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Showing 1 - 23 of
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Judges (Hardcover)
Athena E. Gorospe, Charles Ringma
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R739
Discovery Miles 7 390
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Most books on spirituality focus on disciplines like prayer and
Bible study. But this can mislead us into thinking that God can
only be experienced when we are doing something "spiritual." Apart
from private devotional times or church on Sundays, God may seem
distant and even irrelevant to our daily lives. R. Paul Stevens has
a radically different view of Christian spirituality. True
spirituality, he says, is down-to-earth--we encounter God in the
ordinary, common stuff of everyday life. Taking his cue from the
biblical story of Jacob, Stevens explores the Genesis narrative and
uncovers how ordinary moments are made extraordinary, transformed
by the presence of God in the midst of the mundane. Dreamer,
schemer, worker and entrepreneur, Jacob embodies a multifaceted
life of earthy passion and gritty spirituality. Jacob encounters
the sacred not only through visions of ladders to heaven and
mysterious wrestling matches with angles. Jacob also meets God at
home and at work, at meals and in sleep, in solitude and in
relationships. From birth to death, through every passage of life,
Jacob sees God in the routine details of his everyday experience.
"Everyday life is the spiritual discipline in which God
continuously and graciously meets us," Stevens writes. And in this
book, Stevens helps us see that what appears commonplace on the
surface actually has great spiritual significance. When we least
expect it, God surprises us by re-enchanting our daily experience
and making every moment an opportunity to experience his blessing.
This devotional by theologian and martyr Dietrich Bonhoeffer helps
you see that it is possible to impact that world if we allow
ourselves to be transformed into the likeness of Christ.
Experience the power of Bonhoeffera (TM)s words in a way that
challenges us to live out our discipleship daily--combining
personal spirituality with an active concern for those around us.
a [ 365 meditations
Synopsis: Against the Tide, Towards the Kingdom is the story of the
Urban Vision community in New Zealand. This book recounts the story
of a group of young Christian adults who over the last fifteen
years have relocated to the colorful ends of their city to share
life with those who are struggling, homeless, sick, poor,
neglected, or otherwise marginalized. The community has grown over
time to seven neighborhoods where on any given day you may find
"Urban Visionites" growing vegetables amidst the concrete, teaching
English to refugees, offering alternative education programs to out
of school teenagers, fostering children, doing church with the
homeless, offering friendship to the mentally ill, roasting fair
trade coffee, running kids clubs, moms groups, tenant meetings or
just sharing yet another cup of tea with their neighbors. In fact
sharing is a good summary of the whole shape of this exciting
movement. They share homes, food, money, vehicles, jobs, prayers,
dreams, conversations, fun, tears, pain, hope, healing,
transformation . . . they share the whole of life with each other
and with their neighbors. They live the gospel, this good news of
Jesus. Endorsements: "As you flip through these pages, you feel
your soul start to breathe better. It is a call to break free from
all that suffocates us and to live with the recklessness and
innocence of the lilies and sparrows. Justin and Jenny not only
invite you to reject the counterfeit splendor and empty promises
but they point you towards new rhythms and holy habits that move
the world a little closer to God's dream for it." -Shane Claiborne
author, activist, recovering sinner "Honest and deeply reflective,
Jenny and Justin Duckworth have granted us a window on the beauty,
the mess, the joy, and the pain of missional community. What they
have discovered is that we can live fuller, more gracious lives in
community, mission, and contemplation than we can by living in our
nuclear family fortresses. This journey against the tide of a
consumption-oriented culture will require us to put to death our
tiresome and lonely lives of delicious self-absorption, but the
promise of discovery and adventure in our voyage to a more
sustainable and simplified life of shalom is painted for us with
such striking honesty and beauty that we are compelled to set out
on the waka. This is not a book, it is an invitation. I urge you
not just to read it, but to accept it." -Scott Bessenecker
Associate Director of Missions InterVarsity Christian
Fellowship/USA Author Biography: Jenny and Justin Duckworth were
founders of Urban Vision movement.
The Christian journey is far more complex than an evolutionary
upward movement. There are strange contours in the road. Faith has
its uncertainties, and our healing is far from complete. This
meditational reader seeks to reflect something of this kind of
textured picture of the Christian journey. Charles Ringma is
Professor of Mission and Evangelism at Regent College in Vancouver,
British Columbia. He has previously done mission work among the
Aborigines in Australia, and was Australian founder and executive
director of Teen Challenge in Brisbane. He has taught at the Asian
Theological Seminary in Manila and is the author of Catch the Wind,
Life in Full Stride and Seek the Silences with Thomas Merton.
