addition, suburbs are becoming increasingly diverse. My county school district is now predominately minority. And while that is not reflected in the population as a whole, the population as a whole in my county is also booming more diverse. As DL Mayfield has said, she is in the suburbs because that is where the poor, the immigrant and the needy are likely to be found.

It is this suburban atmosphere that Ashley Hales is writing Finding Holy in the Suburbs. She was a reluctant suburban dweller. I was not reluctant in quite the same way. I was happy to move and really did think that God was guiding us to one back to family when we moved. But that guidance did put to death a (false) sense of calling that I had felt. When I had lived in the city and participated in urban life joyfully, I read extensively about being Christian in an urban place. The 1990s and 2000s were a point when Christians were rediscovering the city. Much of that was very good because theologically those Christians were rediscovering the importance of place. There was negatives as well. Christians, particularly White Evangelicals, had mixed motives. They thought of themselves as White saviors bringing Christ to a community where Christ had not been, instead of joining in to what Christ had been long doing among people that actually were very likely to already know him. And with even the good motives, came gentrification, white supremacy and colonialism and a lot of ignorance, especially cultural ignorance.

I have thought a great deal about place and what place means to our faith. So I am probably not the target audience of Finding Holy in the Suburbs because it is more of an introduction to the concept of being Christian in a particular place. But even as an introduction, this is a very good book on what it means to be Christian in the suburbs, taking account of the particular strengths and weaknesses of the culture and geography of the suburbs. There has been a legitimate critique of some of the city Christian books because they denigrated the suburbs as less than. Hales avoids that trap because she also avoids the trap of assuming that God is not in the suburbs. So Finding Holy in the Suburbs rightly notes how suburban competition and privacy and false instagram worthy images are antithetical to Christianity. But she also notes positives of space and people can actually encourage faith as well.

I think the best parts of the book for me were the spiritual disciplines sections in each chapter that are intended to specifically counteract the weaknesses while encouraging the strengths. The suburbs do have lots of strengths, but also many structural weaknesses that need to be dealt with. The suburbs were often built with real intention, and sometimes continued intention, of racism and exclusion. Suburbs are also about flaunting wealth and about individualism in a way that it more difficult in other geographic types. And suburbs are often about hiding weakness.

Part of my difficulty with Finding Holy in the Suburbs is my personal introversion. I would be very happy to stay inside, not interact with neighbors and keep ears buds in my ears while I am at the park with kids. Some of this I think is healthy for me. But some is just sinful. Like many books that are in the end about community, parts of being in community are easier for people that are extroverts. Meeting people, drawing them into your home or life is easier if you really enjoy getting to know people and being around them. But introverts have strengths in community as well. And while that is not often called out in Finding Holy in the Suburbs, some of the disciplines and approaches are ones that need the more introverted to balance the tendency of some extroverts toward the superficial.

If you are a suburban dweller, as many of us in the White Evangelical world are, Finding Holy in the Suburbs in a good way to help explore what that geography means to our faith. If you are an audiobook listener as I am, Ashley Hales narrates. And as of the posting time, Finding Holy in the Suburbs is still on sale at Christianaudio for less than the Audible, the Kindle or the paperback. Christianaudio is not my favorite audiobook source, I think their iPhone app could use some refinement, but it is decent and I tend to use them in large part because they have lots of really good sales.

Finding Holy in the Suburbs: Living Faithfully in the Land of Too Much by Ashley Hales Purchase Links: Paperback, Kindle Edition, Audible.com Audiobook, Christianaudio.com MP3 Audiobook

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As I read the words, it started me questioning myself, (who lived in different cities, but always in the suburbs). How much did living in the suburbs influence me or not, in my life. As a Christian, I wanted to know ... I found my answer.

