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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian life & practice > Christian religious instruction
In the book, God and His Coexistent Relations to the Universe, the
author is rejecting the universe that Judaism, Christianity, Islam,
Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein have accepted for a long period.
To replace this old universe, an improved universe appeared from
the thoughts of Confucius, Anaxagoras, Plato, and Jesus, who taught
the death of our sun in Ch. 24 of Matthew. Unfortunately, this
teaching by Jesus was quieted for fifteen centuries by Irenaeus,
until Copernicus stood up and said that earth is not the center of
the universe. So, an improved universe was becoming very
interesting to many scientists.. This improved universe of
Copernicus would expand when Kepler found that our sun has a system
of eight precise planets. Slowly, the improved universe would
become very clear when Leibniz found the immortal human souls and
when Galileo found the bodies are made by these immortal souls. In
1766, Ben Franklin went to Germany in order to learn the immortal
souls of Leibniz. In the next ten years, Americans would separate
America from England, which still accepts the old universe. After
this separation, more discoveries would come to the USA from German
and Chinese thoughts. For example, Riemann would tell the world
that the relationships of bodies in the universe can be determined
only by our senses and measurements. With Riemann s statement, the
author concluded that God is always active. The author also found
that God and the bodies in the universe come together with
co-existent concepts. With these advances, the author rejects the
old universe and says that the people of many nations will form a
new religion under an active God."
How can you move beyond youth group? You already know that youth
ministry is about much more than Sunday night Bible study and
lock-ins. It's about changing the lives of youth and empowering
young heroes to change their world. In this book Efrem Smith
provides you with a model for holistic ministry that addresses all
the needs of youth--body, soul and spirit. Powerful stories from
Smith's urban multiethnic context shape the content of Raising Up
Young Heroes. He shows how the fashion, music and lifestyle of the
hip-hop culture are permeating youth culture and how you can enter
that culture to help your youth meet Jesus. The principles that are
the foundation ofRaising Up Young Heroes are designed to serve the
whole body of Christ. So whatever your own youth group context, you
can benefit from the Smith's rich storehouse of experience and his
huge heart for today's youth.
So begins the true story of a five month long "conversation" by
e-mail between the young Kathy and the author, Doctor Wilson Asawu,
after he returns home from the suburban community where she
attended his church seminar. The sequence of e-mail between them
shows how - one cautious, but trusting step after another -- she
finally fulfills her desire to enter a personal relationship with
God. When she has and after she makes her testimony to her sister
and her mother, they do the same. Kathy's story exposes and
addresses the "false start" syndrome: growing up in a comfortable
Christian home, believing all the right things, but finally lacking
the assurance in one's heart that one is a child of God. For any
such children, Kathy's Good News could be their good news, too.
Messages from the media and pressures from peers all seem to
conspire against raising children with strong Christian values. As
kids grow older the potential for things to go wrong just seems to
multiply. How can parents nurture their families with confidence,
without the fear that they are making some big mistake? Tim
Stafford sets you free from worrying about the Joneses or anyone
else. He shows you how to build core Christian values into your
children in a way that fits who God made your family to be, unique
and different from every other family. In this practical and
freeing book, you'll find: Why your family doesn't have to be like
other families How to build core values into your children that
will last a lifetime How you can find the patterns that fit who you
and your family are Ways to build family life that kids enjoy and
that parents find satisfying Why there's more than one, good, right
way to be a family How to build grace and freedom into your family
life while still providing structure and security Release from the
fear that you are parenting the wrong way Stafford identifies
thirteen core biblical values and describes a wide variety of ways
to build these into families. He explores the many options that are
available for parents to help their children develop in
truthfulness, contentment, hard work, joy, rest, forgiveness and
putting God first. Some books suggest there is only one right way
to parent, no matter who you are. InNever Mind the Joneses Stafford
frees you to explore the ways God has provided that fit your family
best.
Are you looking for fresh ideas to energize your small group? Here
are hundreds of activities contributed by small group experts from
across the United States. Tested in the field and drawn from the
front lines of small group ministry, these creative ideas will help
you evaluate the state of your group and enhance the five
components of healthy group life. Community activities for the four
stages of a group's life help you to get acquainted, go deeper with
one another, process conflict, make memories and prepare for your
group's ending. Whether charismatic, liturgical or somewhere in
between, you'll find ideas for worship and prayer that stretch
group members in these vital areas of spiritual growth. Your group
will grow closer to one another as you draw near to God together.
