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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Christian worship
Let's give ourselves an A for effort. We keep our minds so
preoccupied with work projects that we act and think on autopilot.
We keep our kids so occupied with activities that they need day
planners before grade school. We keep our schedules so full with
church meetings and housekeeping and even entertaining that
down-time sounds like a mortal sin. When we fail to rest we do more
than burn ourselves out. We misunderstand the God who calls us to
rest--who created us to be people of rest. Let's face it: our rest
needs work. Sabbath recalls our creation, and with it God's
satisfaction with us as he made us, without our hurried wrangling
and harried worrying. It also recalls God's deliverance of the
Israelites from Egypt, and with it God's ability to do completely
what we cannot complete in ourselves. Sabbath keeping reminds us
that we are free to rest each week. Eighteen months in Tel Aviv,
Israel, where a weekly sabbath is built into the culture, began
Lynne M. Baab's twenty-five-year embrace of a rhythm of rest--as a
stay-at-home mom, as a professional writer working out of her home
and as a minister of the gospel. With collected insights from
sabbath keepers of all ages and backgrounds, Sabbath Keeping offers
a practical and hopeful guidebook that encourages all of us to slow
down and enjoy our relationship with the God of the universe.
Underlying Exodus in its priestly redaction is a pilgrimage.
Smith's new book starts by reviewing pilgrimage shrines, feasts and
practices in ancient Israel. Next, it examines the two pilgrimage
journeys in Exodus. In Exodus 1-15 Moses journeys to Mount Sinai,
experiences God and receives his commission. In Exodus 16-40, Moses
and the people together journey to Mount Sinai for the people's
experience of God and their commission. Between lies Exodus 15, the
fulcrum-point of the book: vv. 1-12 look back and vv. 13-18 look
forward to Israel's journey to Sinai. Finally, the different
meanings of torah in the book of Exodus are contrasted, and the
book concludes with a consideration of Exodus's larger place in the
Pentateuch.>
Faith and Place takes knowledge of place as a basis for thinking
about the relationship between religious belief and our embodied
life.
Recent epistemology of religion has appealed to various secular
analogues for religious belief - especially analogues drawn from
sense perception and scientific theory construction. These
approaches tend to overlook the close connection between religious
belief and our moral, aesthetic and otherwise engaged relationship
to the material world. By taking knowledge of place as a starting
point for religious epistemology, Mark Wynn aims to throw into
clearer focus the embodied, action-orienting,
perception-structuring, and affect-infused character of religious
understanding.
This innovative study understands the religious significance of a
site in terms of i. its capacity to stand for some encompassing
truth about human life; ii. its conservation of historical
meanings, where these meanings make a practical claim upon those
located at the place at later times; and iii. its directing of the
believer's attention to a sacred meaning, through enacted
appropriation of the site.
Wynn proposes that the notion of 'God' functions like the notion of
a 'genius loci', where the relevant locus is the sum of material
reality. He argues that knowledge of God consists in part in a
storied and sensuous appreciation of the significance of particular
places.
Winner of a Christianity Today 2005 Book Award Baptism. The Lord's
Supper. We recognize these church practices. But do we really grasp
their meaning and place in Christian worship? Is our neglect of
them hindering our communion with Christ? Are we missing the real
drama of our salvation? Often the object of debate, the sacraments
are likewise neglected and superficially understood. Leonard Vander
Zee makes a compelling case that these problems can be overcome
when we see the connection between Baptism and the Lord's Supper
and the continuing ministry of Jesus Christ, the incarnate Word of
God. Founding his discussion in biblical teaching reaching back to
the creation narrative and forward to the teaching of Jesus and the
apostle Paul, Vander Zee sees the Christ-centered celebration of
these sacraments as essential to the renewal of the church. A
reappropriation of Baptism and the Eucharist, especially in the
evangelical church, holds great promise for healing the rift
between the natural and the spiritual, the personal and social, the
head and the heart, and between the body of believers and our Lord
Jesus Christ who died for us and now lives to make intercessions
for us. InChrist, Baptism and the Lord's Supper, Vander Zee not
only opens up a Christ-centered approach to the sacraments but also
provides guidance on the practical matters that face pastors and
parishioners in the pursuit of a renewed and authentic Christian
worship.
