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Books > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations > Christian mission & evangelism
A religious studies scholar argues that in antebellum America,
evangelicals, not Transcendentalists, connected ordinary Americans
with their spiritual roots in the natural world. We have long
credited Emerson and his fellow Transcendentalists with
revolutionizing religious life in America and introducing a new
appreciation of nature. Breaking with Protestant orthodoxy, these
New Englanders claimed that God could be found not in church but in
forest, fields, and streams. Their spiritual nonconformity had
thrilling implications but never traveled far beyond their circle.
In this essential reconsideration of American faith in the years
leading up to the Civil War, Brett Malcolm Grainger argues that it
was not the Transcendentalists but the evangelical revivalists who
transformed the everyday religious life of Americans and
spiritualized the natural environment. Evangelical Christianity won
believers from the rural South to the industrial North: this was
the true popular religion of the antebellum years. Revivalists went
to the woods not to free themselves from the constraints of
Christianity but to renew their ties to God. Evangelical
Christianity provided a sense of enchantment for those alienated by
a rapidly industrializing world. In forested camp meetings and
riverside baptisms, in private contemplation and public water
cures, in electrotherapy and mesmerism, American evangelicals
communed with nature, God, and one another. A distinctive
spirituality emerged pairing personal piety with a mystical
relation to nature. As Church in the Wild reveals, the revivalist
attitude toward nature and the material world, which echoed that of
Catholicism, spread like wildfire among Christians of all
backgrounds during the years leading up to the Civil War.
With practical, biblical wisdom, this book casts a vision for the
local church as the engine of world missions-for the joy of all
people and the glory of God.
La question ecologique inquiete les ecologistes et les
climato-septiques. Sans se confondre, avec eux, le theologien
Augustin Kalamba propose a travers ce livre une " ecologie
theo-logique ". Fondee sur la cosmologie du salut d'Adolphe Gesche
et l'ecologie integrale du pape Francois, elle est un projet
spirituel d'ordre superieur qui, partant d'une approche
phenomenologique de la crise ecologique, reaffirme la
responsabilite de " l'homme-parlant-de-Dieu-dans-la-foi " dans le
projet du salut du cosmos. L'homme est invite a redecouvrir
l'identite eco-theologique du monde comme " creation " et " maison
commune " afin de le cultiver, labourer, proteger, et sauve-garder
avec gratitude et dans la serenite qui vient de la foi en un Dieu
Createur du ciel et de la terre, de l'univers visible et invisible.
So you're on fire, you want to make a difference, you want to
change the world...but how? Signing up for a service project or
mission trip is a great first step. But you probably have a lot of
questions. Are you ready for the different cultures you may
encounter? How are you going to really connect with the people you
serve? And what about when you come home-how do you make sense of
all the things you've experienced? Will any of it make a lasting
difference for anyone? It turns out that if you really want to
change the world, you have to change too. The only way that's going
to happen is if you spend time before, during, and after your trip
preparing for and processing your work. This Journal will help you
think about: * Why you're going * The people you're serving * Your
relationship with your teammates * How God factors into your
service project * The impact your experience has had on you * How
you can keep making a difference back at home If you think you're
fired up to serve now, just wait! This hands-on Journal will equip
you to serve in a way that sticks-both for you and those you serve.
* How you can keep making a difference back at home If you think
you're fired up to serve now, just wait! This hands-on Journal will
equip you to serve in a way that sticks-both for you and those you
serve.
Essays exploring different facets of the life and influence of
Edmund Campion, the sixteenth-century Jesuit and martyr. This
volume forms the first modern study of Edmund Campion, the Jesuit
priest executed at Tyburn in 1581, and through him focuses on a
theme that has been attracting growing interest among
sixteenth-century historians: the passagefrom a Catholic to an
Anglican England, and the resistance to this move. The essays
collected here investigate the historical context of Campion's
mission; different aspects of his writing and work; the network of
colleagues withwhom he was in contact; his relationship with
contemporaries such as Sir Philip Sidney; the effect of his English
mission; and the legacy he left. THOMAS M. MCCOOG, S.J. is the
Archivist of the British province of theSociety of Jesus and a
member of the Jesuit Historical Institute at Rome. Contributors:
FRANCISCO DE BORJA MEDINA, JOHN BOSSY, NANCY POLLARD BROWN,
KATHERINE DUNCAN-JONES, DENNIS FLYNN, VICTOR HOULISTON, JOHN J.
LAROCCA, COLM LENNON, DAVID LOADES, JAMES MCCONICA, THOMAS M.
MCCOOG, THOMAS MAYER, MICHAEL QUESTIER, ALISON SHELL, MICHAEL E.
