|
|
Books > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations > Christian ministry & pastoral activity
 |
Wise Church
(Hardcover)
Scot McKnight, Daniel J Hanlon
|
R932
R806
Discovery Miles 8 060
Save R126 (14%)
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
"A great deal of confusion exists today as to what pastors are
to be," Lawrence writes. "Are they chaplains, CEO's, preachers,
managers, or counselors? Paul gave us the answer long ago: They are
to be equippers, disciple-makers." Just as the great artist
Michelangelo took a chipped and flawed piece of marble and
transformed it into a masterful sculpture of David, so does a
pastor with his flock. "This is pastoring," writes Lawrence,
"serving as sculptors of souls."
Christianity Today Book Award Winner Outreach Recommended Resource
of the Year (Counseling and Relationships) The church and science
have drifted apart over the past century. Today the church is often
deemed irrelevant by those who trust science, and science is often
deemed irrelevant by those whose primary loyalties are to the
church. However, this book shows that the new science of
virtue--the field of positive psychology--can serve as a bridge
point between science and the church and can help renew meaningful
conversation. In essence, positive psychology examines how ordinary
people can become happier and more fulfilled. Mark McMinn clarifies
how positive psychology can complement Christian faith and promote
happiness and personal flourishing. In addition, he shows how the
church can help strengthen positive psychology. McMinn brings the
church's experience and wisdom on six virtues--humility,
forgiveness, gratitude, grace, hope, and wisdom--into conversation
with intriguing scientific findings from positive psychology. Each
chapter includes a section addressing Christian counselors who seek
to promote happiness and fulfillment in others.
Southwestern Journal of Theology 2021 Book of the Year Award
(Honorable Mention, Preaching/Ministry/Leadership) A veteran pastor
with thirty years of experience guides readers through a ten-step
process to preaching Old Testament narratives from text selection
to delivery. The first edition received a Christianity Today award
of merit and a Preaching magazine Book of the Year award. This
edition, now updated and revised throughout for a new generation,
includes a new chapter on how to preach Christ from the Old
Testament and an exemplary sample sermon from Mathewson. Foreword
by Haddon W. Robinson.
Christianity Today 2022 Book Award Winner (Church/Pastoral
Leadership) Outreach 2022 Recommended Resource (Church)
Southwestern Journal of Theology 2021 Book of the Year Award
(Honorable Mention, Preaching/Ministry/Leadership) Offering an
important corrective to a pain-averse culture that celebrates
individualism and success, veteran preacher and teacher Matthew Kim
encourages pastors to preach on the painful issues their
congregations face. Through vulnerability and self-disclosure,
pastors can help their congregants share their suffering in
community for the purpose of healing and transformation. The book
includes stories, shares relevant Scripture texts imparting
biblical wisdom, and offers best practices for preaching on
specific topics. Each chapter ends with discussion questions and a
sample sermon.
A major and continuing problem for theological education and the
practice of Christian ministry is how to best achieve a genuine
integration between theory and practice, theology and experience.
The key claim of this book is that theological reflection,
beginning with experience, is a method of integration and that
pastoral supervision is a vehicle for theological reflection. In
establishing this claim, John Paver demonstrates that the model and
method have potential to be a catalyst for reform within
theological colleges and seminaries. Three different theological
reflection models are developed and critiqued in this book, and
their capacity to be developed in particular contexts is explored.
This book does not stop at ministry, cultural and personal
integration, but is bold enough to make recommendations for
structural integration within the theological institution.
 |
Inextinguishable!
(Hardcover)
David Mayorga; Edited by Emily Rose King
|
R669
R598
Discovery Miles 5 980
Save R71 (11%)
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
Learn to apply the lessons found in the Bible to the struggles of
day-to-day life Pastoral Care from the Pulpit connects the head,
heart, and soul issues of everyday life, presenting a pastoral care
approach to preaching and teaching practical Christianity. This
powerful, progressive book gives hope to anyone struggling to
survive and thrive as a spiritual person in difficult times. The
author, a practicing psychotherapist who is also an ordained
minister, explores Biblical stories and passages to find practical
motivations for living as a Christian, offering encouragement to
those suffering from a lack of purpose, identity, or acceptance.
Pastoral Care from the Pulpit makes creative use of counseling and
pastoral care principles to serve as a handbook for spiritual
survival against life's everyday challenges. The book is an
outgrowth of sermons delivered by the author at First Christian
Church in Rome, Georgia, creative explorations of the Bible that
blend theology with preaching to remain relevant to real life. It
can be read a chapter at a time for daily affirmation, or taught
one chapter a week as a class study; questions are provided at the
end of each chapter to encourage reflection. Pastoral Care from the
Pulpit provides positive principles for living and powerful
encouragements for transformation during life's journey. The book
includes: The Transforming Power of Touch (Matthew 8:40-48) Seeing
Possibilities and Potentialities in Your Identity (Mark 10:46-52)
Does God Put You to the Test or Take the Test for You? (Genesis
22:1-18) A Not-So-Modest Proposal: Follow Jesus (Matthew 4:18-23)
Wandering into Far Countries: With Whom Are You Traveling? (Luke
15:11-31) Finding Freedom from False Assumptions (John 14:25-27)
Saying YES to the Way of Jesus (John 10:10) Drinking Out of a Glass
with a Hole in the Bottom (Jeremiah 2:1-13) and much more! Pastoral
Care from the Pulpit is an invaluable aid for ministers, chaplains,
and pastoral counselors working with mainstream Christian
denominations.