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Not Religion but Love (Paperback)
Dave Andrews; Foreword by Charles Ringma; Brian McLaren
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R711
R589
Discovery Miles 5 890
Save R122 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Description: What practices might a community of faith take up that
will bear witness to the alternative world Jesus envisions and
calls us towards? That is the question that Grandview Calvary
Baptist Church, an initially small and fragile group of Christ
followers, has kept asking over the last twenty years. Along the
way, this small group has spawned a vibrant community of faith that
has traveled along four trajectories towards a shared life in
community, radical hospitality, justice for the least, and
confession leading to transformation. In a culture where
individualism, consumerism, injustice, and autonomy shape us all,
these practices have re-shaped not only the people of this church
but also the neighborhood they inhabit in the East side of
Vancouver, British Columbia. For anyone wanting to recover ancient
but newly shaped practices of the first disciples, Plunging into
the Kingdom Way offers renewed hope. By relating their story in
conversation with a host of theologians, sociologists, and
philosophers, Tim Dickau sparks the imagination for how you and
your friends, your community, or your church can live out the
radical vision of Jesus in your neighborhood today. Plunge in and
you will discover renewed hope that you can actually follow the way
of Jesus today. Endorsements: ."" . . a deeply compelling and
engaging portrait of a community that practices hospitality and
justice while nurturing a strong spiritual and communal life. Tim
Dickau's careful description of a single congregation gives his
readers excellent resources for imagining what a fuller commitment
to a Kingdom way might look like in their own contexts.""
-Christine D. Pohl Professor of Social Ethics, Asbury Theological
Seminary Author of Making Room: Recovering Hospitality as a
Christian Tradition ""It is one thing to 'talk the talk.' It is
quite another to 'walk the walk.' This book exhibits the way in
which Grandview Calvary Baptist Church (led by Tim Dickau) walks
the walk in freedom and courage and wisdom. The current crisis in
the church leads us to fall back on specific narratives, so that we
may learn what is true and transferable from one community of
discipleship to another. Dickau offers a full measure of practical
theology that is permeated with justice, generosity, hospitality,
and forgiveness. This book will guide and empower others to walk by
faith where our sight increasingly fails us."" -Walter Brueggemann
Columbia Theological Seminary ""The story that Tim Dickau tells
here is the story of a congregation that has heard and received the
good news: 'The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe
the good news.' That is, this congregation has dared to submit
their life to this coming kingdom and its Lord. In doing so, they
have learned to serve where they have been placed. The life that
they have found in this submission has not been hoarded or
protected behind high walls and thick doors. Instead this life has
been given away in their neighborhood, on their streets, in their
homes, coffee shops, and markets. It is a public faith shaped in
community by joyful and hard discipline. The story is not complete
but its end is certain because the vision that empowers their
witness is the crucified and risen Messiah sent by the love of the
Father and present today in the power of the Holy Spirit. Anyone
who reads this story takes the risk of being captured by that same
vision and called to deeper life in the kingdom. Surely that is the
good news of Christ."" -Jonathan R. Wilson Carey Theological
College Author, Living Faithfully in a Fragmented World
""Multiculturalism is on everyone's lips these days, but we are
still struggling with entrenched barriers that perpetuate exclusion
and suspicion. This book shows us why diversity must be pursued
along with hospitality, repentance, and justice. Tim Dickau warns
us that the kingdom of God is no simple excursion and has provided
a pilgrim's roadmap honed by prayer, failures, awkwardness, su
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. inspired his generation with a dream and
a promise. His unwavering vision of a more equitable, just society
permanently changed the lives of millions around the world. One of
the greatest men of the twentieth century, Dr. King's faith,
conviction, and strength continue to inspire us today. In 120 daily
readings, Charles Ringma encourages us to reflect on Dr. King's
powerful legacy. Find a moment each day to ponder his words and
dare to dream.
Through 365 challenging and stirring reflections based on the bold
message of French philosopher and theologian Jacques Ellul, Charles
Ringma invites you to consider the profound connections between
personal faith and social responsibility. Resist the Powers with
Jacques Ellul will encourage you to pursue an active faith that
resists the powers of our age by embracing a vision of the kingdom
of God that brings together head, heart and hands.
Mother Teresa once said she wanted to "do something beautiful for
God." Looking back at her decades of service and
recognition--including the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize--Mother Teresa's
life indeed proved to be a work of art in its purest form. Charles
Ringma's 150 daily reflections, based on her life and service among
the poor, allow you to look for ways you, too, can do something
beautiful with your life.
In a post-Christendom world, young people continue to be vitally
interested in matters of spirituality and justice, despite their
lack of engagement with the Christian faith and church. This
situation calls for new forms of communication and a
reconsideration of the claims of the Christian faith. This book for
searching minds does just this. A series of letters written by
theologian Charles Ringma to his 19-year-old granddaughter, Finding
Naasicaa addresses ultimate issues of life, faith, spirituality and
social transformation accessibly, unpretentiously and winsomely.
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