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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian worship
Contemporary worship music shapes the way evangelical Christians
understand worship itself. Author Monique M. Ingalls argues that
participatory worship music performances have brought into being
new religious social constellations, or "modes of congregating".
Through exploration of five of these modes-concert, conference,
church, public, and networked congregations-Singing the
Congregation reinvigorates the analytic categories of
"congregation" and "congregational music." Drawing from theoretical
models in ethnomusicology and congregational studies, Singing the
Congregation reconceives the congregation as a fluid, contingent
social constellation that is actively performed into being through
communal practice-in this case, the musically-structured
participatory activity known as "worship." "Congregational
music-making" is thereby recast as a practice capable of weaving
together a religious community both inside and outside local
institutional churches. Congregational music-making is not only a
means of expressing local concerns and constituting the local
religious community; it is also a powerful way to identify with
far-flung individuals, institutions, and networks that comprise
this global religious community. The interactions among the
congregations reveal widespread conflicts over religious authority,
carrying far-ranging implications for how evangelicals position
themselves relative to other groups in North America and beyond.
At the end of your life, will you be able to say you squeezed out all
the gusto and good you were created for?
Deep inside all of us is the relentless knowledge that we were created
for greatness, yet years can pass, and all our efforts don't add up to
what we envisioned life would bring.
Author, pastor, and evangelist Craig Walker challenges you to forget
the mediocre and dream again. It's time to answer the high calling
within you! It's time to unlock your potential as never before!
Craig witnessed nearly 800,000 decisions for Christ in 22 months by
utilizing today's internet technology. Now he has set out to inspire
you to discover and leave the huge footprint you were destined to place
on planet Earth. Born in this generation by God's design, your destiny
is tied to the technological context of your world. This is THE
greatest time ever to be alive. You have more opportunities to change
your world than any preceding generation.
In Born for the Extraordinary, Craig shares...
- How to tap into the greatness God placed within you
- How just one God-inspired idea can evolve into a plan that
reaches the world
- Jaw-dropping, firsthand testimonies of miracles, healings,
and even witchdoctor deliverances
- How to recognize God's voice, follow His instructions, and
dream beyond your ability
You were created for this! You were born for the extraordinary!
In The Power of Prayer to Enrich Your Marriage, bestselling author
Stormie Omartian teaches husbands and wives how to pray for protection
against the most common marriage problems that can lead to serious
distrust, dissatisfaction, and sometimes even divorce.
It’s Never Too Soon or Too Late to Pray for Your Marriage
Stormie Omartian’s bestselling books on prayer have changed the lives
of millions. In The Power of Prayer to Enrich Your Marriage, Stormie
shows husbands and wives how to pray with urgency and power for God’s
protection against the 14 most common marital problems that can lead to
distrust, dissatisfaction, and sometimes even divorce.
Whether you want guidance to help you avoid common pitfalls or you need
healing and restoration from struggles you’ve already faced, you can
partner with God to strengthen your relationship. This book will help
you…
- prevent and pray through the challenges that may arise in
your marriage
- lift your requests for good communication, forgiveness,
wisdom, and much more to the Lord
- experience heartfelt peace knowing that no obstacle in your
relationship is too great for God
The Power of Prayer to Enrich Your Marriage also provides you with
Bible verses that will speak truth to your heart about your
relationship with your spouse and God, and personal prayers you can use
to ensure your marriage lasts a lifetime.
You can have a tangible encounter with glory!
Have you been longing for an encounter with God’s glory, an experience
where Heaven and earth collide, and your limited perspective is blown
apart by the sheer awesomeness of God?
Hrvoje Sirovina believes that you were made for these kinds of glory
experiences, and that every encounter with God’s glory propels you to
live an increasingly extraordinary life in an ordinary world.
In 10 Levels of Glory, Hrvoje guides you through ten powerful
encounters with God’s tangible presence.
Witness His glory in each of the ten levels…
- Creation
- Signs and Wonders
- Experiencing God
- Knowing God
- Seeing God
- The Fear of the Lord
- Walking with God
- The Face of God
- Unity with God
- The Unapproachable Light
With each encounter, you will be filled with a fresh hunger, inspired
toward deeper worship, and overcome by a greater awe of the Lord.
God is calling you to a new experience of His glory! Will you say “yes”?
Speak the words that make hell tremble!
There are timeless words, straight from the Scripture, that - when
spoken and applied - paralyze the devil and cause accelerated
supernatural shift. These words defeat demonic powers, heal disease,
accelerate financial increase, overcome temptation, and demolish
strongholds. These are the power words… and satan is absolutely intent
on removing them from the believer’s vocabulary.
It’s time to open our mouths and release the thunder of Heaven!
Kevin Zadai, bestselling author of Praying from the Heavenly Realms and
The Agenda of Angels, was taken behind the heavenly veil where the Lord
revealed to him certain power words that can release the power of
Heaven and bind the strategies of hell.