WILLIAMS
Mit der neuzeitlichen Sakularisierung verliert auch der
Protestantismus seinen Volkskirchencharakter. Das hat eine
Neuorientierung zur Folge. An die Stelledes theistischen
Gottesbildes tritt das Paradox vom 'abwesenden' Gott. Der Autor
interpretiert das Glaubensparadox als Widerfahrnis von Befreiung
und Verpflichtung durch den Anderen in der 'Spur' Gottes. Er
diskutiert diese fur die Zivilgesellschaft relevanten Potentiale
mit Feministischer Theologie, mit der Umgestaltung des
Erloesungschristentums in einen Protestantismus der Versoehnung mit
unserer Endlichkeit und der Schoepfungswelt. Vom methodischen
Gesichtspunkt wahlt der Autor einen
phanomenologisch-dekonstruktiven Ansatz im Gesprach mit Bonhoeffer,
Nancy, Levinas und mit der protestantischen Tradition.
Das Buch befasst sich mit der Frage, welche Bedeutung einem
ehelosen Leben zukommt und vertritt die These, dass die
Ehelosigkeit in den synoptischen Evange-lien immer eng mit der
Nachfolge Jesu verbunden sei. Die Autorin untersucht diese Frage
anhand neutestamentlicher Zeugnisse. Als Ausgangspunkt dient die
lukanische Fassung des Gesprachs Jesu mit den Sadduzaern (Lk
20,27-40). Die Autorin analysiert, unter welchem Einfluss und aus
welchem Grund das Lukasevangelium eine veranderte Fassung des
ersten Teils der Antwort Jesu im Gesprach mit den Sadduzaern
schildert, was diese AEnderung bedeutet und wie diese interpretiert
werden soll.
Die vorliegende Arbeit moechte zeigen, wie Karl Barth in seiner
Auseinandersetzung mit dem Religionsbegriff zu den Thesen 'Religion
als Unglaube' und 'die christliche Religion als die einzig
wirkliche und wahre Religion' in der Kirchlichen Dogmatik (KD) 17 -
Gottes Offenbarung als Aufhebung der Religion -gelangt. Sie
beschaftigt sich mit Barths AEusserungen zum Verhaltnis von
Religion und Wahrheit im Zeitraum von 1909 bis 1938 und richtet
sich auf die konstruktive Rolle von 'Religion' und damit auf die
Frage, welche argumentative Rolle und Funktion Barth dem
Religionsbegriff zuweist. Daruber hinaus koennte die konstruktive
Rolle von 'Religion' in Barths Theologie der zeitgenoessischen
Religionswissenschaft eine neue Perspektive eroeffnen.
Was ist der Mensch? Diese Frage stellt sich angesichts von
Verfuhrbarkeit, Totalitarismus und Barbarei im 20. Jahrhundert mit
grosser Dringlichkeit. Die Analyse menschlicher Existenz spielt
deshalb fur den Religionsphilosophen Eugen Biser (1918 bis 2014)
eine fundamentale Rolle. Wo liegen religioese Potentiale des
Einzelnen? Was vermag therapeutische Theologie? Welche
Moeglichkeiten des Menschseins eroeffnen sich im 21. Jahrhundert?
Um solche Fragen zu beantworten, fuhrte ein Berliner Symposium
Forscherinnen und Forscher, Wissenschaftler, Kunstlerinnen und
Politiker zusammen, um mit Blick auf Eugen Biser die Zeichen der
Zeit geistesgegenwartig zu deuten.
Was schreibt man einer trauernden, kaiserlichen Witwe? Wie macht
man ihr ein asketisches Leben schmackhaft und bringt sie dazu,
obwohl man sie persoenlich nicht kennt, mit einem Freundschaft zu
schliessen? Derartige Fragen durfte sich Hieronymus gestellt haben,
als er sich ca. im Jahre 399 brieflich an die Dame Salvina wandte.
Diese kunstvoll gestaltete Epistel nimmt Philip Polcar in ihren
Details und grossen argumentativen Linien in den Blick. Sie ist ein
Kleinod der spatantiken Konsolationsliteratur und gleichzeitig ein
Werbetraktat fur eine lebenslange Keuschheit. Die individuellen
Trostgedanken und Ratschlage entpuppen sich als Zugang zur
asketischen Froemmigkeit und zur Kommunikation unter Gebildeten in
der christlich werdenden Spatantike.
Der Band setzt sich mit der Frage auseinander, wie sich der
christliche Glaube zu den nichtchristlichen Religionen und deren
Wahrheitsanspruchen verhalt. Der Autor versammelt seine
religionstheologischen Aufsatze der letzten 25 Jahre und ordnet sie
nach systematischen Gesichtspunkten. In unterschiedlichen
Argumentationszusammenhangen und unter verschiedenen Aspekten
entwickelt er eine Methode der Religionstheologie, die sich vom
Mainstream unterscheidet und von der Problematik des
Offenbarungsbegriffs ausgeht und wie sie von der christlichen
Botschaft beantwortet wird. Hierzu entwickelt der Autor einen
"interioristischen" Zugang zu den Religionen, der auf der Basis des
christlichen Glaubens anderen Religionen - anders als im
Inklusivismus - unuberbietbare Wahrheit zuerkennen kann, ohne dabei
- wie im Pluralismus - die christliche Wahrheit zu relativieren.
