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Eric D. Hovee

About the Author

As of early 2025, Eric D. Hovee is transitioning from a 40+ year professional vocation in economic and development consulting to an avocation focused on personal rediscovery.

For over four decades, he met the specific needs of private, non-profit, and public agency clients through his independent consulting firm, E. D. Hovee & Company, LLC. Before establishing his consulting practice in 1984, he held roles as Economic Development Manager for both the City of Vancouver, WA, and previously the City of Portland, OR.

Eric holds a degree in economics and urban studies from the University of Pennsylvania. He has also shared his expertise as an instructor and speaker for organizations such as the National Main Street Center and the U.S. Conference of Mayors, as well as for various statewide planning and development organizations across North America.

Locally, he remains engaged through involvement on public-private boards advocating for neighborhood issues, affordable housing, downtown revitalization, workforce training, and economic development.

About the Book

Conflict & Peace: At Home with Jesus

Those of Christian faith and those without all carry personalized perceptions about Jesus of Nazareth - some form of god and/or man who sojourned briefly on earth 20 centuries ago. Perspectives vary wildly. But few, whether of Christian or non-Christian persuasion, feel comfortable characterizing this Jesus as one who brashly declares that he came not to bring peace on earth... but rather division. In this book, author Eric Hovee traces a seemingly never-ending Christian dialogue and practice that may espouse peace but often engages in conflict. The author explores this interplay through the lives, beliefs, and practices of 12 pioneers who helped shape Christianity as it has been handed down to us today. We begin with the contrasting perspectives of the four gospel writers - Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John - and continue with pivotal, yet sometimes conflicted, early church leaders such as Paul, James, Peter, Thomas, and Mary Magdalene. The journey then skips forward three centuries to the Roman Emperor Constantine, who sought to marry church and state, before moving another millennium ahead to Martin Luther, who sought to radically reform it all, and finally circles back to our starting point: Jesus, as the one who intended it all. How best to experience conflict, and yet find peace? Every day and through every phase of human existence, there is an opportunity for resolution and partnership, in step and at home with Jesus. We seek a Jesus who consistently demonstrates that, just when we think we have the answers, new questions arise. When we feel we've run the race, we find we've only just begun.