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Books > Christianity > Christian Worship
"I loved The Listening Heart! So rich. Your work is drenched with
scripture and your love for God. I've been buying and giving copies
to family and friends. I plan to read it again in the
future."--FRANCINE RIVERS, New York Times bestselling author Listen
to My heart in the quiet of your heart . . . More. Life is full to
overflowing, but we crave an elusive more. Via social networking,
airwaves, and TV, our culture tells us to strive for more stuff,
more activities, more adventure--you name it. Yet we are often left
feeling unfulfilled and wanting. Empty, even. With so many demands
for our attention, it is difficult to quiet our minds long enough
to hear the still, small voice of our loving Father, and to listen
to the One who desires to bring us so much more than the noise of
everyday life. Judy Gordon Morrow discovered the more when her
world was turned upside down and she knelt before God to seek Him
and ask for His help. More than a decade ago, in tear-stained
notebooks, she began to pen God's responses to her desperate
prayers. Now, in The Listening Heart, Judy invites you to spend a
year hearing from the God Who Speaks--the God who wants to speak to
you. Each daily devotion echoes the Father's love and care for you,
offering hope, comfort, encouragement, and more--a rich closeness
with God that will satisfy the longings of your heart.
Outreach 2022 Recommended Resource (Spiritual Growth) All fruitful
doing must begin with being. For many Christians, it's easy to be
swept up into the fast pace of modern life, desiring to do much for
God. But we struggle to slow down and be with God. According to
pastor, Enneagram teacher, and author AJ Sherrill, being with God
is what empowers doing for God. Sherrill shares his own journey
from "busy" Christianity to the ancient paths of contemplative
practices. He equips readers to integrate rhythms of stillness,
silence, and solitude, offering step-by-step guidance and examples
of finding solitude both personally and on retreats. Sherrill warns
that making these changes appears absurd in a society where time is
money, productivity is central, and hurry is a way of life. He
guides readers gently through the beginning and often confusing
stages of contemplative practice. Citing timely insights from the
world of neurology and mental health, he shows that solitude is
crucial not only for Christian growth but also for holistic
flourishing. Foreword by Rich Villodas. Readers will emerge,
centered in Christ, well on their way to this goal: slow down, pay
attention, be still, and be loved.
In the Middle Ages, it was thought that praying at the right shrine
could save you from just about anything, from madness and famine to
false imprisonment and even shipwreck. Kingdoms, cities, and even
individual trades had patron saints that would protect them from
misfortune and bring them wealth and prosperity, and their feast
days were celebrated with public holidays and pageants. With saints
believed to have the ear of God, veneration of figures such as St
Thomas Becket, St Cuthbert, and St Margaret brought tens of
thousands of pilgrims from all walks of life to sites across the
country. Saints, Shrines and Pilgrims takes the reader across
Britain, providing a map of the most important religious shrines
that pilgrims would travel vast distances to reach, as well as
descriptions and images of the shrines themselves. Featuring over
100 stunning photographs and a gazetteer of places to visit, it
explains the history of pilgrimage in Britain and the importance
that it played in medieval life, and describes the impact of the
unbridled assault made on pilgrimage by the Reformation.
"God, I need you to do something in my children!" Have those words
found their way into your desperate prayers? Do you feel helpless
to know how to equip your children for this world and all it throws
at them? If so, you're not alone. When Brooke McGlothlin realized
her best efforts were falling woefully short of her goal to produce
godly children, she discovered the joy and power of praying
Scripture over her family. Her life and her children's lives were
transformed. Yours can be too. Complete with prayers for specific
situations, this encouraging book is perfect for times when you *
feel too busy to pray, * don't know what or how to pray, * don't
know if your prayers really matter. Nothing is more powerful and
faith-building than praying God's Word for those you love. Become a
mom full of hope in the God who can, even if you can't. "Praying
Mom is the prayer mentor you've always wanted from a mom who
absolutely lives this message on her knees."--STACEY THACKER,
author of Threadbare Prayer
In introducing eight new eucharistic prayers, "Common Worship" has
focused fresh attention on the most central act of Christian
worship. This text offers a wealth of information on both the words
and actions of the Eucharist. Part one focuses on the content of
the Eucharist, from the opening greeting to the final blessing and
dismissal. Each stage of the service is explored from a biblical
and historical perpective and readers discover how the Eucharist
has evolved from the days of the Early Church. Part two focuses on
the actions of the Eucharist: the posture and movement of the
celebrant and participants, ceremonial, symbolism, the role of
memory, essentials and variables in the rite. Part Three explores
the eight different Eucharistic prayers of "Common Worship", their
distinctive styles, provenance, theological features and pastoral
uses.
