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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Aspects of religions (non-Christian) > Religious institutions & organizations
Using an innovative methodological approach combining field
experiments, case studies, and statistical analyzes, this book
explores how the religious beliefs and institutions of Catholics
and Muslims prompt them to be generous with their time and
resources. Drawing upon research involving more than 1,000
Catholics and Muslims in France, Ireland, Italy, and Turkey, the
authors examine Catholicism and Islam in majority and minority
contexts, discerning the specific factors that lead adherents to
help others and contribute to social welfare projects. Based on
theories from political science, economics, religious studies and
social psychology, this approach uncovers the causal connections
between religious community dynamics, religious beliefs and
institutions, and socio-political contexts in promoting or
hindering the generosity of Muslims and Catholics. The study also
provides insight into what different religious beliefs mean to
Muslims and Catholics, and how they understand those concepts.
This book focuses on Free Church pastors in Germany and their
perceptions of spirit possession and mental illness. To explore
Free Church pastors' understanding of spirit possession and mental
illness is critical in light of the overlap of symptoms.
Misdiagnosis may result in a client receiving treatment that may
not be appropriate. Interviews with Free Church pastors were
conducted. The results were analysed and four themes were
identified. Based on these interviews conclusions could be drawn
which ultimately made it clear that the German free church pastors'
theological training needs to be supplemented in the area of
psychology and that the pastors are unable to cope in the area of
"spirit possession or mental illness".
Imagine an organizational model for church leadership that enables
the entire team to unleash their full potential. The joy and vigor
coming from a collective strength, intelligence, and skill in the
community of leaders not only brings greater potency but better
yields for your ministry. What would it be like to see this kind of
healthy leadership reproduced into the second, third, and fourth
generation, on multiple strands? Leveraging the metaphor Ori
Brafman popularized in his NYT best-selling book, The Starfish and
the Spider, Rob Wegner, Lance Ford, and Alan Hirsch show: How to
take a close look at your church's organizational structure and how
to adapt instead of simply adopt a certain kind of structural
approach. How churches can function without a rigid central
authority, making them nimbler in reacting to external forces. How
seeding starfish networks inside today's churches will prepare the
church of tomorrow to be agile while maintaining the accountability
to be effective. The Starfish and the Spirit is about creating a
culture where church leaders view themselves as curators of a
community on a mission, not the source of certainty for every
question and project. It's about creating a team of humble leaders
"in the middle" of the church, not at the top--leaders who
naturally reproduce multiple generations of leaders, from the
middle out.
Mead takes a broad look at past and present changes in the church,
and postulates a future to which those changes are calling us.
Denominations, once structured to deliver resources to far-off
lands of foreign mission, now encounter the mission field in the
layperson's workplace and the community surrounding the local
congregation. Thus, the church is called to reinvention for this
new mission frontier
As Pope Francis continues to make his mark on the church, there is
increased interest in his Jesuit background-what is the Society of
Jesus, how is it different from other religious orders, and how has
it shaped the world? In The Jesuits, acclaimed historian John W.
O'Malley, SJ, provides essential historical background from the
founder Ignatius of Loyola through the present. The book tells the
story of the Jesuits' great successes as missionaries, educators,
scientists, cartographers, polemicists, theologians, poets, patrons
of the arts, and confessors to kings. It tells the story of their
failures and of the calamity that struck them in 1773 when Pope
Clement XIV suppressed them worldwide. It tells how a subsequent
pope restored them to life and how they have fared to this day in
virtually every country in the world. Along the way it introduces
readers to key figures in Jesuit history, such as Matteo Ricci and
Pedro Arrupe, and important Jesuit writings, such as the Spiritual
Exercises. Concise and compelling, The Jesuits is an accessible
introduction for anyone interested in world or church history. In
addition to the narrative, the book provides a timeline, a list of
significant figures, photos of important figures and locations,
recommendations for additional reading, and more. The paperback
features a new Preface that examines the significant global work of
the Jesuits today, including the impact of the first Jesuit pope,
the work of the Jesuit Refugee Service, and more.
*A bestseller since 2002 (over 40,000 in print), thoroughly revised
with 50% new material. *This seminal work was one of the first to
integrate mindfulness into psychotherapy. *The second edition
features advances in MBCT techniques and findings from numerous
clinical trials. *Outstanding utility: purchasers get access to
downloadable audio recordings of guided meditations (with
permission to give to clients), and more than 40 downloadable
forms. *From the top clinician-researcher team who also coauthored
the bestselling trade book The Mindful Way through Depression.
Papal collectors recovered monies due from the clergy to the
Apostolic Chamber and in the late Middle Ages were an important
factor in the communication between the Papacy and the Church as a
whole, particularly as in some countries they assumed the functions
of diplomatic representatives. The study examines all aspects of
collectorship including a comparison of the financial revenue it
yielded it different European countries. The volume also includes a
prosopographic study of the collectors and sub-collectors in the
German-speaking areas of Europe, complete with bibliographic
references on the members of this group.
