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"I've been reading with interest the important work being done by
Denny Weaver and others on violence in relation to our
understandings of God, atonement, and eschatology. I've also been
watching, with joy, the growing rediscovery of the nonviolent
heritage of the Radical Reformation. So I enthusiastically await
the release of Defenseless Christianity," observes Brian D.
McLaren, Author/Activist (brianmclaren.net). Entering a field of
ongoing controversy, this book dares to offer a new model or
vision--defenseless Christianity--for understanding Anabaptism,
both present and past. The authors content that an Anabaptism
defined as defenseless Christianity should be seen as a nonviolent
Christian movement with a world-reconciling theology even though
some first-generation Anabaptists were not pacifists. Greg Boyd,
Author, The Myth of a Christian Nation; and Pastor, Woodland Hills
Church, expresses in the foreword his hope that "God uses this book
to call Anabaptists along with other Jesus-followers back to the
beautifully foolish, enemy-loving, cross-bearing center of our
faith." Nancy R. Heisey, Associate Professor of Biblical Studies
and Church History at Eastern Mennonite University as well as
Mennonite World Conference president, reports that "My first
reaction on reading Defenseless Christianity was, 'Them's fightin'
words ' On further reflection, I'm grateful for the gift Weaver and
Mast have offered by provocatively addressing a host of issues in
Anabaptist historiography and theology on behalf of contemporary
communities of Christ's followers. Mennonite vision for the church
but also issues a compelling call to faithful living." Dawn Ottoni
Wilhelm, Associate Professor of Preaching and Worship, Bethany
Theological Seminary, adds, "Let the reader beware: the dynamic
nature of Christ's peace permeates this text-not as a position to
hold but as a way of creative engagement and witness to God's
reconciling love for all creation." And Elaine Moyer, Associate
Director, Mennonite Education Agency, concludes that "This book not
only presents the peaceful Anabaptist-Mennonite vision for the
church but also issues a compelling call to faithful living."
Worldwide Fury Up close and personal--these stories bring God's
supernatural love and protection closer to "real life" than you may
have thought possible." ""Igniting Furious Love" is an eclectic
spiritual partnering of nine on-fire-for-God believers who "turn
everything upside down in the church to be as unlike the world as
absolutely possible." Spanning the globe from Kosovo to Thailand,
Russia, Mozambique, and inner-city USA, each writer has a unique
story of their furious love for God as manifested in their lives.
Through humorous stories, intelligent commentary, and real-life
miracles and healings, the culmination of distinct voices and
callings of these men and women range from witnessing a
blood-drinking witch, confronting Buddhists with machetes,
prostitution and gay bars--to lecturing at Cambridge University,
experiencing victorious spiritual warfare, planting underground
churches, and seeing people being raised from the dead." "Exciting
chapters and authors include: It's All in the Delivery by Matteus
Van Der SteenCalled to Feed the Hungry by Heidi BakerWorldview
Shakedown by Greg BoydRaising the Dead by Rolland BakerI Will Get
Him by Philip MantofaSimply Love by Shampa RiceWitches, Babies, and
Soldiers by Will HartStepping Stones by Angela GreenigCradle to
Coffin by Robby Dawkins "Igniting Furious Love" reveals God's
wildly soul-stirring plans for any who wants to know Him inside
out.
A review of Modern Love and Other Tall Tales: With prose as clean
as Hemingway’s and a Kafka-esque sense of the absurd, Greg Boyd
delivers a memorable book in Modern Love and Other Tall Tales. But
these tales are not quite so “tall” as the title might suggest;
in fact, their distinction lies in the way they negotiate a fine
line between veracity and the farcical. Each narrator seems to
fancy himself “the rational one” while elaborating the most
bizarre situation with little or no comment. Boyd exploits this
irony by mingling a crushing sense of isolation with a host of
eccentric, straight-faced characters whose predicaments become the
reader’s source of stupefaction and endless mirth. In
“Horny,” a man walks around town carrying a heavy wood cross on
his back, convinced that suffering will erase his primal instincts;
“listen” is a one-sided conversation in which the narrator
formulates a sad and defensive logic that falls on dead ears
or—as one might imagine—no ears at all; and “The Further
Adventures of Tom, Huck, and Jim” transports Twain’s classic
characters to Southern California and brings us hilariously up to
date. But Modern Love isn’t just one laugh after another. Though
Boyd makes light of unfortunate circumstances, there is an
underlying feeling of loneliness and sadness throughout, as if his
characters’ idiosyncrasies were born from an acute sense of
helplessness or an inability to participate in or relate to typical
activities. The characters themselves seem real but flimsy, as if
they will at any moment be blown off the page by a Kafkan ill wind,
as if they were all once, as in “Unglued,” “shy and sickly,
largely ignored by the other children.” Boyd’s writing, like
his characters, is straightforward and descriptive. There’s no
need for verbal trickery here because the author’s imagination
provides us with more than enough to digest. In Modern Love it’s
quite possible to become so engrossed in a story that you forget
you’re actually reading at all.
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Paperback
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R205
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Discovery Miles 1 680
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