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Ashley Hales's Finding Holy in the Suburbs: Living Faithfully in the Land of Too Much reminds me of those niche devotional books, like The New Testament for Outdoorsmen or Devotionals for Quilters. The content is, by definition, just about the same for those books, but it's dressed up for particular people groups or interests. In Hales's case, I felt like I was reading something like Spiritual Disciplines for Middle-Class Suburban Moms.



Hales takes some decent material on spiritual disciplines and Christian life, and forces it onto a template of stereotypes about "the suburbs." Much of it felt artificial, contrived, and insulting. She weakens her position early on when she writes that "more than 50 percent of Americans live in the suburbs." Then she proceeds to develop the worn-out supposed distinctives of suburban life: consumerism, busyness, obsession with safety, superficiality, isolation, etc. First of all, these qualities exist everywhere, not just in the suburbs. Second of all, she keeps up this suburban picture of wealth, privilege, and segregation, while American suburbs become more diverse, racially and economically, all the time (as you might expect since more than half of us live there).



For example, she writes, "Buying is our suburban form of worship." Oh, only suburbanites succumb to this? "In the suburbs we like the sheen of community, but real community is messy and unkempt." Because inner-city neighborhoods are always so naturally community oriented? "The suburbs keep us busy because we think the more we move, the more we work, the more valuable we will be." Is this in contrast to city dwellers, who are know to be so much less career-, work-, and task-oriented? "Although we are materially wealthy in the suburbs, we are spiritually poor." Again, suburbs are diverse, not only full of wealthy people. And materially poor people are just as likely to be spiritually needy as materially rich people. "In the suburbs the default setting is to fill our soul hungers with fast-food versions" of commerce, relationships, and love. Why would she insist this is any more true for someone in a suburb than for someone in the city?



I want to emphasize that there is plenty of good food for thought in Finding Holy in the Suburbs. It just drove me crazy, the whole time I was reading, that she maintains this attitude of denigrating suburban life, seeming to say that one must struggle to overcome the natural pull of suburban life to grow spiritually. The implication is that in the city or in a rural area, spiritual growth is more natural and part of one's surroundings. I find that to be completely bogus. Everything she says about the suburbs can be applied to anywhere you live.



Toward the end she writes, "The man from Galilee is the one who bears our suburban sins in his body and takes them to death." Well, that's true, but you might as well take the word "suburban" out of that sentence, and it is no less true. To me, it just seems a little silly to force the gospel and Christian spirituality into a particular demographic. Maybe we can edit this a little bit: Finding Holy: Living Faithfully Wherever You Are.







Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the complimentary electronic review copy!

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I found this book interesting but also extremely slow. It took me a very long time to get through it.

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I was interested in reading this book because I’ve found myself living… I think, in a suburban area. Well, that is not entirely true. I do live in something similar to the suburbs but I really was interested in reading this book after a conversation about church planting with a friend. We were talking about what church planting could look like, where we would be interested in planting a church and who we would want on our team. I brought up the city of Philadelphia, because I love it there and I love a lot of people that still live there (I graduated school in the area). My friend looked me in the eye and said that she had considered planting a church there to build community, not in the city proper, but in the suburbs of Philly.
It was the first time that I had ever heard of suburban people being one of the least reached population. Because the perception is that the people that live there are “fine”--as though the people in the city are not.

Anyway, Hale does an excellent job bringing to light some of the struggles that people find themselves facing (or not facing if they are unaware of its happening) while living in a suburb. Safety is a expectation of moving into a suburb, but where does trusting God fall into that? How does hospitality and community fall into that if you never see the people that live just across the street?

I frequently found myself wondering if some of these problems might mirror the things that people living in the city have to face. I don’t know if finding holy is a problem specific to suburbanites or more so something people in general have to “find”.

Something else that I appreciated throughout the book was Hale’s mention of how to implement what she had written about at the end of each chapter. Some of the ideas seemed like something we should already be implementing in our lives but sometimes we need someone else to not only mention an idea but to also tell us that those “simple” steps are a part of something monumental.

I received a electronic copy of this title in exchange for my unbiased review.

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