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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations > Christian mission & evangelism
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Changing Stories
(Hardcover)
Jairo De Oliveira; Foreword by J. D. Payne
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R1,054
R851
Discovery Miles 8 510
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Military Ministry
(Hardcover)
Paul E Linzey, B Keith Travis; Foreword by Jeff Iorg
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R1,160
R939
Discovery Miles 9 390
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New Directions in Mission and Evangelization 3 contemplates the
relationship between Christian faith and human culture.
Representing a variety of branches from the Christian church and
located in areas around the world, the contributors express their
views on the question of "inculturation" in a text designed for
classroom use in courses on mission and world Christianity.
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Losing Church
(Hardcover)
Michael J Gehring, Joe A Hamby
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R887
R731
Discovery Miles 7 310
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Does the thought of doing evangelism fill you with fear and make
you want to run for the door? Do you struggle to find motivation to
share your faith? Have you had uncomfortable experiences with
evangelism that you would rather not repeat? If so, this book is
for you. God's Dream will take you on a journey to discover the
purpose God has for you in fulfilling his dream. It will inspire
you to try evangelism again no matter what your previous
experiences have been. "This is the best book I have read on
evangelism in the past ten years." Derrick, YWAM Missionary. "For
many, God's Dream will redeem the concept and practice of
evangelism. It is practical and theologically thorough." David
Webster, MA, Eastgate Church Director. "This book is a real tonic
for all of us who feel out of our depth with the big 'E'. Laced
with brilliant real life stories and examples of how easy
evangelism can be when we partner with the Holy Spirit." Mark
Hendley, Director of The Stones Cry Out. Today, more people are
becoming Christians than at any other point in history, but in
modern western culture, relatively fewer people come to know God
and many Christians struggle with evangelism. Through their
personal stories and those of others, Mark and Fiona question why
this is. They look afresh at evangelism and reimagine it from God's
perspective. They consider what can be learnt from how Jesus did
evangelism, and how he introduced people to the good news of the
kingdom. Visit www.godsdream.info to find out more about the
authors.
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Number Two
(Hardcover)
Joshua L Light; Foreword by Clint Bevins
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R635
R525
Discovery Miles 5 250
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Think Red
(Hardcover)
Larry Stoess
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R909
R747
Discovery Miles 7 470
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Be inspired by a woman who dared to follow God Amy Carmichael
understood true discipleship and lived it out. At a very young age
she felt called to the mission field, followed God's guidance, and
eventually went to India, where she would spend fifty-three years
without furlough. While there, Amy founded the Dohnavur Fellowship,
a refuge for children in moral danger-children who were orphaned or
unwanted and sold to the temple. Amy became a mother for these
children, and so they called her "Amma." Even today, Amy's life of
obedience and courage stands as a model for all Christians
everywhere. We resonate with her desires and dreams, her faults and
fears, her dedication and service. For former missionary and author
Elisabeth Elliot, Amy became a role model. "She was my first
spiritual mother," writes Elliot. "She showed me the shape of
godliness." A Chance to Die is the life story of Amy Carmichael. In
this reverent biography, Elisabeth Elliot brings "Amma" to life,
providing a compelling, unforgettable narrative that will provoke
you to examine the depths of your own faith and encourage you to
reaffirm your life and commitment to Christ. Elisabeth Elliot, one
of the outstanding women of present-day Christianity, is the author
of more than twenty books, including Passion and Purity, The
Journals of Jim Elliot, and These Strange Ashes. She and her
husband, Lars Gren, live in Magnolia, Massachusetts.
Changing Frontiers of Mission reflects on the history of missions
and seeks to discern its path for the future. Ever since Jesus'
time, mission must precede the church. The renewal of the church is
linked to recovery of this priority of mission. Unlike in the past,
where the "frontier" was a geographical location, the future
"frontier" is symbolized by outward movement, away from the status
quo, and toward new challenges, growth and opportunities.
As younger generations drift away from evangelical churches, the
number of religiously unaffiliated young adults grows. Is the drift
because of politics, personal morality, rebelliousness, culture
wars, or something else? In this project, 16 young adults from the
Churches of Christ participate in qualitative interviews over a
five-year span. They describe messages they learned about success
and survival from their faith communities as children, and how they
have embraced and reinterpreted those messages into helpful life
principles as adults. The resulting study explores issues of
ethnicity in evangelical borderland communities and contrasts
Latinx narratives with white narratives in religious and educative
contexts. Findings also revealed gendered narratives, class-based
narratives, and the glaring absence of helpful narratives around
sexuality, filtered through the lenses of religion and education.
The central finding of the interviews is this: participants
experienced the Church of Christ as rewarding conformity with
community, a strategy (when it works) which secures the future of
the denomination and cements a conservative doctrine in the next
generation of leadership. However, the study concludes that true
survival narratives were the narratives participants constructed in
response to the narratives provided by Churches of Christ.
Under the leadership of William F. P. Burton and James Salter, the
Congo Evangelistic Mission (CEM) grew from a simple faith movement
founded in 1915 into one of the most successful classical
Pentecostal missions in Africa, today boasting more than one
million members in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Drawing on
artifacts, images, documents, and interviews, David Maxwell
examines the roles of missionaries and their African
collaborators-the Luba-speaking peoples of southeast Katanga-in
producing knowledge about Africa. Through the careful
reconstruction of knowledge pathways, Maxwell brings into focus the
role of Africans in shaping texts, collections, and images as well
as in challenging and adapting Western-imported presuppositions and
prejudices. Ultimately, Maxwell illustrates the mutually
constitutive nature of discourses of identity in colonial Africa
and reveals not only how the Luba shaped missionary research but
also how these coproducers of knowledge constructed and critiqued
custom and convened new ethnic communities. Making a significant
intervention in the study of both the history of African
Christianity and the cultural transformations effected by
missionary encounters across the globe, Religious Entanglements
excavates the subculture of African Pentecostalism, revealing its
potentiality for radical sociocultural change.
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