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Books > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations > Christian mission & evangelism
The Alpha Guide is a companion to either the Alpha Film Series or
Alpha with Nicky Gumbel. This guide is divided up by session with
an easy-to-read outline so that guests can follow along during each
talk. With simple bullet-point organization and plenty of room for
notes, the guide functions as an invaluable resource to the guest
during Alpha, and as a reference tool for individual reflection
long after Alpha. It is considered an essential resource for Alpha
guests as well as the host and helpers on Alpha. Alpha creates an
environment of hospitality where people can bring their friends,
family, and work colleagues to explore the Christian faith, ask
questions, and share their point of view. Alpha makes it easy to
invite friends to have spiritual conversations which explore life's
biggest questions in a safe and respectful way. Alpha's approach to
hospitality, faith, and discussion is designed to welcome everyone,
especially those who might not describe themselves as Christians or
church-goers. Each session includes time for a large group meal,
short teaching, and small group discussion.
Over the past few decades, short-term mission trips have exploded
in popularity. With easy access to affordable air travel, millions
of American Christians have journeyed internationally for ministry,
service and evangelism. Short-term trips are praised for involving
many in global mission but also critiqued for their limitations.
Despite the diversity of destinations, certain universal
commonalities emerge in how mission trip participants describe
their experiences: "My eyes were opened to the world's needs."
"They ministered to us more than we ministered to them." "It
changed my life." Anthropologist Brian Howell explores the
narrative shape of short-term mission (STM). Drawing on the
anthropology of tourism and pilgrimage, he shows how STM combines
these elements with Christian purposes of mission to create its own
distinct narrative. He provides a careful historical survey of the
development of STM and then offers an in-depth ethnographic study
of a particular mission trip to the Dominican Republic. He explores
how participants remember and interpret their experiences, and he
unpacks the implications for how North American churches understand
mission, grapple with poverty and relate to the larger global
church. A groundbreaking book for all who want to understand how
and why American Christians undertake short-term mission.
The story of the murder of a missionary in Turkey - killed because
of his faith. Rumours of a terrible, triple murder were circulating
around the world. Something horrific had happened but reports were
sketchy at best, frequently embellished and exaggerated. As hearsay
was replaced with hard evidence it was revealed that Susanne Geske
had become a martyr's widow, a long way from home, in Malatya,
eastern Turkey. With so many aggrandised stories being told as
fact, this book seeks the truth from the one person who could
provide it with complete authority - Susanne Geske - a truly
remarkable woman. Married to a Martyr is a story of tragedy and
hope.
This is a call for a new understanding of apologetics, moving away
from appeals to tran-cultural rationality, arguing for a new form
of cross-cultural dialogue. Christian apologetics is in crisis. Old
concepts do no longer hold and post-modern development pose new
questions. Benno van den Toren argues for an apologetic witness
that is an exercise in cross-cultural dialogue aimed at persuading
our conversation partners of the relevance of a life centred on the
reality revealed in Jesus Christ. Some significant steps have been
made toward the development of such a new apologetic practice. The
aim of this book is to provide theological and philosophical basis
for a new paradigm for Christian apologetic dialogue with our
post-modern and multi-cultural world and to work out its practical
relevance.
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Finding Our Way
(Hardcover)
Jeff Lockyer; Foreword by Alan Hirsch
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R797
R699
Discovery Miles 6 990
Save R98 (12%)
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As the world around us is changing, our methods also need to adapt
in order to fulfill the unchanging vision of reaching the lost.
Innovations in Missions provides outstanding opportunities to solve
the great challenges of ministry in this new Century. This book is
not an all-or-nothing approach to being innovative in ministry. It
offers what has worked in other areas and lets the reader choose
what might be a possibility for their church or ministry. It will
provide insight, encouragement and hope to those who are critically
looking at the world and considering the problems that must be
addressed. Missionaries, mission executives, mission pastors and
mission committees wanting to adapt effective strategies in order
to stay current with global changes will benefit greatly from this
book.
God is at work in the city. And he invites his people to join him.
But the city is not merely a mission field for Christians to
target. The city is also the environment where Christians are
discipled and lives are forged into the image of Jesus. Urban
ministry veteran Randy White shows how God transforms you when you
answer God's call to the city. Urban life peels away your sin and
self-deception and challenges your unexamined assumptions about
privilege, race, class and power. Experiential discipleship moves
you from abstract theory to hands-on learning and on-the-ground
action, revolutionizing your perspective and making a difference in
local neighborhoods and beyond. Passionate and practical, White's
vivid narratives of experiencing God in the city show you how your
spiritual health is intertwined with the health of the metropolis.
Seek the welfare of the city, and both you and the city will be
transformed.