The NASB Pew and Worship Bible is perfect for any church pew or
classroom and matches page-for-page with the NASB Preacher's Bible.
While both Bibles retain their own distinct page layout and font
size, they were skillfully designed so that the pages of these two
different Bibles begin and end with the same word. This will allow
pastors and congregations to literally be on the same page during
sermons. Universally recognized as the gold standard among
word-for-word translations, the beloved New American Standard
Bible, 1995 Edition, is now easier to read with Zondervan's
exclusive NASB Comfort Print (R) typeface. Features The full text
of the New American Standard Bible, 1995 Edition Matches
page-for-page with the NASB Preacher's Bible Premium, durable
hardcover binding High-quality paper Double-column, verse-by-verse
format Exclusive Zondervan NASB Comfort Print typeface 9-point
print size
This Element provides a comprehensive overview of the
Transcendental Meditation (TM) Movement and its offshoots. Several
early assessments of the as a cult and/or new religious movement
are helpful, but are brief and somewhat dated. This Element
examines the TM movement's history, beginning in India in 1955, and
ends with an analysis of the splinter groups that have come along
in the past twenty-five years. Close consideration is given to the
movement's appeal for the youth culture of the 1960s, which
accounted for its initial success. The Element also looks at the
marketing of the meditation technique as a scientifically endorsed
practice in the 1970s, and the movement's dramatic turn inward
during the 1980s. It concludes by discussing the waning of its
popular appeal in the new millennium. This Element describes the
social and cultural forces that helped shape the TM movement's
trajectory over the decades leading to the present and shows how
the most popular meditation movement in America distilled into an
obscure form of Neo-Hinduism.
Create a small, strong congregation that is dedicated to advancing
God's mission The twenty-first century is the century of small,
strong congregations. More people will be drawn to small, strong
congregations than any other kind of congregation. Yes, there are
mega-congregations; Their number is increasing greatly.
Nevertheless, across the planet, the vast majority of congregations
will be small and strong, and the vast majority of people will be
in these congregations. With uncommon wisdom Kennon L.
Callahan--today's most noted church consultant--moves ahead of
conventional thinking and in Small, Strong Congregations offers his
unique vision of the church of the future. This important book
chronicles the emergence of a vast number of congregations that are
questioning the bigger-is-better notion in church membership. These
congregations are deliberately small, active, and happy in their
dedication to creating strong church communities that advance God's
mission. Step by step, Kennon Callahan shows pastors and other
church leaders how they can develop the values and specific
qualities helpful to shape and strengthen their own small
congregations.Written to be a hands-on guide, Small, Strong
Congregations offers practical suggestions for creating mission and
service, compassion and shepherding, community and belonging,
self-reliance and self-sufficiency, worship and hope, teams and
leaders, space and facilities, and giving and generosity. This wise
resource is filled with illustrative examples that show clearly how
myriad small churches have created solid, vigorous congregations.
Faced with crisis, lack of direction, or just plain "stuckness,"
many congregations and their leaders are content to deal only with
surface issues and symptoms only to discover that the same problems
keep recurring, often in different, and more serious, ways. In The
Hidden Lives of Congregations, Christian educator and consultant
Israel Galindo takes leaders below the surface of congregational
life to provide a comprehensive, holistic look at the corporate
nature of church relationships and the invisible dynamics at play.
Informed by family systems theory and grounded in a wide-ranging
ecclesiological understanding, Galindo unpacks clearly the factors
of congregational lifespan, size, spirituality, and identity and
shows how these work together to form the congregation s hidden
life. He provides useful tools for diagnosing and understanding how
one s congregation fits into the various categories he names and
suggests what leadership skills are necessary to get beyond the
impasse of surface issues and help the congregation achieve its
mission. The Hidden Lives of Congregations provides one of the most
far-reaching looks into the invisible nature of faith communities
written in recent years. For seminaries and divinity schools, it
provides a standard text for getting a solid start in
congregational practices; for experienced pastors, it provides
support for renewing ministry; for lay leaders and committees, it
offers insight to deepening mutual ministry. Israel Galindo has
written an indispensable manual that leaders will return to
repeatedly for new wisdom and guidance"
"Preaching today", says Kennon Callahan," is less about law and
more about grace. It is about inviting people to discover God's
grace, perhaps for the first time, and touching their lives in a
powerful, personal, helpful way." Callahan, who has helped tens of
thousands of church leaders and pastors through his dynamic
workshops and seminars, sees the sermon as a shared event for the
pastor and the congregation who are gathered to discover the good
news for this day and the week to come. He sees preaching as a sign
of grace, compassion, community, and hope. Preaching Grace
encourages pastors to develop the approach to preaching that
matches with their unique gifts and strengths. Through focusing on
these strengths, pastors will discover more fully their own
personal preaching style and advance the sermons that will stir and
inspire their congregations-to discover the grace of God, the
compassion of Christ, and the healing hope of the Holy Spirit.
