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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Methodist Churches
In seven chapters, Willimon examines United Methodism and the ways
it has made and continues to make a difference in his life. In an
inspiring and enlightening way, he writes of his pride in being
part of a church that has grown from one man's experience to a
worldwide movement covering the globe with its message. A learning
guide for groups and individuals is included.
Chapter titles: Because Religion Is of the Heart Because the
Bible Is Our Book Because Religion Is Practical Because Christians
Are to Witness Because Christians Are to Grow Because Religion Is
Not a Private Affair
This volume is intended to set in historical context the official
United Methodist theological statements in the Disciplines of 1972
and 1988, and to foster reflection on and discussion of the 1988
statement.
With its plain, easy-to-understand language, this Pocket Guide will
help you understand the major aspects of John Wesley's theology.
You will discover what Wesley believed about...The image of God
and original sin Stewardship Justification by faith The witness of
the Spirit Social holiness
...and more. This 96 page booklet also offers study questions
that will help you or your group discuss the importance of Wesley's
ideas for Christians today.
In a single, convenient volume, readers can now look up John
Wesley's own statements of his theological beliefs. Reprinted from
the 1954 work, A Compend of Wesley's Theology, the book includes
Wesley's most significant statements on the essential questions of
Christian doctrine, culled from over thirty of his works.
Women in the United Methodist tradition have long expressed
their commitment to Christ and to their sisters and brothers. Here
is a collection of essays and primary source documents that tells
the stories of pioneering ministries of United Methodist women--of
diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds--from the eighteenth century.
Each essay traces the individual faith journeys and
self-understanding of its subject. The stories also reveal the
sexism and racism that confronted each woman overtly or covertly in
church and society, as well as their own attitudes toward it.
A selection of primary source documents by the subject follows
each essay; these personal statements express vividly each woman's
vision of vocation. In this way, the volume provides a lens for
interpreting and analyzing the subjects' lives through their own
words and enables women and men of today to identify with the
commitment, experiences, and struggles of these pioneers and apply
them to their own faith journeys. Thus, through the witness of
these women, Spirituality and Social Responsibility calls the
church to accountability and discipleship, both pastorally and
prophetically.
Asserting that the "return to Wesley" that is represented in the
Quadrilateral is "intellectually wrongheaded," William J. Abraham
argues that the Quadrilateral is not, and should not be, United
Methodist doctrine. Abraham's lively treatise makes a provocative
appeal for a reasoned exploration of the significance of the UMC's
doctrinal identity. He reveals how churches have faced incompatible
doctrinal proposals within their midst and examines the specific
issues facing the United Methodist church as a whole.
This first effort at constructive Wesleyan theology to appear in
United Methodist circles since the formation of the denomination in
1868 draws on the historical and literary work that has
characterized Wesley studies in recent years. However, it moves
beyond them to propose a way of reconstructing essential elements
of Wesley's thought in service of the life and mission of United
Methodists today.
For the first time, students of Wesley have access to Albert C.
Outler's widely acclaimed "introduction" to Volume 1 of The Works
of John Wesley in a single inexpensive paperback.
No student of John Wesley will need to be reminded of Albert
Outler's stature, or the significance of his contribution to
twentieth-century Wesleyan studies.
Contents A Career in Retrospect The Preacher and His Preaching
The Sermon Corpus Theological Method and the Problems of
development Wesley and His Sources On Reading Wesley's Sermons
God raises up Methodists for such a time as this. Here is a ditty
Len Sweet s Methodist grandfather used to sing: A Methodist, a
Methodist will I be A Methodist will I die. I ve been baptized in
the Methodist way And I ll live on the Methodist side. What genius
of Methodism inspired this kind of love and loyalty in the earlier
years of the faith? What did it mean to live in the Methodist way
and to die on the Methodist side? Perhaps it is time to resurrect a
neo-Wesleyan identity and to challenge the prevailing one-calorie
Methodism that characterizes so much of our tribe today. What makes
a Methodist? How can we re-ignite the spark of genius that
motivated such commitment in our cloud of witnesses? The essence of
Methodism s genius resides in two famous Wesleyan mantras: heart
strangely warmed (inward experiences with a fire in the heart) and
the world is our parish (outward experiences with waterfalls of
cutting-edge intelligence). For Wesley, internal combustion, the
former, led to external combustion, the latter. In the 18th
century, Methodists in general (and in their younger years, the
Wesley brothers themselves) were accused of being too sexy. What
else could all those love feasts and strangely warmed hearts be
about? Why else were all those women in positions of leadership?
With this book the author hopes to bring back to life some of
Methodism s sexiness so that our current reproduction crisis can be
reversed. "
The Elect Methodists is the first full-length academic study of
Calvinistic Methodism, a movement that emerged in the eighteenth
century as an alternative to the better known Wesleyan grouping.
While the branch of Methodism led by John Wesley has received
significant historical attention, Calvinistic Methodism, especially
in England, has not. The book charts the sources of the
eighteenth-century Methodist revival in the context of Protestant
evangelicalism emerging in continental Europe and colonial North
America, and then proceeds to follow the fortunes in both England
and Wales of the Calvinistic branch, to the establishing of formal
denominations in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries.
Throughout this book, Scott J. Jones insists that for United
Methodists the ultimate goal of doctrine is holiness. Importantly,
he clarifies the nature and the specific claims of "official"
United Methodist doctrine in a way that moves beyond the current
tendency to assume the only alternatives are a rigid dogmatism or
an unfettered theological pluralism. In classic Wesleyan form,
Jones' driving concern is with recovering the vital role of forming
believers in the "mind of Christ, " so that they might live more
faithfully in their many settings in our world.
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