Christopher L. Heuertz
"In an age of narcissistic entitlement, Scott's humble but straightforward reflections challenge a leadership-enamored church to discover the grace in service and submission. You'll be challenged and inspired by this fantastic contribution to the conversation on servant leadership. Honest and confessional, How to Inherit the Earth is great read."
Christopher L. Heuertz, international director of Word Made Flesh and author of Simple Spirituality and Friendship at the Margins
Shane Claiborne
"Bessenecker casts out some demons from the Pentagon and Wall Street. He names somepopularidolslike security and independence, and calls us to a simple faith rooted in our love of God and neighbor, which means interdependence and vulnerability and all sorts of countercultural values. Scott offers a simple and scandalous invitation into the upside-down kingdom of God. This kingdom is about a God who blesses the meek in a world that admires aggression. It is about a God who blesses the peacemakers in a world that blesses the warriors. It is about a God who blesses the poor, not just the middle class, a God who casts the mighty from their thrones and raises the lowly, who fills the hungry with good things and sends the rich away empty. Bessenecker offers a message that drips with Jesus--and the kingdom vision is just as offensive and revolutionary and fascinating and timely today as it was thousands of years ago. Beware . . . it could get you in a little trouble or cost you your job--but itwillcertainlysetyoufree."
Shane Claiborne, author,activist,recoveringsinner (www.thesimpleway.org)
Bart Campolo
"Many Christian writers bounce from theme to theme, looking for one that will generate big sales, and so their work never ventures far from the surface. Scott Bessenecker is not one of them. In both his life and his writing, he keeps pursuing the same question: What does it mean to follow Jesus in a broken world full of needy people? His answers keep going deeper and deeper . . . and farther and farther away from the material values and power politics that have come to dominate the evangelical community in North America. I don't know how many books he'll sell this time, but then, I don't know how many books his Teacher would be selling these days either. What I do know is that, in the right hands, this is the kind of book that can make someone dangerous to the status quo."
Bart Campolo, urban minister