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Christians talk about the Holy Spirit, but rarely know how to
recognize the Spirit's presence and activity in the world. Luke is
the most illuminating gospel writer on the topic of the Holy
Spirit. Luke writes about Jesus as the messiah anointed by the Holy
Spirit, and about the church as the Spirit-empowered fellowship in
the Mediterranean world of the first century. These meditations on
Luke-Acts attempt to discern how the winds of the Spirit have blown
in the lives of Jesus, his disciples, and the earliest Christians
so that we can track and participate in the works of the Holy
Spirit in the global village of the 21st century.
The Bible and Disability: A Commentary (BDC) is the first
comprehensive commentary on the Bible from the perspective of
disability. The BDC examines how the Bible constructs or reflects
human wholeness, impairment, and disability in all their
expressions. Biblical texts do envision the ideal body, but they
also present visions of the body that deviate from this ideal,
whether physically or through cognitive impairments or mental
illness. The BDC engages the full range of these depictions of body
and mind, exploring their meaning through close readings and
comparative analysis. The BDC enshrines the distinctive
interpretive imagination required to span the worlds of biblical
studies and disability studies. Each of the fourteen contributors
has worked at this intersection; and through their combined
expertise, the very best of both biblical studies and disability
studies culminates in detailed textual work of description,
interpretation, and application to provide a synthetic and synoptic
whole. The result is a close reading of the Bible that gives
long-overdue attention to the fullness of human identity narrated
in the Scriptures. Not for sale in the UK.
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The Kerygmatic Spirit (Hardcover)
Amos Yong; Edited by Josh P S Samuel; Afterword by Tony Richie
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Hearts Minds Bookstore's Best Books of 2015, Theology Toward the
end of the twentieth century, Lesslie Newbigin offered a
penetrating analysis of the challenges of pluralism that confronted
a Western culture and society reeling from the dissolution of
Christendom. His enormous influence has been felt ever since.
Newbigin (1909-1998) was a longtime Church of Scotland missionary
to India and later General Secretary of the International
Missionary Council and Associate General Secretary of the World
Council of Churches. The first installment in the Missiological
Engagements series, the essays in this volume explore three aspects
of Newbigin?s legacy. First, they assess the impact of his 1989
book, Gospel in a Pluralist Society, on Christian mission and
evangelism in the West. Second, they critically analyze the nature
of Western pluralism in its many dimensions to discern how
Christianity can proclaim good news for today. Finally, the
contributors discuss the influence of Newbigin's work on the field
of missiology. By looking backward, this volume recommends and
advances a vision for Christian witness in the pluralistic world of
the twenty-first century. Contributions from leading missiologists
and theologians, including: William Burrows John Flett Veli-Matti
Karkkainen Esther Meek Wilbert Shenk Missiological Engagements
charts interdisciplinary and innovative trajectories in the
history, theology, and practice of Christian mission, featuring
contributions by leading thinkers from both the Euro-American West
and the majority world whose missiological scholarship bridges
church, academy, and society.
Los Angeles is a global crossroads of migrating communities that
presents a case study of migration, transnationalism, and
interfaith engagement with significant implications for thinking
and practice in other global hubs. This book weaves together
contributions from a group of internationally-recognized scholars
who were brought together for the 2020 Missiology Lectures at
Fuller Theological Seminary, which received funding from the Luce
Foundation. They examine historical waves of migration - European
Protestant, Asian, Latino/a, and Muslim - into Southern California
and use sociological, missiological, and theological methods to
understand the experience of migration and its effects, both on
those who move and those who are already there. The result shows
how migrants are inspired and sustained by faith and spiritual
resources; how migration challenges faith communities about their
identity and attitudes to others; how faith communities in turn
impact the migration landscape through immigrant integration and
public advocacy, and how migration forges new transnational and
global ways of being in community and innovative religious
movements. The contributors put forward a mission theology of
migration and suggest mission practices in response to the
suffering caused by forced migration and the injustices of
immigration systems.
In this book, established scholars from different religions,
regions, and disciplines continue the dialogue that Veli-Matti
Karkkainen began in his A Constructive Christian Theology for the
Pluralistic World series and respond to his work in light of their
diverse expertise and context. Each of the three parts focuses on a
key area of Karkkainen's engaging work: 1) highlighting how his
method shaped each volume, 2) highlighting his commitment to global
perspectives, and 3) highlighting his interreligious and
interdisciplinary dialogue partners. Together, these essays seek to
deepen and extend the impact of Karkkainen's work, taking it
seriously as a substantive model for contemporary systematic
theology in listening and engaging with this world.
