Lexington Books
Pages: 246
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-6948-3 • Hardback • November 2011 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-0-7391-6949-0 • Paperback • November 2011 • $56.99 • (£44.00)
978-0-7391-6950-6 • eBook • November 2011 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Shann Ray Ferch is professor of leadership in the PhD Program in Leadership Studies at Gonzaga University. He is the also editor of The International Journal of Servant Leadership and his work regarding conflict and the human will to forgive and reconcile has appeared in scientific journals internationally.
1 Publications Acknowledgments
2 What is Servant Leadership?
3 Servant Leadership in the Present Day
4 Foreword: The Power of Servant Leadership
5 Preface: Balefire: The World of Violence and Forgiveness
Chapter 6 Servant Leadership, Forgiveness, and Power
Part 7 A Fine Grace
Part 8 When We Rise
Part 9 The Dignity of Life
Part 10 The Eloquent Question
Part 11 Of Love and Human Violence
Part 12 Emerson on Love
Part 13 Sand Creek
Part 14 The House of Light
Chapter 15 Personal Consciousness, Interior Fortitude
Part 16 Shame and Forgiveness
Part 17 The Family, The World
Part 18 The Way of the Child
Part 19 Martin Luther King Jr. and Desmond Tutu
Part 20 The Question of Love and Power
Part 21 Before the Velvet Revolution
Part 22 The Practice of Consciousness
Part 23 Servant Leadership Consciousness and Listening
Chapter 24 A Narrative of Hope and Responsible Action
Part 25 The Inward Road
Part 26 The Illumined Nature of Persuasion
Part 27 People of Self-Transcendence
Part 28 Shadow and Light
Part 29 A Cree Man's Journey
Part 30 The Nature of the Forgiving Touch
Part 31 Healing the Heart of the World
32 Afterword: Acts of Courage and Clarity
33 Endnotes
34 References
35 Recommended Readings in Servant Leadership
36 About the Author
37 Other Publications by Shann Ray Ferch
The greatest figures in history, both human and divine, led with forgiveness. In this book, Shann Ferch uncovers the beauty and grit of vulnerable leadership, forgiving leadership, servant leadership. The power of leading with forgiveness offers high hope for our world’s atrocious history and terrifying future.
— Bill Robinson, Whitworth University
In Forgiveness and Power in the Age of Atrocity Shann Ray Ferch succeeds in creating one of the most beautiful, inspiring, and lyrical books that I have read on servant leadership, or any subject. Shann gets to the heart and soul of what it means to embrace and practice servant leadership. In these, the most cynical of times that our world has ever known, this book points the way toward a more hopeful and compassionate world—a world where misplaced power and aggression are countered by Martin Luther King’s unarmed truth and unconditional love—through the power of servant leadership.
— Larry C. Spears, The Spears Center for Servant Leadership
Dr. Shann Ferch has written a remarkably comprehensive and convincing exploration of forgiveness as the ground of healing and service, and then applied it to the principles and activities of leadership in the contemporary world. I enthusiastically recommend this volume to those who are not only interested in leadership studies, but also in the deepest dimensions and possibilities of love and the human condition. It is a remarkable antidote to the cynicism underlying some of the new purely pragmatic (and frequently inhuman) leadership theories.
— Robert J. Spitzer, Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science, SUNY Cortland; author, "The Politics of Gun Control" and "Guns Across America: Reconciling Gun Rules and Rights"
In a world where hurt and hate dominate the headlines, Shann Ray Ferch is a bold purveyor of peace and love, much in the tradition of Robert Greenleaf. One cannot read this book without experiencing a reflective resolve to live with greater intentionality and purpose.
— Andrew K. Benton
Read this book if you are ready to live a new horizon. It is unsettling and worthy of every precious moment to read—each page creates an asymmetrical balance of joy, tears, laughter, and resolve. To end atrocity through love and forgiveness… this book is a beam of hope for humankind.
— Mary McFarland, Gonzaga University