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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations > Christian social thought & activity
Heather Zempel oversees the community life at a multisite church in
Washington, D.C., a challenging population with one of the highest
relocation rates in the United States. And yet under her
leadership, National Community Church has become a model for
creative, dynamic, deep small group ministry. Drawing from her
background as an environmental engineer (including such bizarre
experiences as monitoring a pig lagoon and the unintended slaughter
of a hundred innocent fish), Heather Zempel assesses the perils and
possibilities inherent in small groups and other environments for
Christian community. The book helps leaders begin to see the
inherent "mess" of such gatherings as raw material for arriving at
something beautiful. Read this book and discover fresh insights
into how we can support one another's unique paths to maturity in
Christ while maintaining cohesion as a community and blessing the
world around us.
Seamon explores the historical, theological, and societal dynamics
of religious intermarriage as a way to introduce scholars to the
myriad of factors that have contributed and will continue to
contribute to the complete transformation of religion and
Christianity in the twenty-first century.
What signals are you sending when you share the gospel? The
importance of signs for communicating truth has been recognized
throughout the ages. Crystal L. Downing traces this awareness from
biblical texts, through figures from church history like John
Wycliffe and William Tyndale, to more recent writers Samuel Taylor
Coleridge and C. S. Lewis. In the nineteenth century, this legacy
of interest in the activity of signs brought about a new field of
academic study. In this book, Downing puts the discipline of
semiotics within reach for beginners through analysis of the
movement's key theorists, Ferdinand de Saussure, Charles Sanders
Peirce, Mikhail Bakhtin and others. She then draws out the
implications for effective communication of the gospel of Jesus
Christ within our shifting cultural landscape. Her fundamental
thesis is that "Failure to understand how signs work--as effects of
the cultures we seek to affect--inevitably undermines not just our
political and moral agendas but, worse, the gospel of Jesus
Christ." Writing with humor, clarity and flare, Downing lucidly
explains the sophisticated thinking of leaders in semiotics for
nonexperts. Of value to all those interested in communication in
any context, this work will be of special interest to students
majoring in communications or English or to students in evangelism
and preaching courses at the undergraduate and graduate level.
Managing As If Faith Mattered, the inaugural volume in the Catholic
Social Tradition series, defines the proposed thrust of the new
series: to study the very best of what the Catholic social
tradition has to offer in response to the pressing issues and
problems of our times. Challenging the often-held double standard
of private and public moralities, authors Helen Alford and Michael
Naughton bridge the fault line between work and faith by engaging
current management issues with that tradition. Alford and Naughton
address issues essential to the interface between enterprise and
ethics: integrity, personal responsibility, and human solidarity.
They consider the practical realities of managers within their
economic and human resource environments, and discuss such concrete
management issues as job design, just wages, corporate ownership
structures, marketing communication, and product development. In
their hands, economic and social challenges become opportunities to
integrate their beliefs and to make decisions based on the tenets
of Catholic social tradition. Undergraduate and graduate students
and faculty in management, business, theology, and ethics will find
it an excellent text, and real-life managers will benefit from the
practical wisdom it contains.
2012 Midwest Publishing Association Crystal Book Award honorable
mention Margot Starbuck is back with as much passion and energy as
ever. In thirty brief chapters, she invites you to choose the
adventure that fits who you are in authentically loving those
around you. Yes, she knows: just the thought of adding something
more to your life sounds exhausting. But here's the fantastic truth
she's discovered in her own journey: "We don't have to add lots
more overwhelming activity to what we've already got going. The
regular stuff of our lives--the commute to work and the potlucks
and home improvement projects and errands and play dates--are the
exact places in which we express and experience God's love for a
world in need." With a list of resources, a study guide and a
six-week "Adventure Challenge," as well as plenty of stories and
hilarity from Margot's own life, Small Things with Great Love will
open your eyes to the people around you and the huge impact you can
have on them through small acts of love. "Small things happen when
I learn the name of my daughter's school bus driver," Margot
writes. "Small things happen when I listen to the dreams of a woman
who lives in a group home on my block. Small things happen when I
risk crossing a language barrier even though I look really stupid
doing it." And small things add up to big adventures and surprises,
for you and others. The biggest surprise of all might be how
powerfully God can use you, right in the midst of your
walking-the-dog, paying-the-bills, doing-laundry life, when you're
living out his love. Do the first small thing by opening these
pages--and let the adventure begin
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A Riff of Love
(Hardcover)
Greg Jarrell; Foreword by Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove
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R941
R805
Discovery Miles 8 050
Save R136 (14%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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2012 Christianity Today Book Award winner 2011 Leadership Journal
Top Book of the Year Copastors Kent Carlson and Mike Lueken tell
the story of how God took their thriving, consumer-oriented church
and transformed it into a modest congregation of unformed believers
committed to the growth of the spirit--even when it meant a decline
in numbers. As Kent and Mike found out, a decade of major change is
not easy on a church. Oak Hills Church, from the pastoral staff to
the congregation, had to confront addiction to personal ambition,
resist consumerism and reorient their lives around the teachings of
Jesus. Their renewed focus on spiritual formation over numerical
growth triggered major changes in the content of their sermons, the
tenor of their worship services, and the reason for their outreach.
