Circle of Hope Audiobook By Eliza Griswold cover art

Circle of Hope

A Reckoning with Love, Power, and Justice in an American Church

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Circle of Hope

By: Eliza Griswold
Narrated by: Jennifer Pickens
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Long-listed, Minneapolis Star Tribune Holiday Book Recommendations, 2024

Long-listed, Publishers Weekly Best Books of the Year, 2024

National Book Awards, Finalist, 2024

New York Times Book Review Notable Books of the Year, 2024

Long-listed, Washington Post Best Books of the Year, 2024

Long-listed, NPR Best Book of the Year, 2024

Long-listed, Boston Globe Best Books of the Year, 2024

A Pulitzer Prize winner’s intimate portrait of a church, its radical mission, and its riveting crisis.

"Jennifer Pickens adopts an even-keeled reportorial cadence and timbre well suited to Griswold's immersion journalism, which recounts the rise and fall of Circle of Hope."—AudioFile

“The revolution I wanted to be part of was in the church.”

Americans have been leaving their churches. Some drift away. Some stay home. And some have been searching for—and finding—more authentic ways to find and follow Jesus.

This is the story of one such “radical outpost of Jesus followers” dedicated to service, the Sermon on the Mount, and working toward justice for all in this life, not just salvation for some in the next. Part of a little-known yet influential movement at the edge of American evangelicalism, Philadelphia’s Circle of Hope grew for forty years, planted four congregations, and then found itself in crisis.

The story that follows is an American allegory full of questions with urgent relevance for so many of us, not just the faithful: How do we commit to one another and our better selves in a fracturing world? Where does power live? Can it be shared? How do we make “the least of these” welcome?

Building on years of deep reporting, the Pulitzer Prize winner Eliza Griswold has crafted an intimate, immersive, tenderhearted portrait of a community, as well as a riveting chronicle of its transformation, bearing witness to the ways a deeply committed membership and their team of devoted pastors are striving toward change that might help their church survive. Through generational rifts, an increasingly politicized religious landscape, a pandemic that prevented gathering to worship, and a rise in foundation-shaking activism, Circle of Hope tells a propulsive, layered story of what we do to stay true to our beliefs. It is a soaring, searing examination of what it means for us to love, to grow, and to disagree.

A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

©2024 Eliza Griswold (P)2024 Macmillan Audio
Christianity Evangelism Ministry & Evangelism Religious Studies Sociology

Critic reviews

“Riveting . . . A fascinating inquest into the death of a church that doubles as a compassionate case study on the insufficiency of good intentions.”Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Eliza Griswold is a dazzling reporter: ever observant, wise, sympathetic, and honest. And in this spellbinding book, she not only immerses herself in a radical religious community but also reveals its fracturing in real time, raising questions about the nature of faith and justice and what binds us as Americans.”—David Grann, author of The Wager

Circle of Hope is an act of courage, vulnerability, and creativity—all things that make Eliza Griswold’s seasoned voice once again strike with strength.”—Danté Stewart, author of Shoutin’ in the Fire

All stars
Most relevant
The author started out what she thought was to detail a church that thought it was extraordinary but turned out to be ordinary. A person can be humble materialistically but if you can’t humble yourself in all aspects of your life it’s hard to lead a church. The hard part is the journey inward. I wish nothing but the best for Rachel Julie Ben and Jonny. Although you do leave the book with favorites.

Nothing goes as planned

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Suspenseful, lucid, caring story of Circle of Hope's loving actions for the homeless, addicted, harmed, confused, selfish, destructive, and lost in the midst of the Christians' own failures, sins, getting caught in false ideologies that tore the beloved community apart.

Empathy and hope despite tragedies, loss, fanaticism

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A detailed and full access account to many sides of a conflicted time as a church community wrestles with pandemic and their own flawed systems and characters.

Insightful full account of a painful time

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I’m a non-theistic humanist, but I was raised in a religious and contemplative family, very active in social justice. COH reminds me of a community I belonged to as a teenager, which imploded in similar fashion. Like others, I found this book harrowing but engrossing. I have not much to add upon other reviews except this: Rod, along with his faults, turned out to have prescient wisdom about a few things. His absence for a year or two might have made things a bit less tangled, but it seemed to me—in the end—the younger pastors who shunned him made their own misery by not heeding his advice and by straying far afield from too many of the church practices he had helped develop over 3 decades of experience. However, in the end, it seemed to turn out for the best. I do hope Rachel returned to pastoring. Of the four, she seemed uniquely gifted for it,

Worthy read for faith seekers, church-minded, etc.

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Amazing balanced capture of the strengths and wrestles of pastors and a Christian community attempting to be present and viable in an ever shifting American culture.

A not so perfect view

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