Damit setzt dieser Band auch neue Akzente im christlich-judischen
wie im christlich-islamischen Verhaltnis.
Throughout the nineteenth century the relationship between the
State and the Established Church of England engaged Parliament, the
Church, the courts and - to an increasing degree - the people.
During this period, the spectre of Disestablishment periodically
loomed over these debates, in the cause - as Trollope put it - of
'the renewal of inquiry as to the connection which exists between
the Crown and the Mitre'. As our own twenty-first century gathers
pace, Disestablishment has still not materialised: though a very
different kind of dynamic between Church and State has anyway come
into being in England. Professor Evans here tells the stories of
the controversies which have made such change possible - including
the revival of Convocation, the Church's own parliament - as well
as the many memorable characters involved. The author's lively
narrative includes much valuable material about key areas of
ecclesiastical law that is of relevance to the future Church of
England.
 |
Buried Seeds
(Hardcover)
Alexia Salvatierra, Brandon Wrencher
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R1,572
Discovery Miles 15 720
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Unthinkable only decades ago, America is now raising up
generations of people who are "radically unchurched"-those who have
had little contact with a Christ-centered church and have no clear
understanding of the gospel message. This state of affairs isn't
likely to change unless Christians can communicate the significance
of their message to a culture that regards the church as irrelevant
and outmoded.
Calling for a passionate overhaul of how Christians see and
interact with individuals outside the church, Alvin Reid
demonstrates a clear understanding of the distinction between the
changeless basics of the faith and negotiable traditions, programs,
and artifacts. He examines the causes behind the loss of America's
Christian identity and the resulting failure of the American church
to understand and utilize the New Testament pattern of penetrating
an indifferent culture with the gospel. Reid offers proven
strategies for touching people who desperately need to be
confronted with life-changing Christianity.
Weighs the use of mission and missions language today
Praise for "The Missional Leader"
"Alan J. Roxburgh and Fred Romanuk are two of the few people in
the world today who understand how we can create an environment for
the missional transformation of the church for the postmodern
world. Every church leader should read this book!"
--Rev. Dr. Clark D. Cowden, Presbytery of San Joaquin,
Presbyterian Church
"Discontinuous change wreaks havoc among congregations and
pastors who aren't familiar with the new terrain. When it comes to
navigating this new land, Roxburgh and Romanuk have my ear and
gratitude. Effective, dependable, useful . . . their wisdom is
helping retool our congregation for daring and robust witness. And
among my students--who feel change deep in their bones, both its
threats and opportunities--this book is a vital companion as they
begin their ministries."
--Chris William Erdman, senior pastor, University Presbyterian
Church; adjunct faculty, MB Biblical Seminary
Visit the Leadership Network Website, www.leadnet.org, for more
innovative resources and information.
This is the story of the birth and growth of Seattle's innovative
Mars Hill Church, one of America's fastest growing churches located
in one of America's toughest mission fields. It's also the story of
the growth of a pastor, the mistakes he's made along the way, and
God's grace and work in spite of those mistakes. Mark Driscoll's
emerging, missional church took a rocky road from its start in a
hot, upstairs youth room with gold shag carpet to its current
weekly attendance of thousands. With engaging humor, humility, and
candor, Driscoll shares the failures, frustrations, and just plain
messiness of trying to build a church that is faithful to the
gospel of Christ in a highly post-Christian culture. In the
telling, he's not afraid to skewer some sacred cows of traditional,
contemporary, and emerging churches. Each chapter discusses not
only the hard lessons learned but also the principles and practices
that worked and that can inform your church's ministry, no matter
its present size. The book includes discussion questions and
appendix resources. "After reading a book like this, you can never
go back to being an inwardly focused church without a mission. Even
if you disagree with Mark about some of the things he says, you
cannot help but be convicted to the inner core about what it means
to have a heart for those who don't know Jesus."-Dan Kimball,
author,The Emerging Church "... will make you laugh, cry, and get
mad ... school you, shape you, and mold you into the right kind of
priorities to lead the church in today's messy world."-Robert
Webber, Northern Seminary
In the decades before colonial partition in Africa, the Church
Missionary Society embarked on the first serious effort to
evangelize in an independent Muslim state. Bishop Samuel Ajayi
Crowther led an all-African field staff to convert the people of
the Upper Niger and Confluence area, whose communities were
threatened or already conquered by an expanding jihadist Nupe
state. In this book, Femi J. Kolapo examines the significance of
the mission as an African-rather than European-undertaking,
assessing its impact on missionary practice, local engagement, and
Christian conversion prospects. By offering a fuller history of
this overlooked mission in the history of Christianity in Nigeria,
this book reaffirms indigenous agency and rethinks the mission as
an experiment ahead of its time.
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