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Books > Christianity > Christian life & practice > Christian religious instruction
The Classic Guide for Educators of Any Denomination What mission calls us to teach? How do societal issues-social oppression, poverty, politics-affect what we teach, how we teach it, and how people learn? Who are our students? What and when are they ready to learn? Once we understand these foundations, how can we facilitate an educational experience that has the power to shape and transform people and communities in life-giving ways of faith? In this classic text, Thomas Groome asks and answers these central questions, providing a comprehensive integration of the history, theory, and practice of modern religious education for a new generation of educators. His self-reflective approach-shared praxis-will inspire school teachers, students of religious education, pastors, parents, and religious educators in local churches who want to understand themselves, their mission, and their surroundings-to inform, form, and transform their students' lives. "Anyone tugged by the calling at the heart of education or religious life can only cheer for the republication of this classic book."-Robert Kegan, Harvard Graduate School of Education "Whether returning Christian Religious Education or reading it for the first time, readers will discover freshness leaping from the page; you will soon know why this formative book of the past is a beacon for the future-informative, inspiring, and wise!"-Mary Elizabeth Moore, professor of theology and Christian education, Claremont School of Theology
Have you tried all the new youth programs? Have you planned one too
many wacky activities? Are you frustrated about the size of the
youth group? Here's an approach to ministry that takes youth work
seriously. Family-based youth ministry is about adults discipling
teens one-on-one and in groups. It is about involving not just the
nuclear family but the whole church family--from singles to older
adults. More important, it's about incorporating youth into the
life of your church. So stop worrying about the size of your youth
group or your budget. Mark DeVries's refreshing approach to youth
ministry will show you how your church can reach today's teens and
how you can keep them involved in the life of the church. Whether
you are a parent, a youth pastor or a church member who cares about
teens, you will find in this book an entirely different approach to
youth ministry that will build mature Christian believers.
Seymour and Miller, with four other experts in the field, seek
to clarify the agenda, resources, and hopes for Christian education
in the twenty-first century. Gone are the days when Christian
education was variously envisioned as a school, a home, an
educational system, a mission agency, or a school for Christian
living. These dreams revealed the conflicts Christian education was
to face throughout much of the twentieth century; yet they also
clarified its resources and motivated efforts on its behalf.
Modern educators such as Seymour and Miller also dream of what
Christian education is and what it can become. Here they
investigate five approaches through which contemporary Christian
educators can develop the theory and practice of Christian
education: (1) religious instruction (2) faith community (3)
development (4) liberation (5) interpretation. Although they
explore these five vital approaches from psychological,
philosophical, exegetical, and sociological viewpoints, the authors
agree that the central theme is still the teaching of the Good
News. It is there we will discover that we are delivered for
dependency on the old ways and that we are free to move into new
ways of living."
This book provides new insights on the unique role of doctoral
students and new faculty as they join other stewards of the academy
working within Christian higher education. Weaving together a
variety of voices-graduate students, pastors, and seasoned
scholars-the book examines the Christian university's relationship
to the Church and how faith and stewardshipcan guide the pursuit of
teaching and scholarship.
Christians believe that history is moving towards a dramatic
conclusion - that one day Jesus Christ will return in glory to
judge the living and the dead. But there seem to be so many
different views about how this will happen, and when it will take
place. How can we make sense of it all?
This short, readable book explains clearly and simply the
liberating reality of what the Bible is actually saying about the
return of Christ and the end of the world.
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