Ideas for study offer you some creative methods for Bible study and
life application as well as ideas for learning through books,
videos and other resources. A section on outreach helps your group
to look beyond its borders and serve the needs of others. You'll
find ideas for inviting others into your group and for working
together in evangelism, social action and world mission. Edited by
Cindy Bunch, this edition features new ideas gathered from The
Small Group Network (www.SmallGroups.com) founded by Michael Mack
and now directed by Dan Lentz. Whether you are a small group
leader, a group coordinator or a pastor, you will return to this
valuable resource again and again.
Book Description Flash! Ping! Whiz! Pop! Boom! Bang! Such are the
sights and sounds of modern youth ministry. We look for the bigger,
the louder, the brighter, and we work long and hard to make our
ministry the biggest, the loudest, the brightest. But look out and
listen up: God has no desire to see young people caught up in sound
and fury. Nor does he want to see youth workers burn out and fade
away. All the momentum surrounding youth ministry signifies nothing
once youth workers disengage, letting the momentum define their
purpose. Mike Higgs, reflecting on over two decades of work with
youth, thinks the greatest need among youth workers is a reminder
of who we are. We need to set aside the distractions of an emphasis
on performance and focus instead on following God in his work in
us, our students and other youth workers. When a renewed vision and
mission shapes our work with youth, our ministry will become less a
cacophony of strategies and targets and more a symphony of purpose
and practice.
This five-session small group Bible study (DVD/digital video sold
separately) by noted teacher and historian, Ray Vander Laan, is
volume five of the That the World May Know series. In this volume,
Vander Laan uncovers the passion and commitment early believers
displayed as they claimed Jesus in the face of fierce consequences
and powerful adversaries. Faith Lessons is a unique video series
that brings God's Word to life with astounding relevance. By
weaving together the Bible's fascinating historical, cultural,
religious, and geographical contexts, teacher and historian Ray
Vander Laan reveals unique insights into the Scriptures'
significance for modern believers. Filmed on location in Caesarea
Philippi, Sardis, Pergamum, Ephesus, and Laodicea, these
illuminating "faith lessons" afford a new understanding of the
Bible that will ground your convictions and transform your life.
The Faith Lessons video series is ideal for use in small groups,
personal and family Bible studies, and adult Sunday school.
Individual believers and families will gain vital insights from
long-ago times and cultures through this innovative approach to
Bible study. Lessons include: Everything to Lose, Nothing to Gain -
Filmed in Caesarea Philippi The Salt of the Earth - Filmed in
Sardis Where Satan Lives - Filmed in Pergamum The Mark of the Beast
- Filmed in Ephesus Hot or Cold - Filmed in Laodicea Designed for
use with the Early Church Video Study (sold separately).
Charles E. Curran offers the first comprehensive analysis and
criticism of the development of modern Catholic social teaching
from the perspective of theology, ethics, and church history.
Curran studies the methodology and content of the documents of
Catholic social teaching, generally understood as comprising twelve
papal letters beginning with Leo XIII's 1891 encyclical "Rerum
novarum," two documents from Vatican II, and two pastoral letters
of the U.S. bishops.
He contends that the fundamental basis for this body of teaching
comes from an anthropological perspective that recognizes both the
inherent dignity and the social nature of the human person -- thus
do the church's teachings on political and economic matters chart a
middle course between the two extremes of individualism and
collectivism. The documents themselves tend to downplay any
discontinuities with previous documents, but Curran's systematic
analysis reveals the significant historical developments that have
occurred over the course of more than a century. Although greatly
appreciative of the many strengths of this teaching, Curran also
points out the weaknesses and continuing tensions in Catholic
social teaching today.
Intended for scholars and students of Catholic social ethics, as
well as those involved in Catholic social ministry, this volume
will also appeal to non-Catholic readers interested in an
understanding and evaluation of Catholic social teaching.
Alberto is an energetic, people-pleasing eighth grader. He seems to
have it all--from the junior high varsity team to his family's
beautiful new home to leadership in his youth group. But he feels
pressured by team members who mock his Christianity and rejected by
his dad whose work requires more and more travel. His young
spiritual life is in a precarious place. Last year, as a high
school sophomore, Jonathan began spending time with some
recreational drug users. He was confident in his ability to hang
out with these guys without getting involved with drugs. But he
crossed the line. Jonathan is broken and cannot find his way back
to the comfort of his previous trust in Jesus. Rachel is estranged
from her parents. In her freshman year at college, she is sharing
an apartment with her boyfriend. She is torn between her emotional
dependence on his attention and the fear that he will once again
hurt her in a drunken rage. She has tried church but deemed it to
be unsafe for a person like herself. This generation is the first
to travel a truly postmodern pilgrimage where religious pluralism
and faddish spiritual experiences are in vogue while Christianity
is considered out of style. You want to reach them. But how?
