Praying with Our Feet

Pursuing Justice and Healing on the Streets

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Pub Date 2 Feb 2021 | Archive Date 26 Feb 2021

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Description

"Readers looking for ways to get involved in their communities will find plenty to motivate them in Krinks's personal testament."
--Publishers Weekly

At age twenty, Lindsey Krinks thought she had her life figured out. But a devastating injury and an unexpected encounter with a homeless organizing group disrupted her plans and opened her eyes to the immense suffering and injustice around her. Awakened to a fierce pursuit of justice and a faith that called her to "pray with her feet," Krinks plunged into the underside of American society, where she found both staggering loss and astounding love.

As a street chaplain, activist, and cofounder of Open Table Nashville, Krinks takes us on an unforgettable spiritual journey to tent cities, alleys, slums, and the front lines of movements for justice. Praying with Our Feet challenges preconceptions about people who live on the streets, calling us to move from charity to justice and to get our hands dirty in the struggle for a better world.

Readers who are dismayed by the world's suffering but don't know where to start will find much inspiration in this intimate and moving book. Includes end-of-book discussion questions for each chapter.

"Readers looking for ways to get involved in their communities will find plenty to motivate them in Krinks's personal testament."
--Publishers Weekly

At age twenty, Lindsey Krinks thought she had her...


Advance Praise

“I wholeheartedly say amen to Praying with Our Feet. The continued growth of poverty and homelessness in the richest country in the world is a moral failing and a social sin. Those who have decided to devote their lives to the faithful and who struggle to uplift all of God’s children, from ‘the least of these’ to ‘all of these,’ need to be heard. The story Krinks tells in her book is one of an important and needed ministry of work with the poor and homeless. It is a story among many other untold stories of unsung saints.”—Willie Baptist, activist, educator, author, and formerly homeless father 

“I took up this book expecting a study of the integration of action and contemplation. What I was delighted to find was a superbly written story about the life-forming experiences that brought Krinks to such integration.”—Paul Quenon, Abbey of Gethsemani; author of In Praise of the Useless Life: A Monk’s Memoir 

“Krinks reminds us time and again that one life does make a difference—be it our own or another’s—and this is both gift and grace. Our world desperately needs not only our caring but also our actions to heal and to continue to point us to the new heaven and new earth where justice and love find their home. This is a powerful book of stories that will keep you reading. Read. Be challenged. Act.”—Emilie M. Townes, dean and distinguished professor of womanist ethics and society, Vanderbilt University Divinity School 

“Thoughtfully crafted and powerfully told, Praying with Our Feet is a story of a movement growing from those who are homeless but not helpless coming together to demand dignity, life, and change. Activist, theologian, and sister in the struggle Lindsey Krinks weaves together stories from her upbringing with stories of those left out of the prosperity God intends for all. With great sensitivity and honesty, she calls people to fix their gaze on the stark reality of poverty and homelessness, and witnesses to how poor and homeless leaders and people of faith and conscience endeavor to do something about it. I am familiar with many of the people’s stories lifted up by Krinks and thank her for treating the lives and wounds of so many of God’s people as serious and sacred, and for recognizing them as moral and political agents of change.”—Liz Theoharis, cochair, Poor People’s Campaign; codirector, Kairos: The Center for Religions, Rights, and Social Justice, Union Theological Seminary 

“Praying with one’s feet changes everything—not only religion and spirituality but also lives and communities, and even words spoken or written. Lindsey Krinks takes her readers on a journey in which this insight deepens on every page. She brings together the personal and the political, with a hint toward economic possibilities.”—Joerg Rieger, distinguished professor of theology, Cal Turner Chancellor’s Chair in Wesleyan Studies, and director of the Wendland-Cook Program in Religion and Justice, Vanderbilt University Divinity School 

“Praying with Our Feet reminds us that theology is meant to be lived out, not sequestered in the ivory towers of academia. This book shines a light on the people who need our solidarity more now than ever. Praise for Lindsey Krinks for writing such a timely read for all of us.”—Robyn Henderson-Espinoza, founder of the Activist Theology Project

“I wholeheartedly say amen to Praying with Our Feet. The continued growth of poverty and homelessness in the richest country in the world is a moral failing and a social sin. Those who have decided...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781587434587
PRICE US$20.00 (USD)
PAGES 224

Average rating from 11 members


Featured Reviews

Do you ever feel overwhelmed by inequality and injustice? Ever feel like what you do makes no difference?

Krinks tells the story of her own calling, working alongside others who seize the opportunities to change the world by serving the poor, disenfranchised, and needy in their own neighborhoods and cities. With compelling emotion, the author explores what it means to be radically committed to Jesus' care for - and notice of - those whom society leaves behind.