They lost members. But the health and spiritual depth of their
church today is a testimony of God's transforming work and enduring
faithfulness to the people he loves. Honest and humble, this is
Kent and Mike's story of a church they love, written to inspire and
challenge other churches to let God rewrite their stories as well.
Read it for the church you love.
In the wake of a historic earthquake in the fragile country of
Haiti, Kent Annan considers suffering--from the epic to the
everyday--as a problem for faith. Less than two weeks after the
release of Kent's book about his work with Haiti Partners, he heard
the news. Friends trapped under the rubble of buildings. Friends
sprinting across the city looking for family. Churches--including
one Kent often attended--turned to rubble. Suddenly Kent and his
friends were part of an uncomfortable fellowship: people whose
faith is shaken by crisis. Taking courage from the psalmists of old
and the company of his grieving neighbors, Kent has found that
there is solidarity in suffering. Others have followed life to the
edge of meaning and have heard God even there, calling for honest
faith. Are there questions or realities your faith can't handle?
Kent wroteAfter Shock to help you find out.
There are heated discussions happening on the conflict between
science and faith. This disagreement tends to focus around three
main issues, one of them being what causes our sinful behavior. The
intense conflict has to do with biblically defined sinful behaviors
and if there just might be a biological predisposition for these
behaviors. The Biology of Sin speaks to this debate and hopefully
brings some resolution to the conflict. As both a Christian and a
neuroscientist, Dr. Stanford has seen scientific knowledge
distorted to justify sinful behavior and perhaps more disturbingly,
he has seen Christians misuse Scripture to demonize and alienate
the very ones they should be reaching out to. He suggests that the
underlying cause of this problem in the church is a lack of
knowledge, both of basic brain function and scriptural teaching.
The Biology of Sin discusses sinful behaviors, including adultery,
rage, addiction, and homosexuality, asking of each: What does
science say, and what does the Bible say about this behavior? He
then attempts to reconcile the fact that biological predispositions
do play a role in behavior which the Bible defines as sinful while
always emphasizing the authority of God's Holy Word and the
abundant grace he has for those struggling with habitual sin.
2011 Outreach Magazine Book Award winner The world is becoming
increasingly diverse. More and more of our neighbors are from a
variety of cultures, ethnicities and cultural backgrounds. But most
churches are still culturally homogenous and do not represent every
tribe and tongue. What can we do to minister more effectively to
our multicultural society? David Anderson and Margarita Cabellon
bring together an experienced team of practitioners to share best
practices for multicultural ministry. First they lay out the
biblical rationale for multicultural community as God's vision for
his people. Then key leaders share personal journeys and practical
ideas for multicultural leadership development, worship, children's
ministry, outreach and much more. Drawing on the pioneering
expertise of Bridgeway Community Church and BridgeLeader Network,
the contributors present a holistic and multifaceted portrait of
what a dynamic, grace-filled and diverse ministry can look like.
Our tribalized world is crying out for healing. Discover how you
can minister to others as agents of God's reconciliation and hope.
If you are exploring doing something extraordinary for the glory of
God among the nations, Ask A Missionary will give clarity and
answers for a journey into missions. Because they have "been
there," over one hundred missionaries from around the world,
including Elisabeth Elliot, George Verwer, Phyllis Kilbourn, and
Bill Stearns, share their insightful wisdom and practical advice on
everything from making the decision to go, to stepping into a new
life once on the field, and everything in between. The treasures
amassed in this book will guide you toward serving in the most
wonderful, challenging, God glorifying, eternity-impacting endeavor
in the world: missions.
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