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Abide and Go
(Hardcover)
Michael J. Gorman
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R1,333
R1,108
Discovery Miles 11 080
Save R225 (17%)
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Connected Learning
(Hardcover)
L Lynn Thigpen; Foreword by Tom Steffen
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R1,473
R1,214
Discovery Miles 12 140
Save R259 (18%)
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ABOUT THE BOOK: The Tommie Scott Story is a true story-a true love
story-but not of the usual variety. This is a story of a
gangbanger, drug dealer, and "hit man" who worked his way through
the juvenile reform system and into a California state prison by
age twenty. It's the story of an angry young criminal with no
remorse and no hope. And it's here-in the depths of hopeless
darkness-that this story begins again. It begins again with a
humble, gray-haired man who was not ashamed to be a servant and to
share the power of God that brings salvation to everyone who
believes. It begins again with a new birth-a spiritual rebirth into
God's family through Jesus Christ. And it continues today with a
repentant and joyful servant-a dedicated soldier for Christ-whose
true story affirms God's Word that says, ..". neither death nor
life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the
future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else
in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God
that is in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Romans 8:38 NIV). "For we are
God's handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which
God prepared in advance for us to do" (Ephesians 2:10 NIV). ****
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Tommie Scott is former gang member and now
born-again believer in Jesus Christ. He is an author, advocate for
at-risk youth, a chaplain for the Las Vegas Community Gang Task
Force, and a dedicated witness and soldier for Christ. Tommie is a
native of Southern California. He grew up in poverty and was
introduced to drugs, alcohol, and gangs as a pre-teen. The juvenile
justice system, and later the California Department of Corrections,
became his home. By God's grace, Tommie was introduced to Jesus
Christ through a faithful Christian prison ministry. Just like
Paul's dramatic conversion on the road to Damascus, God changed
Tommie's heart and life forever during a prison Bible study. Tommie
is now living and doing good works in Christ in Las Vegas, Nevada,
with his wife, Rache't, and their five children.
Who gets to narrate the world? The late Robert Webber believed this
question to be the most pressing issue of our time. Christianity in
America, he preached, will not survive if Christians are not rooted
in and informed by the uniquely Christian story that is the gospel
of Jesus Christ. This is the burden of Webber's final book, Who
Gets to Narrate the World?: Contending for the Christian Story in
an Age of Rivals. Convinced that American evangelicals are facing
the demise of their entire way of life and faith, Webber challenges
his readers to rise up and engage both the external and internal
challenges confronting them today. This means that Christians must
repent of their cultural accommodation and reclaim the unique
story--the Christian story--that God has given them both to
proclaim and to live.
In her inspiring true story of her walk of faith, Eileen shares
a candid glimpse into a God guided journey as she and Alan, her
husband, transformed by a powerful conversion, left everything
behind and travelled to India with their young family as
missionaries. Here you enter the miraculous faith venture of two
passionate people, prepared to do whatever the Lord says. Led to
witness modern day miracles of healing, and incredible answers to
prayer, Eileen and Alan embarked upon an unforgettable path of
supernatural provision, as they only made their needs known to God.
This book teaches life-changing lessons that will make you useful
to God. The story is told with purpose; weaving together lessons of
faith learnt as they took small steps everyday to grow in faith and
in the joy of the Holy Spirit. You will be challenged to get up and
live your faith.
"Faith Works" offers the compelling testimony of a couples'
salvation and missionary years in India that seeks to challenge
others to learn what it takes to be useful to God.
Mechanistic dehumanization occurs when human beings are objectified
and exploited as a means to an end, comparable to expendable
components of a machine. This misconstruction of human value is a
source and sustainer of overproduction, an excess of consumption,
and the pursuit of unrestrained economic growth, damaging both
people and the planet.The notion of mission as accompaniment
promotes solidarity among church companions that embodies
interdependence and mutuality. Grounded in the New Testament
expression of koinonia, Mission as Accompaniment is affirmed in
this study as a suitable foundation to counteract mechanistic
dehumanization.Through this research with the University of
KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa) Theology and Development program,
Brian E. Konkol incorporates economics, ecology, anthropology, and
postcolonial missiology. He maintains that two particular
elements-the African concept of Ubuntu, and an Olive Agenda-when
integrated into mission as accompaniment, will equip the ELCA
Global Mission with an advocacy-driven trajectory in response to
mechanistic dehumanization.
EVANGELISM MANUAL
This manual exemplifies the most effective methods of
evangelism. It also provides many strategic plans and guidelines
for effective evangelism. All believers, particularly those who
aspire to be in leadership or are currently in ministry should own
this evangelism manual. This manual is a much-needed resource in
the field of evangelistic outreach. It seeks to give practical
training and equipping to those who wish to fulfill the call of the
Great Commission. The manual is useful for teaching, training,
witnessing, follow-up discipleship, launching your own ministry,
and even for acquiring personal knowledge of evangelism.
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