Image from Coce

Nō reira nei te āwhina mōku? = From where will my help come? : poems, people and reflections from Aotearoa; deep taproots in good soil / David Moxon.

By: Publisher: Wellington, New Zealand : Huia Publishers, 2021Description: xxvi, 239 pages : illustrations ; 21 cmISBN:
  • 9781775506522
  • 1775506525
Other title:
  • From where will my help come?
Subject(s):
Contents:
Foreword / Donald Tamihere, Philip Richardson -- Introduction -- Poems. Aotearoa -- The whole earth, our garden home -- In times of uncertainty and suffering -- Grace, justice, peace -- People. Wings of the morning : Te Arikinu Te Atairangikaahu with Te Kaahui Ariki, Waikato-Tainui and ngaa motu -- Seven times down, eight times up : Robert Maunsell with Susan and Beatrice, church and people -- Bear fruit that will last : Thomas Chapman with Anne and Mary Jane, Ihāia Te Ahu and Rangirauaka, Seymour Mills Spencer and Ellen Stanley Spencer -- A child shall lead : Tārore of Waharoa with Wiremu Ngākuku, Wiremu Tāmihana, her whānau and iwi -- A family for all seasons : Mary Ann and James Preece with their whānau -- Courage and compassion : Hēni Te Kirikaramu with her whānau and iwi -- Death defying love : Hare Maihi Ruarangi with Te Whānau a Te Karaiti and Waikato-Tainui -- Heal from your heart : Suzanne Aubert with her sisters -- Ride on, ride on : Winifred Lysnar with Joyce Tomb, Ken Herivel, Les Woodward and the Percheron horses -- The sacred to the fore : Canon Wiremu Wī te Tau Huata with Ybel, whānau, hāhi and iwi -- Beneath her wings : Puti Hopaea Murray with her hāhi and iwi -- New wine, new wineskins : Paul Alfred Reeves with Beverley, whānau, church and state -- Reflections. As small as a mustard seed -- A deeply interested companion -- Doubt in a global crisis -- A house of many rooms -- Epilogue : a haka for the next generation.
Summary: "The stories of the Māori and Pākehā Christians in this book describe people who were both bicultural and transformative in their time. Ranging from 1814 to 2011, the book spans the first two hundred years of sowing and cultivating the seeds of the gospel in Aotearoa. By exploring the stories of others who had struggles and challenges, we can gain enlightenment and motivation for the issues we face in our own time. This book was written as the world grappled with the overwhelming challenge of a global life-threatening virus. From this, the question arose 'From where will our help come?' The stories here give us examples of resilience and a focus on the common good of all people. This book tries to describe examples from both Māori and Pākehā stories, where people of faith reached out from their own communities. They found a way to become friends and neighbours with people who were very different from them. The mutual association both ways made much more of their own hearts and minds. They can encourage us to strive as they did and not to give up. By the grace of God, we are not alone"--Page 4 of cover.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Panapa Māori Resources John Kinder Theological Library BR1481 MOX (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available A42388497
Main Collection John Kinder Theological Library BR1481 MOX (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available A42388500
New Zealand/Pacific John Kinder Theological Library BX5770.M93 MOX (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan A42372908
Main Collection Orongonui 279.3 MOX (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available A42392244

Includes bibliographical references (pages 228-237).

Foreword / Donald Tamihere, Philip Richardson -- Introduction -- Poems. Aotearoa -- The whole earth, our garden home -- In times of uncertainty and suffering -- Grace, justice, peace -- People. Wings of the morning : Te Arikinu Te Atairangikaahu with Te Kaahui Ariki, Waikato-Tainui and ngaa motu -- Seven times down, eight times up : Robert Maunsell with Susan and Beatrice, church and people -- Bear fruit that will last : Thomas Chapman with Anne and Mary Jane, Ihāia Te Ahu and Rangirauaka, Seymour Mills Spencer and Ellen Stanley Spencer -- A child shall lead : Tārore of Waharoa with Wiremu Ngākuku, Wiremu Tāmihana, her whānau and iwi -- A family for all seasons : Mary Ann and James Preece with their whānau -- Courage and compassion : Hēni Te Kirikaramu with her whānau and iwi -- Death defying love : Hare Maihi Ruarangi with Te Whānau a Te Karaiti and Waikato-Tainui -- Heal from your heart : Suzanne Aubert with her sisters -- Ride on, ride on : Winifred Lysnar with Joyce Tomb, Ken Herivel, Les Woodward and the Percheron horses -- The sacred to the fore : Canon Wiremu Wī te Tau Huata with Ybel, whānau, hāhi and iwi -- Beneath her wings : Puti Hopaea Murray with her hāhi and iwi -- New wine, new wineskins : Paul Alfred Reeves with Beverley, whānau, church and state -- Reflections. As small as a mustard seed -- A deeply interested companion -- Doubt in a global crisis -- A house of many rooms -- Epilogue : a haka for the next generation.

"The stories of the Māori and Pākehā Christians in this book describe people who were both bicultural and transformative in their time. Ranging from 1814 to 2011, the book spans the first two hundred years of sowing and cultivating the seeds of the gospel in Aotearoa. By exploring the stories of others who had struggles and challenges, we can gain enlightenment and motivation for the issues we face in our own time. This book was written as the world grappled with the overwhelming challenge of a global life-threatening virus. From this, the question arose 'From where will our help come?' The stories here give us examples of resilience and a focus on the common good of all people. This book tries to describe examples from both Māori and Pākehā stories, where people of faith reached out from their own communities. They found a way to become friends and neighbours with people who were very different from them. The mutual association both ways made much more of their own hearts and minds. They can encourage us to strive as they did and not to give up. By the grace of God, we are not alone"--Page 4 of cover.

Powered by Koha