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Recover the true beauty of Christianity as found in
forgiveness.
If Christianity is to be a compelling and relevant voice in the
twenty-first century, it needs a fresh message. Not a new
innovation or novel interpretation, but a return to our roots. For
if Christianity is not about forgiveness, it's about nothing at
all.
Beginning with the horror of the Holocaust, "Radical Forgiveness"
explores what forgiveness means--and how far it should go--in the
real world of rape, child abuse, genocide, and other atrocities.
With honesty and compassion Zahnd tackles questions such
as...
Should we always forgive? Is forgiveness always even possible?
Does forgiveness enable evil? Does it sacrifice justice? Are there
ANY limits?
Pushing you beyond intellectual exercises, "Radical Forgiveness"
will challenge your thinking by juxtaposing absolutely bottom-line
examples with the simple question: What would you do?
Previously published as "Unconditional?"
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Hellrazed? (Paperback)
Michael Hardin, Brian Zahnd, Lazar Puhalo
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R352
Discovery Miles 3 520
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Is it possible to hold on to faith in an age of unbelief?
Intellectual certainty has long been a cornerstone of the Christian
faith. But in an age of secularism, skepticism, and cynicism, our
worldviews have been shaken. Various solutions exist-some double
down on certainty, while others deconstruct their faith until there
is nothing left at all. But Brian Zahnd offers a third way: what is
needed is not a demolition but instead a renovation of faith.
Written with personal and pastoral experience, Zahnd extends an
invitation to move beyond the crisis of faith toward the journey of
reconstruction. As the world rapidly changes in ways that feel
incompatible with Christianity, When Everything's on Fire provides
much-needed hope. A stronger, more confident faith is possible when
it is grounded in the beauty and truth of Christ. Zahnd permits us
to risk the journey of deconstruction so that God can forge
something more beautiful in its place.
"People don't abandon faith because they have doubts. People
abandon faith because they think they're not allowed to have
doubts." Too often, our honest questions about faith are met with
cold confidence and easy answers. But false certitude doesn't
result in strong faith-it results in disillusionment, or worse, in
a dogmatic, overweening faith unable to see itself or its object
clearly. Even as a pastor, Austin Fischer has experienced the
shadows of doubt and disillusionment. In Faith in the Shadows, he
leans into perennial questions about Christianity with raw and
fearless integrity. He addresses contemporary science, the problem
of evil, hell, God's silence, and other issues, offering not only
fresh treatments of these questions but also a fresh paradigm for
thinking about doubt itself. Doubt, Fischer contends, is no reason
to leave the faith. Instead, it's an invitation to a more honest
faith-a faith that's not in control, but that trusts more fully in
its Lord.
In today's world we have technology, convenience, security, and
a measure of prosperity, but where is the beauty?
For thousands of years, artists, sages, philosophers, and
theologians have connected the beautiful and the sacred and
identified art with our longing for God. Now we live in a day when
convenience and practicality have largely displaced beauty as a
value. The church is no exception. Even salvation is commonly
viewed in a scientific and mechanistic manner and presented as a
plan, system, or formula.
In "Beauty Will Save the World," Brian Zahnd presents the argument
that this loss of beauty as a principal value has been disastrous
for Western culture, and especially for the church. The full
message of the beauty of the gospel has been replaced by our
desires to satisfy our material needs, to empirically prove our
faith, and to establish political power in our world--the exact
same things that Christ was tempted with and rejected in the
wilderness.
Zahnd shows that by following the teachings of the Beatitudes,
the church can become a viable alternative to current-day
political, commercial, and religious power and can actually achieve
what these powers promise to provide but fail to deliver. Using
stories from the lives of St. Francis of Assisi and from his own
life, he teaches us to stay on the journey to discover the kingdom
of God in a fuller, richer, more beautiful, way.
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