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Books > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations > Christian ministry & pastoral activity
In the early morning hours of December 31, 2010, Dr. Cornelius
H. Evans and his wife received a terrible phone call: their son,
Bryant, had been shot and killed. The agonizing days that followed
brought Evans face-to-face with the realization that evil had
touched his family's life, sending him on a quest to try to
understand the role evil plays in our world.
Deeply emotional and heartfelt, Surviving Evil in a Depraved
Society offers insight into how Evans dealt with the loss of his
son by analyzing the root of violence in America-evil. He examines
various theories on evil and its origin, its effects on mankind,
and how, according to the Christian belief, evil will remain a part
of our society until Christ returns.
Evans also challenges ideologies, philosophical beliefs, and
theologies on whether one can avoid evil elements. He demonstrates
that we can be on our guard against inviting evil into our lives by
spiritually guarding ourselves and raising our children with a
strong moral foundation.
An eye-opening look at the face of evil, Surviving Evil in a
Depraved Society offers hope for living in today's world.
Much of the conversation and concern of churches and of Christian
individuals is centred around Christian discernment or knowing
God's leading in decision-making. The language we use around these
moments is fluid, and often feels inadequate - ask someone how they
'know' what God might be saying in a given situation and they may
well reach for the phrase 'I just know'. In "How Do You Know it's
God?", Lynn McChlery draws on ethnographic research amongst those
in different kinds of 'discernment' processes, along with
theological, spiritural and psychological insights to try and
understand this phenomenum of 'insight' - or 'just knowing'.
Challenging the perception that such intuition needs to be
marginalised and removed from discernment conversations, McChlery
suggests that instead intuition can and should be intentionally
matured both individually and in communities; and that it can be
verified, articulated and recorded in forms appropriate to its own
mode of insight. It is a vital new contribution to the scholarship
for all practical theologians researching ecclesiology, vocation,
group dynamics in churches, and communal decision-making processes
of any kind.
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Serving Well
(Hardcover)
Jonathan Trotter, Elizabeth Trotter; Foreword by Marilyn R Gardner
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R1,281
R1,077
Discovery Miles 10 770
Save R204 (16%)
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