These powerful words include: The Blood - Repentance - New Covenant -
Kingdom Dominion - The Fear of the Lord - Resurrection Power - Holy
Fire - Visitation - Habitation - Divine Prosperity and many more!
Mystery of the Power Words will help you…
- Understand the pathways for walking out your destiny on
Earth.
- Access the battle strategies of Heaven that reveal God’s
intent for your life.
- Decode the veil of secrecy that surrounds the power words
God wants you to understand and boldly speak.
- Clearly discern God’s will for you and your family.
- Identify and defeat the enemies of your advancement.
- Establish a link between praying in tongues and walking in
Kingdom dominion.
All of Heaven is waiting for you to release these supernatural words.
Wield the power of the tongue for the sake of the Kingdom. Decree and
declare words of victory over your life today!
This volume of the Jerusalem Talmud publishes the first two
tractates of the Second Order, Sabbat and 'Eruvin. These tractates
deal with discussion of all regulations regarding Shabbat, the
weekly day of rest, including the activities prohibited on Shabbat.
The tractate 'Eruvin covers questions of definition of what is
allowed to do on Shabbat. The Second Order is the last one to be
published in Heinrich W. Guggenheimer's edition of the Jerusalem
Talmud.
The Sounds of Our Offerings is good news about the music of the
church. It recounts what has been learned from studying nine
congregations where music promotes the full, active, conscious
participation of the worshipers and where it has done so
consistently and coherently for many years. Pastors and musicians
reflect on their work together and offer rich insights about what
works and what does not. Lay musicians and members of the
congregation also share their experiences with music in worship.
Though no site was without its struggles, and at times difficult
choices had to be made, for the most part, we see unremarkable,
week to week, year to year, faithful rendering of music for prayer
and praise. We see that sometimes the nature of the music took a
slightly different turn, one that built upon the foundations of the
past. The music choices in these churches are not restricted to one
particular era or style, but rather reflect the broader church's
music repertoire, including the best recently written music. These
are the stories of churches with a reputation for their fine music
programs, churches that, with their leaders and congregations, have
worked out these programs in consistent, coherent ways. In most
cases, the programs span multiple priests/pastors and musicians.
The Sounds of Our Offerings is about excellent music and how it has
found its way into the life and faith practices of these
congregations.
This reference work incorporates the insights and expertise of
leading liturgists and scholars of liturgy at work today,
comprising 200 entries on important topics in the field, from
vestments and offertories to ordination and divine unction. It is
systematically organized and alphabetically arranged for ease of
use. It also includes comprehensive bibliographies and reading
lists, to bring the work fully up to date and to encourage further
reading and research.
The essays collected in this volume provide a resource for thinking
theologically about the practice of Christian prayer. In the first
of four parts, the volume begins by reaching back to the biblical
foundations of prayer. Then, each of the chapters in the second
part investigates a classical Christian doctrine - including God,
creation, Christology, pneumatology, providence and eschatology -
from the perspective of prayer. The chapters in the third part
explore the writings of some of the great theorizers of prayer in
the history of the Christian tradition. The final part gathers a
set of creative and critical conversations on prayer responding to
a variety of contemporary issues. Overall, the T&T Clark
Handbook of Christian Prayer articulates a theologically expansive
account of prayer - one that is deeply biblical, energetically
doctrinal, historically rooted, and relevant to a whole host of
critical questions and concerns facing the world today.
Many churches have active worship committees or planning teams, and
an abundance of books and resources guide pastors and laity.
Encounters with the Holy offers a conversational model of worship
planning that was developed to train practitioners to be more
reflective in their planning of worship experiences. The model
planning, ordering, worshiping, reflecting is a flexible, fluid
pattern. It provides a more circular, spiraling practice of
imaginative planning, preparing the leaders and the space, and
reflecting theologically to understand more fully the experience of
worship. It has been tested in congregations, seminaries, and
campus ministries amid a wide range of denominational and cultural
styles. An underlying theological assumption of this approach is
that we are engaged in holy work when we plan and prepare for
worship. Leaders study, preparation, and training are themselves an
encounter with the Holy. Therefore, we are called to become more
informed and better prepared liturgical leaders. The language and
encouraging style of the book is accessible to student pastors,
pastors, and lay people interested in learning to think more deeply
about worship.
Works of liturgical theology tend to be produced by experts who
draw from the sources and explain the meaning of the liturgy to the
lay people. When such explanations are firmly grounded in the
sources, the academy accepts and celebrates them as genuine works
of liturgical theology. Liturgical theology requires an examination
from a different perspective: the lay people's. How do the lay
people explain their understanding of the liturgy in their own
words? Drawing from the results of parish focus groups and a clergy
survey, The People's Faith presents the liturgical theology of the
lay people in the Orthodox Churches of America. The People's Faith
presents original findings on how ordinary laity experience the
Divine Liturgy, Holy Communion, Lent and Easter, liturgical change,
and gender roles in the Liturgy. The author brings the laity's
views into dialog with the prevailing liturgical theology in the
Orthodox Church and identifies several topics worthy of theological
reflection. The people's veneration for tradition tops a list of
liturgical issues worthy of further research, including ecumenical
aspects of the Eucharist, the relationship between liturgy and
theological anthropology, and a desire to receive divine compassion
during ritual celebration.