Beyond the compelling story, this book shows how those called to serve change their communities and nations - and draw others into the work of God.

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Praying With Our Feet by Lindsey Krinks is an eye-opening, impassioned memoir that recounts the author's call to service. This memoir documents Krinks' journey into activism and determining her purpose, helping homeless community members in Nashville, Tennessee. I don't necessarily identify as Christian because of the corruption and hypocrisy of many churches, but the description of this book really intrigued me as I adore the philosophy of Christian Civil Rights activists like John Lewis. Unfortunately many Christian churches focus more on comfort than real action, which would improve conditions for those in need in their communities.

Krinks has been inspired by the Catholic Worker Movement, which focuses on serving those in need and fighting injustice. Despite there being massive shortages of affordable housing available in many cities, homelessness has often been criminalized, with laws against trespassing, etc. in order to keep up appearances. Additionally, police are often ordered to retaliate against the homeless by destroying tents and encampments.

I really enjoyed the perspective of this book and focus on service, but also addressing the core of the issues and implementing change/programs at the level of local government. The recent Black Lives Matter movement has helped illuminate the idea of diverting some of the funding from police forces to social services to more greatly benefit the community. Krinks has such a kind, beautiful way of connecting to others which is reflected throughout Praying With Our Feet.

I listened to the audiobook and the narration was fine and seemed to match how I imagined the author. I did speed up the recording 1.5x for best listening. I highly recommend this memoir for anyone interested in social justice and implementing real change that benefits our communities.

Thank you Brazos Press / RB Media and NetGalley for providing this audiobook and ebook ARC.

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Praying with Our Feet follows the personal development of Lindsey Krinks as she begins to engage with issues of justice and how those experiences shape her understanding of herself and her community. The primary setting for the book is among an unhoused community in Nashville and tenuous relationships with churches, local government, and nonprofits who limit their engagement.

(It's not big on social analysis or prescriptive strategies, which should not be a knock on the book. My former experience in housing and organizing probably makes me a little more attuned to some of the rhetoric.)

One paragraph, in particular, stood out from the entire book.

"I would learn that once you begin to notice the flattened cardboard and blankets beneath bridges, the footpaths into the woods behind gas stations, the flash of blue tarps through the trees, you never see things the same way again. Once you begin to understand the city not from above but from below, it changes everything."

What Krinks is able to do in her memoir is shift the focus away from her and put it on rehumanizing the unhoused community that she comes alongside of. And similar to the cardboard, blankets, and tarps, once you begin to recognize the humanity in those who have been marginalized, you never see things the same way again. It changes everything.

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Lindsey's book is inspiring and insightful. I have loved getting to learn more about who Lindsey is, and about the incredible work that has and is being done in our community. As soon as this pandemic is over, I will be joining Lindsey in the streets while we pray with our feet.

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In writing "Praying with our Feet," Lindsey Krinks has offered readers the chance to listen in on her development from concerned but naive Christian college student to passionate activist to street chaplain for the unhoused in Nashville. This is no "how to" manual for advancing systemic change; neither is it simply a story about a woman who learns how to love her neighbors who live in the underpasses. Krinks is a skilled storyteller, for sure. But the attentive reader will hear in her stories the intellectual and spiritual grounding of her developing theology of care. And the love with which she tells the stories of those she ministers alongside, housed and unhoused, draws open, curious readers to wonder how they, themselves, are being called to bear witness and work for change.

Books about faith-fueled activism can often feel like heroic epics or bible study manuals. This is neither. I look forward to sharing "Praying with our Feet" with the people I work with, knowing that they'll be challenged to respond.

Thanks to NetGalley and Brazos Press for the opportunity to read this ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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An interesting read, as you grow along with the writer. Krink's is concerned with homelessness and the culture prejudices that perpetuate this situation. She is overwhelmed and brings the reader along with her, as she grows in her response. I really appreciated the storyline that carried us along with her and her realizations, rather then telling us what would happen from the beginning. I also really appreciated the human stories that she included.

"while I knew I couldn't give him the keys to a new home, I could be kind. I could connect, affirm his humanity, exchange names..."

"Bu I was learning that whenever I had extra food and coats, I needed to open my hands a little wider to my neighbour. I was learning that every small act of kindness mattered."

She challenges us to do what we can.

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I really liked this book and found it interesting what she struggled with regarding the church and the world. She seems caring and passionate while being fiercely convicted. Would be a great book to give to someone who is trying to figure out how to manage their faith with social justice.

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The author writes a compelling story of her experiences and what she has learned along the way, and she does it with integrity and humility. The greatest value of the book would be for inspiring others to move in similar directions.

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