These essays reflect on the future of Christian theology in light
of the contributions Jurgen Moltmann has made in his prolific
career as one of the world's foremost theologians. They are not a
prediction of what is coming in the future of theology, since God's
own actions, and human history, for that matter, are not
predictable. Expressed here is hope for what future theology should
take seriously from Moltmann's work. Moltmann broke the mold of
19th and 20th century theology by focusing consistently on God's
promises of a new heaven and a new earth. The result was a
theological imagination that is utterly realistic, delighting in
the creative tension of theology that lives in an unfinished, open
field of negations and possibilities. Hope for the promised future
of God casts its light on present sufferings that contradict that
future. The prominent themes here focus on the contradictions of
God's promises and God's justice. The essays see clearly the human
domination that leads to the oppression of nature, the hatred of
the poor, the dominance of one gender over the other, the migration
of those who find no home in their homeland, and the wounds of
neocolonialism. For Moltmann, these sufferings do not belong simply
to ethics but to the heart of theology. The doctrines of creation,
redemption, and new creation are fully engaged in the political,
economic, ecological, and social problems of this time. Here lies
the way ecumenism will be reborn in the future. The essays argue
that theology should not turn aside from Moltmann's main theme of
the resurrection of the Crucified One and of the presence of God's
future in the present. Hope opens our eyes to the work of God's
Spirit of Life and the affirmation of eternal life in the present.
The future of Christian theology should not miss the theme of joy
in the face of sin, death, and evil and the celebration of God's
cosmic, all-inclusive future in which God will be at home in God's
creation.
Paul Tillich (1886-1965) is widely regarded as one of the most
influential theologians of the 20th century. By bringing his
thought together with the theology and practices of an important
contemporary Christian movement, Pentecostalism, this volume
provokes active, productive, critical, and creative dialogue with a
broad range of theological topics. These essays stimulate robust
conversation, engage on common ground regarding the work of the
Holy Spirit, and offer significant insights into the universal
concerns of Christian theology and Paul Tillich and his legacy.
This volume brings 'America's theologian' and one of the fastest
growing forms of Christianity into dialogue. Edwards is a fruitful
source for Pentecostal investigation for historical and theological
reasons. Edwards and Pentecostals descend from a common historical
tradition-North American Evangelicalism. From revivalism and
religious/charismatic experience to pneumatology they also share
common theological interests. Though sharing a common history and
core theological concerns, no critical conversation between
Pentecostals and Edwards and their fields of scholarship has
occurred. This is the first volume that provides Pentecostal
readings of Edwards' theology that contribute to Pentecostal
theology and Edwards scholarship. The contributing essays offer
examination of affections and the Spirit, God and Salvation, Church
and culture; and mission and witness.
Godly Love: Impediments and Possibilities examines the theory of
"Godly Love," understood as including a vertical axis denoting the
love of God and a horizontal axis involving the love of others, is
at the core of a new field of research that studies how divine love
influences the love of others and vice-versa. It is a
multidisciplinary research program into the benevolent expressions
of the Great Commandment of the Christian tradition involving the
theological and social sciences. Theological and social scientific
essays that ask why there is not more Godly Love in this world and
what might be done to change the situation. This book focuses on
the problems confronting, challenging, prohibiting, and perhaps
even resisting the concrete expression of Godly Love in the world,
utilizing a range of theological and especially social scientific
methodologies.
Christianity Today Book Award Winner Outreach Resource of the Year
(Multicultural) ASM (American Society of Missiology) Book of the
Year Award Globalization is speeding up our world, extending our
relationships globally and bringing us closer together in positive
and not-so-positive ways. The church and many Christians, however,
remain largely unaware of its seductive power, resulting in a
failure of vision for mission in today's world. This up-to-date
resource by a veteran leader in global development work with World
Vision orients readers to the history of globalization and to a
Christian theological perspective on it, explores concrete
realities by focusing on global poverty, and helps readers
reimagine Christian mission in ways that announce the truly good
news of Christ and God's kingdom. Diagrams and sidebars that
incorporate the voices of global partners are included. This is the
second book in a new series that reframes missiological themes and
studies for students using/featuring the common theme of mission as
partnership with Christians.
The Pentecostal movement has had an incredible impact on the shape
of worldwide Christianity in the past century. Estimates are that
Pentecostals and charismatics make up approximately one-fourth of
Christians worldwide, and the numbers are only expected to grow.
With these developments comes the need for thoughtful Christians of
all persuasions to better understand Pentecostal theology. In fact,
Amos Yong believes that Pentecostal theology can be a great gift to
the church at large.
Yong presents a thoroughly Pentecostal theology of salvation, the
church, the nature of God, and creation. He also provides a
fascinating survey of the state of worldwide Pentecostalism,
examining how Pentecostal theology is influencing Christian
churches in other countries.
Pentecostalism has been known much more for its religious
experientialism than for its theology. During the past generation,
however, Pentecostals have taken up the task of reflecting
theologically from their experience of the Spirit of God. This book
represents Pentecostal theology at its best, being thoroughly and
unabashedly Pentecostal on the one hand, and yet being deeply
ecumenical on the other. Within this dual Pentecostal and
ecumenical framework, it offers Spirit-centered theological
perspectives on the doctrine of the Church (ecclesiology), the
doctrine of the salvation (soteriology), and the ministry and
witness of Christians to the world (theology of mission). Toward a
Pneumatological Theology is a sign that Pentecostal theology has
come of age. It furthers the discussion of what it means to do
Christian theology by starting with the Spirit of God, thereby
demonstrating that Pentecostalism may indeed have something unique
and distinctive to offer theologically to the larger Christian
Church. At the same time, it will also be of interest to those who
wish to begin understanding Pentecostalism on its own terms as well
as to those who have followed closely the history and theology of
the movement.
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