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Books > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations
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Jesus of Nazareth
(Hardcover)
Christianne Meroz; Translated by Dennis Wienk
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R704
R617
Discovery Miles 6 170
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A new way to follow Jesus that draws on old ways of following him.
Prominent progressive writer, speaker, and minister Robin Meyers
proposes that the best way for the faithful to recapture the spirit
of the early Christian church is to recognize that Jesus-following
was - and must be again - subversive in the best sense of the word
because the gospel taken seriously turns the world upside down. No
matter how the church may organize itself or worship, the defining
characteristic of the church of the future will be its
Jesus-inspired countercultural witness.
Although our planet faces numerous ecological crises, including
climate change, many Christians continue to view their faith as
primarily a "spiritual" matter that has little relationship to the
world in which we live. But Steven Bouma-Prediger contends that
protecting and restoring our planet is part and parcel of what it
means to be a Christian. Making his case from Scripture, theology,
and ethics and including insights from the global church,
Bouma-Prediger explains why Christians must acknowledge their
identity as earthkeepers and therefore embrace their calling to
serve and protect their home planet and fellow creatures. To help
readers put an "earthkeeping faith" into practice, he also suggests
numerous practical steps that concerned believers can take to care
for the planet. Bouma-Prediger unfolds a biblical vision of
earthkeeping and challenges Christians to view care for the earth
as an integral part of Christian discipleship.
Hans Urs von Balthasar, one of the preeminent theologians of Roman
Catholic theology in the modern-era, constructed a theological
world suffused by the literary, a vision carried across over 16
volumes of his magnum opus. A Generous Symphony offers a balanced
appraisal of Balthasar's literary achievement and explicates
Balthasar's literary criticism as a distinctive theology of
revelation, which offers possibilities for understanding how divine
presence may be manifested outside the canonical boundaries of
Christian tradition. The structure of A Generous Symphony is a
chronological presentation of the Balthasarian canon of imaginative
literature, which allows readers to see how social and historical
interests guide Balthasar's readings in the pre-Christian,
medieval, and modern eras. Balthasar's deep investment in the
uniqueness of Christian revelation is underlined, while, at the
same time, his aesthetic sympathies cause him to invest literature
with 'quasi-sacramental' status.
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