|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
The world has changed, but will the church keep up? This seminal
report from the Church of England evaluates the changing religious
landscape and introduces exciting new forms of church that speak
directly to their diverse mission contexts. The Archbishop of
Canterbury's Council on Mission and Public Affairs collaborated to
research and produce the Mission-Shaped Church report in 2004, and
Seabury Books is the new North American Publisher.
Ministerial training and enabling lay discipleship have become key
strategic issues as the Church seeks to respond to new challenges
in its mission and ministry. This major report was commissioned and
endorsed by the Archbishops' Council and produced by a working
party chaired by Bishop John Hind. It reviews the training needs of
the clergy in the context of the learning needs of the Church as a
whole. Proceeding from the conviction of the diversity of God's
gifts to the Church, it seeks to: raise the standard of the initial
training of the clergy; promote the patterns of lifelong learning;
strengthen lay theological education; co-ordinate the work and
resources of our existing ministerial training institutions and
other potential partners; promote ecumenical partnership in the
training enterprise; and secure the best value for the Church s
expenditure in training. With these aims the review offers a broad
strategy for the development of training to be implemented
regionally and locally in the coming years.
This handbook is a summary version of the longer "A Time to Heal"
report. It provides a guide on the report from the Church of
England on the ministry of healing. The report offers an overview
of the current state of this ministry, a look at how the ministry
takes shape at local level, and a framework for the development of
the healing ministry in the 21st century. There are answers to key
questions, guidelines for good practice, and radical
recommendations for improved effectiveness.
Ministerial training and enabling lay discipleship have become key
strategic issues as the Church seeks to respond to new challenges
in its mission and ministry. This major report was commissioned and
endorsed by the Archbishops' Council and produced by a working
party chaired by Bishop John Hind. It reviews the training needs of
the clergy in the context of the learning needs of the Church as a
whole. Proceeding from the conviction of the diversity of God's
gifts to the Church, it seeks to: raise the standard of the initial
training of the clergy; promote the patterns of lifelong learning;
strengthen lay theological education; co-ordinate the work and
resources of our existing ministerial training institutions and
other potential partners; promote ecumenical partnership in the
training enterprise; and secure the best value for the Church s
expenditure in training. With these aims the review offers a broad
strategy for the development of training to be implemented
regionally and locally in the coming years.
The histories of the Church of England and the Methodist Church
have been linked together for 250 years. In the 1970s, a proposal
for unity failed narrowly. Now relationships between Methodists and
Anglicans are stronger than ever, locally, regionally and
nationally. Both are committed to the search for unity. What holds
them apart? This official report of the Formal Conversations that
began in 1999 sets out the common ground that has been
rediscovered. It shows the strength of theological agreement, but
also points out significant differences that require further work.
Conscious of both the opportunities and the unresolved issues, the
two churches asked the Conversations to draw up an agreement that
would enable them to take a significant step towards future unity.
The talks gave priority to mission and evangelism and paid special
attention to diversity. This report proposes a national covenant,
made up of mutual acknowledgement and mutual commitment. It should
consolidate at the national level the many local and regional
covenants that already exist and so prepare the ground for the next
vital stage on the road to unity.
The Archbishops' Commission on the Organisation of the Church of
England has carried out a more comprehensive review of the national
institutions of the Church than has ever before been undertaken.
Its recommendations are far-reaching and, if implemented, would
radically change the ways in which the Church of England operates.
This would involve a redefinition of how episcopal leadership and
synodical governance can work most effectively together in
resolving policy and resource issues at the national level, a
change of working culture, and much closer integration at the
national level and with dioceses. The report sets out clearly the
theological principles which led the Commission to its conclusions,
describes briefly the existing central structures and goes on to
outline the proposals for a new National Council for the Church of
England.
For Such a Time as This takes a radical look at the ministry of
Deacons in the Church. It brings biblical, theological and
ecumenical perspectives to bear on a ministry that many believe has
not yet realised its full potential. Diakonia is reinterpreted in
the light of recent biblical research as fundamental commissioning
for ministry - one that expresses the essential nature of the whole
Church and underlies all ordained ministry. Deacons are seen as
go-between or link persons in the mission space between the Churchs
liturgy and the needy world. This report of a Working Party of the
House of Bishops, set up by the General Synod, also comments on the
implications for lay ministry and proposes a concrete job
description or ministerial profile for a renewed diaconate, one
that is not merely transitional to the priesthood. The Report
argues that the Diaconate comes into its own at times of social
change and cultural crisis and that the time is now right to renew
the diaconate for the sake of mission.
|
You may like...
Baobab
Beth Moon
Hardcover
R908
Discovery Miles 9 080
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.