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Books > Christianity > Christian Worship
Have we replaced the glory of God with our church programs. If so,
is there anything we can do to get the glory of God back into our
gatherings and individual lives? While we have good music,
well-written songs and history to learn from, we can still miss
having the presence of God in our meetings the way it was in Bible
times. In this challenging and often provocative book, Jarrod
Cooper deals with these important questions. Providing plenty of
biblical illustrations to support his concerns, Jarrod shakes up
more of our conventional thinking on the subject or worship. Can we
for example only worship in the presence of the microphone, worship
leader and powerpoint. What if all these were stripped away and it
was just God and us? What would our worship be like then?
At key moments in his life on earth, Jesus Christ, the very Son of
God, turned to the Psalms for words to express his deepest thoughts
and emotions. It is not hard to imagine Jesus, his mind and heart
saturated with the words and thoughts of the Psalms as they were
prayed aloud in the Temple, going off early in the morning to pray.
How much must he have mouthed the words of the Psalms and given
them a fulfillment? They became his answering speech to his
heavenly Father. In these pages you will discover how the psalms
that relate closely to the mission of Jesus can also become our
answering speech. We will begin our journey into the mind of Christ
by immersing ourselves in several psalms which Jesus himself refers
to and fulfills. And then in the second half of the book, we will
immerse ourselves in psalms that Jesus would have meditated on
during his time on earth, focusing on the heart and mind of Jesus
as he prayed the psalms. Structural analysis of each psalm will
help us grow our ability to read the Psalms. The guided personal
prayer liturgy with each chapter will help us go deeper in the
experience of praying the Psalms. Through these psalms we will
discover more of the human life of our Lord and Savior. And in the
process we will discover more of who we are as we come before our
holy God. Also included: a group discussion and prayer experience
to accompany each chapter.
Rituals transform citizens into presidents and princesses into
queens. They transform sick persons into healthy ones, and public
space into prohibited sanctuary. Shamanic rituals heal, legal
rituals bind, political rituals ratify, and religious rituals
sanctify. But how exactly do they accomplish these things? How do
rituals work? This is the question of ritual efficacy, and although
it is one of the very first questions that people everywhere ask of
rituals, surprisingly little has been written on the topic. In
fact, this collection of 10 contributed essays is the first to
explicitly address the question of ritual efficacy. The authors do
not aspire to answer the question 'how do rituals work?' in a
simplistic fashion, but rather to show how complex the question is.
While some contributors do indeed advance a particular theory of
ritual efficacy, others ask whether the question makes any sense at
all, and most show how complex it is by referring to the
sociocultural environment in which it is posed, since the answer
depends on who is asking the question, and what criteria they use
to evaluate the efficacy of ritual. In his introduction, William
Sax emphasizes that the very notion of ritual efficacy is a
suspicious one because, according to a widespread 'modern' and
'scientific' viewpoint, rituals are merely expressive, and
therefore cannot be efficacious. Rituals are thought of as
superficial, 'merely symbolic,' and certainly not effective.
Nevertheless many people insist that rituals 'work,' and the
various positions taken on the question tell us a great deal about
the social and historical background of the people involved. One
essay, for example, illuminates a dispute between 'materialist' and
'enlightenment' Catholics in Ecuador, with the former affirming the
notion of ritual efficacy and the latter doubting it. In other
essays, contributors address instances in which orthodox religious
figures (mullahs, church authorities, and even scientific
positivists) discount the efficacy of rituals. In several of the
essays, 'modern' people are suspicious of rituals and tend to deny
their efficacy, confirming the theme highlighted in Sax's
introduction.
"You're blessed when you've worked up a good appetite for God."
Matthew 5:6 The Message We live in hungry times. Ours is a consumer
culture, predisposed to quickly fill the cravings of body and mind.
The idea of fasting--the voluntary denial of something for a
specific time, for a spiritual purpose--sets us immediately on
edge. But Lynne Baab makes the case that anyone can fast. Fasting
is an expression of freedom. Free from the patterns and habits that
mark everyday life, from time to time we can move beyond our
appetites into meaningful encounter with God. In Fasting you'll
discover an ancient Christian practice that extends beyond giving
up food to any regular activity in our contemporary lives. You'll
see how taking a break from eating--or driving, or checking e-mail,
or watching television--opens us up to discover new things about
ourselves and God and the world around us. You'll see that while
not everyone should forgo food, anyone can step out of routine to
feed the soul. In a time of great spiritual hunger, God invites us
all to a feast: fellowship with the Creator of the universe, where
all our truest needs are identified and attended to.
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Common Prayer
(Hardcover)
Joseph S Pagano, Amy E. Richter; Foreword by Stanley Hauerwas
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"I know dogs in my life the way I know people and cats and trees
and landscapes. Dogs help me shape my thoughts, feelings, and
prayer life. Dogs have taught me attributes I feel in myself when
reflecting and praying. "Dogs have shown me the spirit of being
loyal, glad, overwhelmed, protective, committed, vigilant, patient,
kind, energetic, discerning, forgiving. Unfolding these attributes
of dog life opens my own spiritual being. My relationship with dog
mirrors my relationship with God." In Dog Psalms the reader can use
a dog's attributes to speak to God.
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.
A personal retreat. We've never needed it more. We run from one
place to the next--from meetings and appointments to our kid's
soccer practice, from class to work to choir rehearsal, from the
grocery store to small group--and then drop into bed later than we
hoped, exhausted and dreading the morning. We want to slow down but
don't know how and don't really believe that we can. And often, the
idea of a personal retreat--time for solitude and silence--makes us
feel as anxious as all our frenzied rushing. What in the world
would we do with an hour, an afternoon or (gulp ) a whole day of
solitude with God? But what is the cost of our frantic pace? What
are we missing by not slowing down for reflection and meditation on
Scripture? What kind of toll does our anxious running take on those
around us--and, even more deeply, on our own soul? In Resting
Place, retreat speaker Jane Rubietta addresses soul matters with
retreat topics such as dealing with our fear of abandonment,
wrestling with discontent, overcoming our attempts to control
others and fulfilling our deep desire to be loved. These retreats
help us enter Psalm 23 rest, a place of true rest and trust in our
loving, gentle Shepherd. Full of quotes to contemplate, Scripture
to meditate on, questions, prayer and journaling ideas, and ideas
for creativity, Jane Rubietta leads us to and through times of
silence and solitude that will follow us into our everyday world as
we learn to allow Jesus to guide, comfort and restore us. Come to
the Shepherd, and find the true rest your soul is longing for.
Rediscovering the role God designed for the church in mission is a
critical issue facing the missions movement today. That role is to
glorify God by planting churches among every tongue, tribe, and
nation. Planting churches amid unreached peoples is a complex
process. It calls forth every ministry gift and the contribution of
every believer. Imagine a businessman, a construction worker, a
schoolteacher, and an engineer all working together to support the
development of a local church amongst an unreached people group in
another part of the world. Most Christians will not leave home and
go elsewhere to minister. If they are to participate in God's
global mission, they must be affirmed, developed and released right
where they live, in the context of their local church. This book
shows how churches can become centers of mission vision and
implementation and so accomplish God's design for the local church.
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