This examination of primary texts of the Lutheran Confessions
gathers together pertinent references for the discussion of worship
in the Lutheran Church.
Decision making begins with a willingness to submit your intentions
to God's perfect will and humbly follow His direction and
understanding the impact of consequences in your decision making!
The daily decisions that you make today will determine what kind of
impact you will make tomorrow. The key to making better decisions
is to educate yourself, make adjustments necessary, let your
decisions be based on a solid foundation and take proper
precaution. This book can help you understand decision making
process and help you develop in moving forward in your journey of
life and also makes the principles in the Bible relevant to
everyday living.
In this compelling book, Mark Stibbe argues that God wants to use
Christians to speak prophetically into the lives of unbelievers,
waking them up to the fact that Jesus is alive and he knows their
every thought, word and action. There are many biblical examples of
God's people using prophecy in their witness to unbelievers. Jesus
used prophecy in His ministry to seekers. After Pentecost, God gave
the gift of prophecy to believers as one resource among many in
their witness to the world. Furthermore, Christians today receive
prophecies for those who don't know Christ, often with immediate
and life-changing effects. This book contains many such
testimonies.
The books in this series help preachers and students of preaching
understand biblical texts in light of current scholarship. Each
volume gives exegetical help, suggestions on how to preach
important biblical texts, and sample sermons.
This comprehensive resource is the first lectionary-based
collection of prayers for the communion table. Included are
communion and post-communion prayers for each Sunday in the
lectionary cycle and selected special days. The prayers can be used
both by congregations that offer separate prayers for bread and cup
and by those that use a single prayer. An index is included for
congregations that do not use the lectionary.
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Holy Ground
(Hardcover)
Julie K. Aageson
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R862
R741
Discovery Miles 7 410
Save R121 (14%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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A Lifeline to the Peace and Joy You've been Looking for What if
prayer was more than just something you mumbled before going to
sleep, or said quickly when your team takes the field or you're
about to take a test? What if prayer was a gateway to the best
relationship you've ever had? An energizing, joy-filled,
peace-giving connection to God? This devotional provides regular
readings to help connect you to God through prayer. It also
contains journaling prompts and questions that will bring the
concepts of Worried about Everything to life, taking you to the
next step in your faith. Join pastor/author Chad Veach as he guides
you day-by-day to a closer walk with God. You'll be so glad you
did.
Spread the spirit of the Christmas season by giving the true love
worth giving-God's love. A Love Worth Giving to You at Christmas
will remind you that before we can pass love on, we must learn to
receive it ourselves. Based on Max Lucado's book A Love Worth
Giving, this holiday booklet tells the story of a love that has no
bounds, no limits, no end. The Christmas kind of love. A love worth
giving to others and to you. There's a problem, though. How can you
give something that you never truly received? A Love Worth Giving
to You at Christmas will shed light on God's generous gift, giving
you the encouragement that you need to: Embrace your place as a
dearly loved child in his heavenly family Learn to love others well
by living loved Graciously accept the unending love that God has
for you Maybe it has something to do with the lavishness of the
gift that first Christmas morning, the extravagance of love that
came in the form of a tiny, helpless newborn. Consider the gift for
a moment, what Jesus really did. He swapped a spotless castle for a
grimy stable. He exchanged the worship of angels for the company of
killers. Why? Because that's what love does. It puts the beloved
before itself. Your soul was more important than his blood. Your
eternal life was more important than his earthly life. Your place
in heaven was more important to him than his place in heaven, so he
gave up his so you could have yours. And that's what extravagant
giving is all about. Reminding us of the most priceless gift of
all, A Love Worth Giving to You at Christmas invites you to let
this love worth giving fill you, flood you, and change you forever.
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