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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian worship
The call of Deep Church is not just for theologians and church
leaders; it is also about each individual Christian experiencing
and knowing that Jesus rescues from the depths and changes them
deeply In this book Frog and Amy Orr-Ewing explore the concept of
Deep Church in a 21st-century context. They argue that a missionary
congregation needs to be deeply evangelical and evangelistic,
deeply reliant on the power of the Holy Spirit, deeply engaged with
its surrounding culture and community, deeply realistic about its
limitations and temptations, and deeply convinced of its faith, in
the face of all other worldviews and alternatives. Deep Church is
about restoring the heart of the Christian faith within a rapidly
changing and demanding culture, without lurching from one new
methodology to another, rescuing today's church from unnecessary
disillusionment, and wholeheartedly embracing Christ and his
Kingdom.
Offers 'starter' ideas to help those who lead intercessions in public worship and small groups,
and aims to open the reader's imagination to enrich their own style of praying.
Everyday language, images and experiences are used in each of the three main sections. The first, Intercessions in mainstream worship, offers prayers (1) for each of the 12 months; (2) for major festivals and their seasons; (3) for special days, like Mothering Sunday and Remembrance); (4) on themes such as light, storms and fear. The second section provides intercessions for use in informal worship and small groups, and the third focuses on personal intercessions (including a section for extroverts).
Art, Truth, and Time is a book which endeavours to show that
artistic creation depends as much upon the body, as it does the
soul, and the soul's intelligent use of the body's way of
understanding. When there occurs a complete disjunction between the
two, as occurs in much of contemporary art, art is stripped of its
inherent beauty, its wholeness. In this book the author considers
the nature of art from its earliest manifestations to the present
day, endeavouring to show that its truth transcends time and place
through the unity of soul and body and man's awareness of this
unity, not a barren unity, but a unity which is profoundly
creative.
'Vincent van Gogh's last words: La tristesse durea--the sadness
will never go away. It will not go away. But it will change.'
Sometimes grief can be overwhelming --especially over the holidays.
The world is moving forward and celebrating life, but for grievers
darkness pervades the holiday.This special gift book edition of
bestseller A Decembered Grief is designed to guide you on a journey
beyond that darkness and get out on the other side. You will learn
that the holidays aren t about presents or cookies or church
services-- they are about relationships. Harold Ivan Smith will
teach you how to alter traditions instead of abandoning them,
appreciate the grief styles of others, and befriend your grief
instead of dread it. The holidays can be tough. This book can help.
Why go to church? What happens in church and why does it matter?
The Empty Church presents fresh answers to these questions by
creating an interdisciplinary conversation between theater
directors and Christian theologians. This original study expands
church beyond the sanctuary and into life. Shannon Craigo-Snell
emphasizes the importance of liturgical worship in forming
Christians as characters crafted by the texts of the Bible. This
formation includes shaping how Christians know, in ways that
involve the intellect, emotions, body, and will. Each chapter
brings a theater director into dialogue with a theologian, teasing
out the ways performance enriches hermeneutics, anthropology, and
epistemology. Thinkers like Karl Barth, Peter Brook, Delores
Williams, and Bertolt Brecht are examined for their insights into
theology, worship, and theater. The result is a compelling
depiction of church as performance of relationship with Jesus
Christ, mediated by Scripture, in hope of the Holy Spirit.
Liturgical worship, at its best, forms Christians in patterns of
affections. This includes the cultivation of emotion memories
influenced by biblical narratives, as well as a repertoire of
physical actions that evoke particular affections. Liturgy also
encourages Christians to step into various roles, enabling them to
make intellectual and volitional choices about what roles to take
up in society. Through liturgical worship, the author argues,
Christians can be formed as people who hope, and therefore as
people who live in expectation of the presence and grace of God.
This entails a discipline of emptiness that awaits and appreciates
the Holy Spirit. Church performance must therefore be provisional,
ongoing, and open to further inspiration.
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A Teaching Hymnal
(Hardcover)
Clayton J. Schmit; Foreword by Richard J Mouw
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R1,701
R1,399
Discovery Miles 13 990
Save R302 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Bryan Spinks is one of the world's leading scholars in the field of
liturgy and to have a comprehensive work by him on the Eucharist is
a major catch for SCM. Like the author's previous work on Baptism,
this will become a standard work about the Eucharist and
Eucharistic theology worldwide. The book, a study of the history
and theology of the Eucharist, is the fifth volume in the SCM
Studies in Worship and Liturgy series and will help to establish
the series as a place for landmark books of liturgical scholarship.
This book will be aimed at undergraduate and graduate theology
students, clergy and theologically literate laity. It will assume
some technical knowledge (i. e. it is not an introduction to
liturgy or introduction to sacraments), but will attempt to outline
what the evidence is, and what current scholars think. On occasions
it will advance or argue for why one interpretation is preferable
to another.
"A Pilgrim's Guide to Iona Abbey" gives you the opportunity to walk
around the Abbey church and cloisters with suggestions for
reflection and prayer. If you have not visited the Abbey it is an
excellent tool with which to help visualise the sites of Iona.
Included are some stories about the Abbey and life in the community
from the perspective of Iona Community members. At each point of
your pilgrimage around the Abbey and the Abbey grounds you will
find: some background information; a reflection; and a simple
prayer. 'Iona is a place where people come looking for answers - to
get in touch with their spiritual needs and find a new vision of
themselves and their lives, and of our lives together.' From "A
Pilgrim's Guide to Iona Abbey": Candles in the Abbey Some candles
flickered in a downdraft; some stood still, lighting, in orange
flame, the precious dark. Their silence created silence; their
dimness in so vast a space soothed the restless soul. Their light
was a quiet presence that spoke of the light, the real presence,
come to meet us at the appointed place. He was there, though human
eyes are not given to see him. Hearts, open to receive him, rested
awhile in a circle of peace. David Levison is a member of the Iona
Community.
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