Passing the Plate shows that few American Christians donate
generously to religious and charitable causes -- a parsimony that
seriously undermines the work of churches and ministries. Far from
the 10 percent of one's income that tithing requires, American
Christians' financial giving typically amounts, by some measures,
to less than one percent of annual earnings. And a startling one
out of five self-identified Christians gives nothing at all.
This eye-opening book explores the reasons behind such ungenerous
giving, the potential world-changing benefits of greater financial
giving, and what can be done to improve matters. If American
Christians gave more generously, say the authors, any number of
worthy projects -- from the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS to
the promotion of inter-religious understanding to the upgrading of
world missions -- could be funded at astounding levels. Analyzing a
wide range of social surveys and government and denominational
statistical datasets and drawing on in-depth interviews with
Christian pastors and church members in seven different states, the
book identifies a crucial set of factors that appear to depress
religious financial support -- among them the powerful allure of a
mass-consumerist culture and its impact on Americans' priorities,
parishioners' suspicions of waste and abuse by nonprofit
administrators, clergy's hesitations to boldly ask for money, and
the lack of structure and routine in the way most American
Christians give away money. In their conclusion, the authors
suggest practical steps that clergy and lay leaders might take to
counteract these tendencies and better educate their congregations
about the transformative effects of generous giving.
By illuminating the social and psychological forces that shape
charitable giving, Passing the Plate is sure to spark a much-needed
debate on a critical issue that is of much interest to
church-goers, religious leaders, philanthropists, and social
scientists.
Explore with children and for yourself why we celebrate the
Eucharist Breaking bread with others is central to our faith. This
book is an invitation to learn and wonder about why we worship and
celebrate the Holy Eucharist. Although grounded in the Episcopal
liturgical tradition, it is an accessible and inviting introduction
to worship for children and families of many Christian traditions.
While learning what occurs during worship and the Holy Eucharist,
readers of all ages will be guided through the sacramental and
communal aspects of the celebration and how in the breaking of
bread we are called into the world. The beautiful full-color
illustrations reflect the diversity of God's people, and a
dedication page encourages personalization. A family section offers
questions and suggests ways for all ages to engage in worship and
family rituals. Reflecting some of the spirit, beauty, and
vocabulary of the Episcopal liturgy, this will be a treasured
volume for parents, godparents, grandparents, and other important
adults in the life of a child who is wondering about worship.
This book offers a systematic, chronological analysis of the role
played by the human senses in experiencing pilgrimage and sacred
places, past and present. It thus addresses two major gaps in the
existing literature, by providing a broad historical narrative
against which patterns of continuity and change can be more
meaningfully discussed, and focusing on the central, but curiously
neglected, area of the core dynamics of pilgrim experience.
Bringing together the still-developing fields of Pilgrimage Studies
and Sensory Studies in a historically framed conversation, this
interdisciplinary study traces the dynamics of pilgrimage and
engagement with holy places from the beginnings of the
Judaeo-Christian tradition to the resurgence of interest evident in
twenty-first century England. Perspectives from a wide range of
disciplines, from history to neuroscience, are used to examine
themes including sacred sites in the Bible and Early Church;
pilgrimage and holy places in early and later medieval England; the
impact of the English Reformation; revival of pilgrimage and sacred
places during the nineteenth and twentieth Centuries; and the
emergence of modern place-centred, popular 'spirituality'.
Addressing the resurgence of pilgrimage and its persistent link to
the attachment of meaning to place, this book will be a key
reference for scholars of Pilgrimage Studies, History of Religion,
Religious Studies, Sensory Studies, Medieval Studies, and Early
Modern Studies.
This new Pillar commentary devotes attention throughout to the
vocabulary, historical background, special themes, and narrative
purpose that make the book of Luke unique among the four Gospels.
Though the Gentile focus of Luke is often held to be primary, James
Edwards counterbalances that by citing numerous evidences of Luke's
overarching interest in depicting Jesus as the fulfillment of the
providential work of God in the history of Israel, and he considers
the possibility that Luke himself was a Jew. Edwards also draws out
other important thematic issues in excursuses scattered throughout
the commentary, including discussion of Luke's infancy narrative,
the mission of Jesus as the way of salvation, and Luke's depiction
of the universal scope of the gospel. This readable, relevant
commentary attends to the linguistic, historical, literary, and
theological elements of Luke that are essential to its meaning and
considers Luke's significance for the church and the life of faith
today.
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