Learn to balance the professional demands of your ministry with
your personal needs No amount of research, study, or planning can
prepare pastoral care givers for the stress placed on their
personal lives by the demands of their ministries. But Grief, Loss,
and Death: The Shadow Side of Ministry can help anyone involved in
pastoral counseling close the gap between their professional and
personal needs, encouraging them to use the stress, loss, and grief
that accompanies pastoral care giving as opportunities to humanize
their ministries and reaffirm their faith. This unique book offers
comfort and solace to those in the chaplaincy who are torn between
professional obligations and the limits and boundaries of the
shadow side of their ministrythe human side. The shadow side of
ministry shoots a bullet through the brain that does not kill or
prevent thinking or feeling. But the bullet creates a hole, a long,
hollow, empty wound that thinking and feeling must somehow bypass.
The wounded minister does not recover the previous self, cannot
remember what the old self thought or felt. Like a veteran of a
secret war, there may be a new life after the shameful wound, but
no public way to heal. But there is a public way of speaking about
it and this may help relieve some of the shame and some of the
self-blaming. Author Halbert Weidner Grief, Loss, and Death: The
Shadow Side of Ministry can help in your search for the answers to
questions you may have already found yourself asking, including: Do
I prefer co-workers or friends? How did I lose focus of my original
goals? How did I become isolated? How can I share authority without
giving up responsibility? How do I cope when family issues arise?
The book also addresses issues of illness, death and suicide,
funerals, the confrontation between joy and sorrow, and how life's
stages are often like the Stations of the Cross. Grief, Loss, and
Death: The Shadow Side of Ministry is help against despair.
Newcomers to the profession can use the book as a guide to the
difficulties that lie ahead, and experienced pastoral care givers
can employ it as a catalogue to be consulted when all hope seems
lost.
By 2030, 20% of the people living in the United States will be age
65 or older, with unique spiritual needs that can affect their
physical and mental well-being. This book answers the critical need
for a ministry that doesn't center primarily on youth and families
in its outreach, instead presenting a step-by-step guide to
developing a ministry for the aged that is focused on the needs and
resources of each congregation. This program has been used
effectively with nearly 50 congregations, both large and small, to
create a focused older adult ministry. No two congregations are
alike. The resources, perspectives, and skills of each congregation
are different, as are the needs of its members. This book provides
a framework for use by planning groups within communities of any
religious tradition. The book presents a process that includes
essential questions that allow planning groups to develop answers
that fit the needs, cultural, history, and structure of their
individual congregations. The book is divided into three sections:
"The Fundamentals"-defining your audience, your mission, and the
skills and existing programs that can be brought to the planning
process "Programming Possibilities"-spiritual needs based on the
aging process, continued learning for older adults, opportunities
to serve and be served, providing quality pastoral care, and
community building "Putting it All Together"-deciding on a
direction, using desired outcomes for evaluation, establishing
target dates, and ongoing evaluation This book also includes forms
and charts to help in the planning process. The book is an
invaluable resource for clergy, ministry committees and planning
groups, and staff persons responsible for older adult ministries.
Understand the basic practical aspects of pastoral careand make
your visit to the sick meaningful for both of you! Training Guide
for Visiting the Sick: More Than a Social Call is a useful handbook
from a Christian perspective that provides the common sense and
not-so-common answers to your questions on how best to minister to
the sick. Drawing on his three decades of experience as a bedside
hospital chaplain, the author explains appropriate and
inappropriate behaviors and suggests things to say (or not to say)
to truly make your next visit fruitful for you and the patient.
More than simply an educational tool, this guidebook provides
clergy and Christian laypeople with spiritual explanations and
straightforward strategies to not only comfort the patient but also
foster the sense of joy and accomplishment in oneself. Training
Guide for Visiting the Sick: More Than a Social Call teaches you to
glean a positive experience from a difficult task, the visit to the
sick. The author shares his insights learned in his lengthy and
distinguished career in this instructional guidebook. Honest and
compassionate in its portrayal of the sick and dying, the book
prepares the reader spiritually, emotionally, and even physically
for the challenge of the visit while focusing on the distress and
the needs of the patient. At times stating practical common sense,
other times shining an insightful light on the less physical
aspects of the visit, this educational handbook is invaluable for
all who minister, or wish to minister, to the sick. Training Guide
for Visiting the Sick: More Than a Social Call discusses: Jesus'
Eleventh CommandmentTo Love One Another how to prepare yourself
spiritually and emotionally for the visit the hospital patient's
world explanations of patients' possible emotional, financial,
family, and spiritual distress do's and don'ts to note before and
during a visit to the patient's room the special needs of shut-ins
ministering to the dying ministering to difficult patients
ministering to Alzheimer's or comatose patients Training Guide for
Visiting the Sick: More Than a Social Call is a practical
educational guide for pastors, supervisors in clinical pastoral
education programs, CPE students, college and seminary students in
courses in ministry to the sick, police and fire department
chaplains, and family and friends of hospitalized, nursing home,
and assisted living patients/residents.
|
|