
Shifting Margins
From Fear and Exclusion Toward Love and Belonging
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Kenneth Carder

This title uses virtual voice narration
About this listen
“You will find out that the margins are God’s favorite place to hang out.”
Rev. Dr. Cari Willis, Chaplain to those on death row
Through lived stories, Bishop Kenneth Carder candidly shares lessons learned from his experiences with people on the margins of society, including his own formation as the son of Appalachian tenant farmers and textile workers. By entering his life and ministry from poverty to privilege, from provincialism and segregation to beloved community, and from a religion of fear to a theology of liberating love, the reader is invited to widen the margins of their own relationships and perspectives.
The reader accompanies the author as he struggles with economic exploitation and disparity, racial segregation and white privilege, ministry with those in prisons, and the heart-wrenching loss of his wife and his own aging.
- The road map of Carder’s journey includes:
- Birthed and Nurtured on the Margins
- Early Movement from Poverty to Privilege
- A Whole New World and a Radical Shift
- Transition Back Home and a Changed World
- Poverty, Privilege, and Ministry
- Confrontation with Personal and Institutional Racism
- “I Was in Prison. . .”
- Dementia and Diminishment: Gifts from the Forgetting and the Forgotten
- Margins Keep Shifting
What Readers are Saying about Shifting Margins
Bishop Ken Carder is the consummate storyteller. These stories of his life will draw you into the broader narrative where you will not only be with Ken as he is living on the margins of society, but you will find out that the margins are God’s favorite place to hang out as well.
Cari Willis
Chaplain to those on death row
It is a memoir of God’s faithfulness toward a preacher whose integrity, patience, and love for family, the church, and the penitent remind us of the divine grace that abounds in the places, spaces, and faces we encounter and experience daily.
Read, laugh, and cry. Be encouraged. Then go and do likewise.
Robin Dease
Bishop, North Georgia Conference of The United Methodist Church
Carder’s gentle storytelling reflects the heart of a sage. His childhood of poverty, adulthood of privilege and power, and deep reflection about systemic oppression draw the reader into the complexities and beauty of humanity. The stitching together of transformative experiences becomes the literary patchwork quilt of love.
Bishop Connie Mitchell Shelton
Shifting Margins is the story of growing up in the Appalachian hills of East Tennessee. Bishop Carder’s book is a lesson in the lived experience of poverty, marginalization, and powerlessness. Even a naïve person of privilege will be exposed to a significant index of how to begin relationships with the poor and the oppressed by simply walking through these pages. It is also the story of Carder’s pastoral ministry and episcopacy—the challenges, issues, failures he had to confront, and the victories he knew. Do yourself a favor: walk with this poor kid, preacher, pastor, professor, and episcopal leader through the last eighty years. It will inform, and it may transform your life.
Tex Sample
Bishop Ken Carder is a gifted and generous storyteller. Ken tells his story with clarity, sensitivity, vulnerability, and grace. In so doing, he connects us not just to himself but to our humanity and to the God who longs for God’s story to become fully alive in each of us and all of us. I am so glad Megan kept saying, “Pawpaw, tell me a story.”
Bishop Gregory Palmer
Each chapter draws the reader into increased engagement and intimacy with the situations Bishop Carder has faced. Shifting Margins is a must-read for any person interested in spiritual formation.
Pamela Couture, Emmanuel College of Victoria University
What listeners say about Shifting Margins
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Christy Ann Clark
- 01-10-25
powerful witness, pleasant narration
I love this book. I heard Bishop Carter speak at a conference a year ago and was excited to hear more of his story in this book. I love the assertion that Jesus is with the marginalized, and thus, the margins ought to be centralized in our Kristian practice and witness. His story is told with humor, humility, and true confession; confession is one of the things the church sometimes misses. I believe that this book gives hope to all people. I think this model provides powerful insight into what it can look like to extend our table, Jesus‘s table, to those imprisoned, the aging/declining, ethnic minorities, and many others. Of course, the powerful summary statements at the end of each chapter help keep us on track. I recommend this book to church groups, pastors, and laity interested in powerful models of Christian discipleship.
The narration was surprisingly good as well. I wasn’t sure what to expect, but even speeding up the voice. It still sounded good and then AI narrator had good pronunciation and did not distract from the reading as sometimes AI voices do.
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