Religious controversies frequently center on origins, and at the
origins of the major religious traditions one typically finds a
seminal figure. Names such as Jesus, Muhammad, Confucius, and Moses
are well known, yet their status as "founders" has not gone
uncontested. Does Paul deserve the credit for founding
Christianity? Is Laozi the father of Daoism, or should that title
belong to Zhuangzi? What is at stake, if anything, in debates about
"the historical Buddha"? What assumptions are implicit in the claim
that Hinduism is a religion without a founder? The essays in
Varieties of Religious Invention do not attempt to settle these
perennial arguments once and for all. Rather, they aim to consider
the subtexts of such debates as an exercise in comparative
religion: Who engages in them? To whom do they matter, and when?
When is "development" in a religious tradition perceived as
"deviation" from its roots? To what extent are origins thought to
define the "essence" of a religion? In what ways do arguments about
founders serve as a proxy for broader cultural, theological,
political, or ideological questions? What do they reveal about the
ways in which the past is remembered and authority negotiated? As
the contributors survey the landscape shaped by these questions
within each tradition, they provide insights and novel perspectives
about the religions individually, and about the study of world
religions as a whole.
Kabir was a great iconoclastic-mystic poet of fifteenth-century
North India; his poems were composed orally, written down by others
in manuscripts and books, and transmitted through song. Scholars
and translators usually attend to written collections, but these
present only a partial picture of the Kabir who has remained
vibrantly alive through the centuries mostly in oral forms.
Entering the worlds of singers and listeners in rural Madhya
Pradesh, Bodies of Song combines ethnographic and textual study in
exploring how oral transmission and performance shape the content
and interpretation of vernacular poetry in North India. The book
investigates textual scholars' study of oral-performative
traditions in a milieu where texts move simultaneously via oral,
written, audio/video-recorded, and electronic pathways. As texts
and performances are always socially embedded, Linda Hess brings
readers into the lives of those who sing, hear, celebrate, revere,
and dispute about Kabir. Bodies of Song is rich in stories of
individuals and families, villages and towns, religious and secular
organizations, castes and communities. Dialogue between
religious/spiritual Kabir and social/political Kabir is a
continuous theme throughout the book: ambiguously located between
Hindu and Muslim cultures, Kabir rejected religious identities,
pretentions, and hypocrisies. But even while satirizing the
religious, he composed stunning poetry of religious experience and
psychological insight. A weaver by trade, Kabir also criticized
caste and other inequalities and today serves as an icon for Dalits
and all who strive to remove caste prejudice and oppression.
Exploring the role of imagination in trauma recovery, the author
shares the arresting dreams and stories of traumatized adolescents.
Describing the impact of trauma on adolescent health and
development, the author provides promising research into the use of
breathing skills, HRV Biofeedback, and dream work to promote
healthy breathing, emotion regulation, and restorative dreaming.
Research suggests that these interventions can decrease
post-traumatic distress and assist in the creation of meaningful
posttraumatic narratives. The author explores the role of embodied
imagination in adolescent spiritual development and posttraumatic
growth. These interventions provide clinicians and pastoral
caregivers with simple and effective ways of helping adolescents
heal from trauma in holistic and dynamic ways that respect the
integrated constitution of the human person.
The Alleluia Community is a unique Christian community of over
three hundred committed charismatic Christians in Augusta, Georgia,
who live a covenant and ecumenical lifestyle. Emerging from the
Charismatic Renewal Movement of the 1960s, members of Alleluia have
maintained a lively charismatic dimension of the Christian
tradition with a willingness to make a life-time covenant
commitment to each other. Since 1973, this group of people has
exhibited heroic virtue, self-sacrifice, humility, deference for
one another, and service to others outside their boundaries. They
claim to be guided by the Holy Spirit in their daily lives. Their
leaders lead with a strong sense of service and Christian love and
a willingness to lay down their own agendas. A major feature of
these covenant makers is that they strive for daily Christian unity
while being committed to one of the twelve-plus various
denominations and fellowships. Swenson had the opportunity of
living among these people for twenty months. During this time, he
used a mixed method approach involving over one hundred interviews
and three hundred instruments to create both qualitative and
quantitative measures of the lives of these people. To structure
their story, he used the dilemmas of the institutionalization of
religion from the scholarship of Thomas O'Dea and secularization
theory. The data gathered give abundant evidence that these
Alleluia faithful have substantively resisted the secular influence
so common in Western culture.
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