Richard Dunn suggests that the key is to set the pace in their
lives--physically, intellectually, socially, and spiritually.
Pacing takes time. It requires listening to youth and digging
beneath the surface. But it pays off, because pacing allows you to
enter the world of an adolescent and communicate caring. In this
book, Dunn shows you how to set the pace with sensitivity to the
unique spiritual issues that occur during each stage of adolescent
development: junior high, senior high and college.
Share and pass on the faith from A to Z with this guidebook of
all things totally Catholic In this comprehensive resource, adults
and children ages 9-12 are provided with child-appropriate and
theologically-correct language based upon the Catechism of the
Catholic Church. Containing extensive information on what Catholics
believe and how they live, this manual also offers readers ways to
engage in the faith.
Formation of Character is the fifth volume of Charlotte Mason's
Homeschooling series. The chapters stand alone and are valuable to
parents of children of all ages. Part I includes case studies of
children (and adults) who cured themselves of bad habits. Part II
is a series of reflections on subjects including both schooling and
vacations (or "stay-cations" as we now call them). Part III covers
various aspects of home schooling, with a special section detailing
the things that Charlotte Mason thought were important to teach to
girls in particular. Part IV consists of examples of how education
affected outcome of character in famous writers of her day.
Charlotte Mason was a late nineteenth-century British educator
whose ideas were far ahead of her time. She believed that children
are born persons worthy of respect, rather than blank slates, and
that it was better to feed their growing minds with living
literature and vital ideas and knowledge, rather than dry facts and
knowledge filtered and pre-digested by the teacher. Her method of
education, still used by some private schools and many
homeschooling families, is gentle and flexible, especially with
younger children, and includes first-hand exposure to great and
noble ideas through books in each school subject, conveying wonder
and arousing curiosity, and through reflection upon great art,
music, and poetry; nature observation as the primary means of early
science teaching; use of manipulatives and real-life application to
understand mathematical concepts and learning to reason, rather
than rote memorization and working endless sums; and an emphasis on
character and on cultivating and maintaining good personal habits.
Schooling is teacher-directed, not child-led, but school time
should be short enough to allow students free time to play and to
pursue their own worthy interests such as handicrafts. Traditional
Charlotte Mason schooling is firmly based on Christianity, although
the method is also used successfully by secular families and
families of other religions.
You know that part of the Old Testament where the priest finds a
suspicious sore on your arm and shaves a ring around it? A week
later the priest takes another look to see if the skin has gotten
better or if the sore has spread. If it's spreading, the priest
knows you've got a big problem on your hands. Like most diseases,
apathy surfaces in observable symptoms that are frustrating to its
victims and to the people who care for them. Teenagers are
particularly susceptible to apathy--and apathy is particularly
contagious. In Bored with God, Sean Dunn catalogs what he's seen of
apathy in his ministry to youth. He offers sympathetic guidance
from the Scriptures for keeping apathy from spreading and for
shepherding students into spiritual hunger. Teenagers can be
frustratingly sleepy in their faith, but once these slumbering
giants are awakened to a life with God, they can apply virtually
tireless energy to the problems of a world bored with God. And
their energy is particularly contagious.
The Christian church hides a multitude of secrets; it is, after
all, a mysterious religion. For instance, what if Jesus did not
start Christianity? What if Paul, who knew Jesus only through
visions, created it? In Cover-Up, author and lay minister Lawrence
Goudge disputes the Christian theology that has dominated the world
for millennia. G
oudge, who has spent more than twenty-four years researching the
suppressed history of Jesus's Jewish followers, demonstrates how
the church has corrupted Jesus's message. "Cover-Up "takes an
innovative and investigative approach to Christianity, St. Paul's
credibility, and ways in which theological truths have been
concealed for two thousand years. Goudge's analysis debunks the
myths and provides alternative theories. A
s hatred and heresy haunt Christianity's shadows, this study
addresses the intolerant nature of the Christian church and sets
out to right the wrongs by bringing the truth about the Nazarenes
into the light of day. Goudge's message presents hope for a just
world.
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