About the Author:
Adam J. Copeland is the Faculty Director for Faith and Leadership and Instructor of Religion at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota. He holds a M.Div. from Columbia Theological Seminary, a B.A. from St. Olaf College, and is a Ph.D. student in Rhetoric, Writing, and Culture at North Dakota State University. He has served as pastor of a rural Presbyterian congregation and mission developer of a Lutheran emergent ministry.
Review:
Copeland’s book steps beyond studies about Millenials and offers a view 'on the ground' of the dynamic, honest wrestling of young adults today around issues of faith in college. The essayists’ animated stories put flesh on the dry bones of cultural assumptions about faith in college, and remind us of the importance of spiritual engagement and self-reflection during these formative years. Copeland’s book offers a window into unique and real college faith experiences that has value for students, parents, pastors, and the church at large! (Rev. Katie Owen Aumann, Presbyterian Campus Minister, Duke University)
Kissing in the Chapel, Praying in the Frat House is a great collective work first and foremost because it is full of fresh and diverse voices that belong to actual members of the Millennial Generation. While this book, like many others about young people, certainly captures the mixture of excitement and pain that comes with one's self discovery in young adulthood, the ferociously honest way with which it addresses faith, religion, and spirituality is what separates it from the rest. (Rob Fohr, Mission Catalyst, Presbyterian Mission Agency)
So many these days are in search of and yearning for voices that are real, authentic, and true. That is why this book is such a treasure. It is real. The voices here are authentic, compelling, and convicting. It is long past time for us to actually hear from these young adults instead of about them. It is long past time for us to do exactly what these young adults are both illustrating and calling forth from us. (Rodger Y. Nishioka, Columbia Theological Seminary)
Young adults are a wonderful, confusing, energized, questioning, messy group of people and this collection of essays digs deeply into their experiences of faith and meaning-making in college contexts. This is a wonderful book to read and to share, and one which nourished my own faith and gave me some hope for the future of communities of faith. (Mary E. Hess Ph.D, Luther Seminary)
This [is an] absorbing, diverse anthology . . . In 21 essays, young men and women in their 20s and 30s reflect on their college experience with faith, exploring a wide range of subjects—from Kristi Del Vecchio’s socially-minded humanism to Edward Anderson’s reflections on the powerful ways a religious upbringing can both shape and challenge a young person’s attempt to discover faith on his own terms. The most outstanding essays appear in the section on 'Sex and Sexuality,' every one of these extraordinarily, even painfully, honest. The authors movingly describe their intimate experiences as they deal with some complicated topics, made even more so for persons of faith (coming out as gay, being transgender, and the trauma of sexual assault, among them). Copeland includes a set of discussion questions at the end of each essay that will be useful for youth ministry groups and classes. (Publishers Weekly)
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.