|
Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations > General
 |
Earnest
(Hardcover)
Andrew C. Koehl, David Basinger
|
R1,399
R1,157
Discovery Miles 11 570
Save R242 (17%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
Christianity in the United States has long been organized around
congregations and denominations. However, a different type of
organization operating outside of these traditional structures is
claiming an increasingly important place in the religious market.
The growth of Christian nonprofits, popularly called "parachurch"
organizations, has been recognized by churchgoers and social
scientists alike as an important development that is transforming
the composition and dynamics of American Christianity. The size,
resources, and activities of this population have made it the
public face of American Christianity and altered the relationship
between individuals, churches and denominations. Beyond the
Congregation utilizes data on almost 2,000 of the largest and most
influential Christian nonprofits in the United States to answer
some of the key questions raised by these organizations. What
explains the growth of Christian nonprofits? What activities are
they pursuing? How are they funded and how do they use those funds?
Beyond the Congregation provides a much needed examination of these
issues that is accessible and informative for scholars, nonprofit
executives, religious leaders and the general public.
As the pope's alter ego, the medieval papal legate was the crucial
connecting link between Rome and the Christian provinces.
Commissioned with varying degrees of papal authority and
jurisdiction, these hand-picked representatives of the Roman Church
were nothing less than the administrative, legal, and institutional
embodiment of papal justice, diplomacy, government, and law during
the Middle Ages. By examining the origins and development of this
ecclesiastical office in the early Middle Ages, this book defines
the papacy's early contribution to medieval European law and
society. Presenting a pioneering inquiry into the field, The
Foundations of Medieval Papal Legation demonstrates the growth of
papal government and its increasing reliance on representation
beyond Rome, explaining how this centralized position was achieved
over time, going further to legitimize the papacy's burgeoning need
for increased supervision, mediation, and communication throughout
western Christendom. In so doing, it contributes to a wider
administrative, legal, and institutional understanding of papal
government in early medieval Europe as a whole.
This study utilizes the rich archives which survive at Durham
Cathedral to examine the way in which accounting methods and
systems were adopted and adapted to manage income and expenses,
assets and liabilities in changing economic environments.
 |
Metrospiritual
(Hardcover)
Sean Benesh; Foreword by Allan Karr; Preface by Cam Roxburgh
|
R1,046
R885
Discovery Miles 8 850
Save R161 (15%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
Race and the Assemblies of God Church chronicles the treatment of
African Americans by the largest, predominantly white, Pentecostal
denomination in the United States. The formation of the Assemblies
of God in 1914, brought an end to the interracial focus of the
Pentecostal movement that characterized the revival from its
inception in Los Angeles, California, at an abandoned warehouse on
Azusa Street in 1906. Dr. Newman utilizes the extensive archival
holdings of the Flower Pentecostal Heritage Center, housed in the
international headquarters of the Assemblies of God in Springfield,
Missouri, to support his contention that Assemblies of God leaders
deliberately engaged in racist efforts to prevent African American
participation in Assemblies of God activities because the
denominational leaders feared the reaction of its ministers and
congregations in the American South. In addition, a concerted
effort to refer African Americans interested in the Assemblies of
God to African American groups, such as the Church of God in
Christ, was approved at the highest levels of Assemblies of God
leadership. Ultimately, efforts to exclude African Americans from
the denomination led to official decisions to refuse them
ordination and approved resolutions to support the establishment of
a separate, unrelated Pentecostal denomination specifically for
African Americans. Assemblies of God attitudes regarding racial
issues changed only as a result of the civil rights movement and
its effect upon American society during the 1960s and 1970s. The
treatment of race in church groups with European origins was
compared to that of the Assemblies of God and the influence of
African and slave religions upon the rise of the Pentecostal
movement. Finally, the author provides an analysis of the 1994
event known as the "Miracle of Memphis" in which white Pentecostal
denominations dissolved the racially segregated Pentecostal
Fellowship of North America in favor of a new organization, the
Pentecostal and Charismatic Churches of North America. The book
concludes that although current Assemblies of God leaders have
embraced the concept of an integrated church fellowship that no
longer excludes African Americans, there is virtually no evidence
of wide acceptance of this concept at the local church level in the
denomination.
|
|