This thought-provoking book explores medieval perceptions of pilgrimage, gender and space. It examines real life evidence for the widespread presence of women pilgrims, as well as secular and literary texts concerning pilgrimage and women pilgrims represented in the visual arts. Women pilgrims were inextricably linked with sexuality and their presence on the pilgrimage trails was viewed as tainting sacred space. eBook available with sample pages: 0203463803
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.
“At twenty-one I was as far from hopeful as anyone could get. Maybe as far as you are now.”
These are the words of Christina Baker as she considered her traumatic life: from childhood abuse to troubled teen years, to a descent into substance abuse, she resonates with a lost world who understands first-hand how easy it is to lose hope. Then, just as she was about to go to jail for drug possession, the Hero of Hope, Jesus Christ, came into her life and set her on a completely new path.
If you are weary and doubting, Christina understands. Hope in 60 Seconds will help you to:
- Be encouraged and empowered by someone who has been in a similar place of discouragement and discovered Christ’s authority and love
- Learn how Jesus establishes hope and begin to experience it first-hand in the darkest of circumstances
- Grow in your ability to connect with Jesus and find the hope you have longed for all of your life
- Prove that a connection with Jesus is the ultimate source of hope
The message of Cristina’s life is Jesus, the hope we need and hunger for—a hope that will stand secure in the face of brokenness, loss, sickness, abuse, a brain tumor diagnosis, injustice, and death. In Hope in 60 Seconds, she shares the steps of her journey to encounter, receive, and walk in the hope of Jesus, and offers readers powerful wisdom for how they can take the same journey for themselves.
This book takes the bible and asks the questions that the church
does not want you to ask. This book has taken some of the major
events in the bible, and analyzes them for authenticity. This book
will not only invalidate many of the claims the bible makes, it
will also show how the bible often contradicts itself.
Contradictions from the creation of the universe, to the
resurrection of Jesus. While the church claims the bible is the
word of god, this book will show that the bible is merely a
collection of myths and legends, and often borrowed from other
mythologies.
The Advent season is filled with rich themes that have fascinated
poets. In Run, Shepherds, Run, Bill Countryman presents a poem a
day for devotional reading during Advent and the twelve days of
Christmas. Readers will find classic poets they know and love,
including George Herbert, John Donne, Christina Rossetti, Emily
Dickinson, and Alfred, Lord Tennyson, as well as contemporary
poets, known and unknown. Run, Shepherds, Run includes helpful
hints for reading poetry, for those who have less experience
reading it than others, as well as useful annotations to help
readers with older language that may not have easily apparent
meanings for today's readers.
This beautiful book describes and interprets a series of paintings
for each day of Advent. Artists often address subjects our culture
seeks to avoid, and Jane Williams' brilliant and perceptive
reflections will help you to read these paintings with a more
discerning eye, and discover deeper levels of meaning than may at
first appear.
How do the arts inform and cultivate our service to God? In this
addition to an award-winning series, distinguished philosopher
Bruce Ellis Benson rethinks what it means to be artistic. Rather
than viewing art as practiced by the few, he recovers the ancient
Christian idea of presenting ourselves to God as works of art,
reenvisioning art as the very core of our being: God calls us to
improvise as living works of art. Benson also examines the nature
of liturgy and connects art and liturgy in a new way. This book
will appeal to philosophy, worship/liturgy, art, music, and
theology students as well as readers interested in engaging issues
of worship and aesthetics in a postmodern context, including
Christian artists and worship leaders.
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