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Subterranean (Hardcover)
Dan White; Foreword by Jr. Woodward; Afterword by David E Fitch
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R987
R807
Discovery Miles 8 070
Save R180 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Jesus gave his followers seven key practices: The Lord's Supper
Reconciliation Proclaiming the gospel Being with the "least of
these" Being with children Fivefold ministry gifting Kingdom prayer
When we practice these disciplines, God becomes faithfully present
to us, and we in turn become God's faithful presence to the world.
Pastor and professor David Fitch shows how these seven practices
can revolutionize the church's presence in our neighborhoods,
transform our way of life in the world, and advance the kingdom.
Our communities can be changed when they see us practicing our
faith. Go and do.
Missio Alliance Essential Reading List of 2016 In our quest to
renew the church, Christians have walked through seeker-friendly,
emergent, missional, and other movements to develop new expressions
of the body of Christ. Now in the post-Christian world in North
America we're asking the question again: Is there a way to be the
church that engages the world, not by judgment nor accommodation
but by becoming the good news in our culture? In Faithful Presence,
noted pastor and scholar David Fitch offers a new vision for the
witness of the church in the world. He argues that we have lost the
intent and practice of the sacramental ways of the historic church,
and he recovers seven disciplines that have been with us since the
birth of the church. Through numerous examples and stories, he
demonstrates how these revolutionary disciplines can help the
church take shape in and among our neighborhoods, transform our way
of life in the world, and advance the kingdom. This book will help
you re-envision church, what you do in the name of church, and the
way you lead a church. It recovers a future for the church that
takes us beyond Christendom. Embrace the call to reimagine the
church as the living embodiment of Christ, dwelling in and
reflecting God's faithful presence to a world that desperately
needs more of it.
An engaging and thoughtful book that guides readers into the
frontiers of being a missional Christian
"Prodigal Christianity" offers a down-to-earth, accessible, and
yet provocative understanding of God's mission of redemption in the
world, and how followers of Christ can participate in this work. It
speaks into the discontent of all those who have exhausted
conservative, liberal, and even emergent ways of being Christian
and are looking for a new way forward. It offers building blocks
for missional theology and practice that moves Christians into a
gospel-centered way of life for our culture and our times.Offers a
compelling and creative vision for North American ChristiansPuts
forth a theology and ten critical signposts that must be observed
to follow a missional way of life: post-Christendom, missio Dei,
incarnation, witness, scripture, gospel, church, sexuality,
justice, pluralismAsks questions and points to issues that trouble
many leaders in the post-modern, post-denominational,
post-Christendom church
This book can fill the gap for the average Christian left
discontented with the current options "after evangelicalism."
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Subterranean (Paperback)
Dan White; Foreword by Jr. Woodward; Afterword by David E Fitch
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R602
R497
Discovery Miles 4 970
Save R105 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Description: In The End of Evangelicalism? David Fitch examines the
political presence of evangelicalism as a church in North America.
Amidst the negative image of evangelicalism in the national media
and its purported decline as a church, Fitch asks how
evangelicalism's belief and practice has formed it as a political
presence in North America. Why are evangelicals perceived as
arrogant, exclusivist, duplicitous, and dispassionate by the wider
culture? Diagnosing its political cultural presence via the
ideological theory of Slavoj Zizek, Fitch argues that
evangelicalism appears to have lost the core of its politic: Jesus
Christ. In so doing its politic has become ""empty."" Its witness
has been rendered moot. The way back to a vibrant political
presence is through the corporate participation in the triune God's
ongoing work in the world as founded in the incarnation. Herein
lies the way towards an evangelical missional political theology.
Fitch ends his study by examining the possibilities for a new
faithfulness in the current day emerging and missional church
movements springing forth from evangelicalism in North America.
Endorsements: ""In your hands is one of the sharpest and informed
evaluations of the state of evangelicalism. Read it slowly. Ponder
it. Plot a better evangelicalism."" --Scot McKnight Karl A. Olsson
Professor in Religious Studies North Park University ""In
compelling fashion, Fitch digs deep to examine how key U.S.
evangelical beliefs actually function as an ideology rather than
gospel. He calls us from a Christianity that acts as 'ideology' to
one that authentically incarnates Jesus' life and mission. What a
book This one will knock you back on your heels."" --Howard A.
Snyder Professor of Wesley Studies Tyndale Seminary, Ontario,
Canada ""This is a significant book for those wrestling with the
theological and cultural integrity of the Evangelical movement in a
post-Christian setting."" --John R. Franke Clemens Professor of
Missional Theology Biblical Seminary, Hatfield, Pennsylvania
""David Fitch explores three key issues that symbolize the
evangelical conundrum-the inerrant Bible, the decision for Christ,
and the Christian nation-by reframing them through missional
theology. This is a timely and crucial read for those concerned
about the evangelical movement."" --Craig Van Gelder Professor of
Congregational Mission Luther Seminary, St. Paul About the
Contributor(s): David E. Fitch is B. R. Lindner Professor of
Evangelical Theology at Northern Seminary, Lombard IL. He is also a
pastor at Life on the Vine Christian Community in the Northwest
Suburbs of Chicago. He is the author of The Great Giveaway (2005).
"North American evangelicals learned to do church in relation to
modernity," asserts David Fitch. Furthermore, evangelicals have
begun to model their ministries after the secular sciences or even
to farm out functions of the church whenever it seems more
efficient. As a result, the church, too often, has stopped being
the church.
In The Great Giveaway, Fitch examines various church practices and
shows how and why each function has been compromised by modernity.
Discussing such ministries as evangelism, physical healing, and
spiritual formation, Fitch challenges Christians to reclaim these
lost practices so that the church can regain its influence.
Pastors, leaders, and students who minister to the postmodern world
will find in this book fresh insight that will stir the hearts of
many and spark much-needed discussion about the evangelical church.
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