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Aimed at practitioners, church leaders, academics, and students of
mission and world Christianity, Mission in the Twenty-First Century
provides fresh insights on the theology and practice of mission in
our age. It brings together scholarly reflection on practice, case
studies and stories, and questions for discussion. Addressing the
"five marks of mission
???????????????????????????????????????????????? evangelism and
proclamation, discipleship, social service, social transformation,
and ecological concern
???????????????????????????????????????????????? chapters examine
these marks in the context of such important factors as
globalization, migration, Islam, "old Christendom," and peace and
reconciliation. In addition to the editors, the international group
of contributors includes Desmond Tutu, Jehu Hanciles, Anne Marie
Kool, David Zac Nirigiye, Tony Gittins, Lamin Sanneh, Ashish
Crispal, Melba Maggay, Hami Tutu Chapman, Gerald Pilay, Kwame
Bediako, and Moonjang Lee.
Stimulated by Andrew Kirk's mission theology, this book brings
fresh theological reflection to a wide range of mission issues. A
formidable group of international missiologists are drawn together
to explore current reflections on a wide range of issues including:
poverty and injustice, environmentalism, secularism, the place of
scripture in a pluralist culture, science and faith, liberation
theology, oppression and reconciliation, and much more. Kirk's
influence and reputation is international, and extends to South
America, USA, Eastern Europe, Africa and SE Asia. Latin American
mission has been especially enriched by Kirk's innovative thinking
on revolutionary politics, contextualisation and holistic mission.
This is an indispensable resource of up-to-date missiological
reflections for all involved in mission at every level.
Stimulated by Andrew Kirk's mission theology, this book brings
fresh theological reflection to a wide range of mission issues. A
formidable group of international missiologists are drawn together
to explore current reflections on a wide range of issues including:
poverty and injustice, environmentalism, secularism, the place of
scripture in a pluralist culture, science and faith, liberation
theology, oppression and reconciliation, and much more. Kirk's
influence and reputation is international, and extends to South
America, USA, Eastern Europe, Africa and SE Asia. Latin American
mission has been especially enriched by Kirk's innovative thinking
on revolutionary politics, contextualisation and holistic mission.
This is an indispensable resource of up-to-date missiological
reflections for all involved in mission at every level.
The impact that John V. Taylor had on our contemporary
understanding of mission is vast - his determination that mission
should mean engagement across cultural boundaries has deep
resonance today. In 'Imagining Mission with John V. Taylor',
leading missional thinkers Jonny Baker and Cathy Ross invite us
into a vision of church, mission and society which takes John
Taylor's ideas seriously, seeking to imagine what Taylor's insights
might mean for these three areas in our contemporary context. The
result is a clarion call to the church to take bigger risks and
dream bigger dreams.
Has the Church lost sight of her original vocation of living out
her mission by serving the world? There is a prevailing
ecclesiology of fatalism which suggests that it has, and that there
is nothing to do be done about. This book argues however, that the
church still has a role in bearing witness fruitfully and
creatively even within a context of crisis. Leading thinkers offer
theoretical, contextual and practical responses to encourage a
renewed love for the church and renewed energy to bear witness
appropriately and creatively. Chapters include: Richard Bauckham -
on New Testament perspectives on a church in crisis Alister McGrath
- challenging the narrative of decline Rev Dr Carlton Turner - on
BAME Presence and the Witness of Diversity and Inclusion Dr Susie
Snyder - on attending to those on the margins
Pioneering ministry sounds like something you do, something active,
even something driven. However, prayer and contemplation are at its
heart, paying attention to God, to the world and to oneself - a
kind of being that goes hand in hand with doing. Pioneering
requires a spirituality that will fuel a life lived beyond the
borders of the church. In this collection, a range of practitioners
explore the inner and outer dimensions of pioneering spirituality.
Offering many proven and innovative ideas, they explore what
resources, fuels and sustains a life of pioneering mission. What is
the spirituality in the UK's wider culture and how do we connect
with it appropriately? How might spiritual treasures such as the
Eucharist, prayer, pilgrimage, spiritual direction and community
rhythms of life be expressed to those with whom pioneers share
life? And how might communities of disciples grow and be formed in
this pioneering spirituality?
Discover which prehistoric mammals would once have lived by the
River Thames. Take a detailed look at the crystal palace of the
Great Exhibition and an early map of the underground. See the
locations of medieval plague pits, Tudor inns, eighteenth-century
hangings and gangland crime hotspots. London: An Illustrated
History offers a new perspective on one of the world's most
exciting cities, from Iron Age cemeteries to Victorian sewers,
Viking raids to Zeppelin air raids, Roman temples to Jewish
ghettos, Georgian brothels to the Great Fire, Roman arenas to the
Olympics. Images, objects and expert text from the Museum of
London, together with maps old and new, contemporary cartoons and
paintings, startling artefacts and vivid reconstructions of ancient
buildings, shine a fresh light on all aspects of the city's
constantly changing story. Invasions, epidemics, riots, pubs,
shrines, crime, gentrification, immigrant communities, urban
development and art are all here. Special 'Survivals' sections even
show where remains of buildings from London's past can still be
seen today. The daily lives of Londoners and the city's chequered
history come alive in this book as never before.
Cathy Ross and Steve Bevans are two of the biggest names in the
study of mission and missiology worldwide. Cathy is director of
OxCEPT at Ripon College Cuddesdon and Steve Bevans is teaching
missiology at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. The
contributors in the book consider mission through the lens of
'prophetic dialogue'. The book consciously tries to bring a fresh
approach - introducing some newer themes (identity, creation,
migration) and bringing a different perspective on some older
themes by grouping them in this way. It is theological rather than
issues-based and involves both older and newer contributors. The
book is aimed at scholars and students of missiology in the UK, the
US and worldwide. It is also a contribution to the study of world
Christianity and contextual theology. Contributors include Jonny
Baker, Kirsteen Kim, Gavin d'Costa, Emma Wild-Wood, Robert
Schreiter and S. Mark Heim.
Missional Conversations introduces the reader to key themes in
contemporary mission through global conversations between theory
and praxis. Exploring emergent themes in missiology, the book takes
the form of a conversation between reflective practitioners - both
those in academia and with those who are practically engaged. With
contributions from: Dave Bookless, Amy Ross, Daniel G. Groody CSC,
Amy Roche, Mark Poulson, Richard Sudworth, David Barclay, Ash
Barker, Stephan de Beer, Elisa Padilla, Berdine van den
Toren-Lekkerkerker, Andrea Campanale, Michael Moynagh, Kyama
Mugambi, Harvey Kwiyani, Dennis Tongoi, Paul Bickley, Jonny Baker,
Ric Stott, Ian Adams
Ordained pioneer ministry is a significant and growing presence in
the Church of England and the Methodist Church and in denominations
around the world. Here leading practitioners and theologians in the
pioneer movement including Doug Gay, Liz Sercombe, Beth Keith and
Gerald Arbuckle reflect on emerging trends, practices and the key
theological challenges of pioneer work, offering critical
reflection on emerging forms of mission and church in changing
social contexts. They explore how people experience transformation,
contextual engagement, dissent as a form of leadership, emerging
patterns of urban ministry, whether the language of sin and guilt
works today, assumptions about how pioneer ministry is learned, and
more.
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Paperback
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R383
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