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Showing 1 - 14 of
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Constantine Revisited (Hardcover)
John D Roth; Foreword by Stanley Hauerwas; Afterword by Peter J Leithart
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R1,139
R918
Discovery Miles 9 180
Save R221 (19%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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What does it cost to follow Jesus? For these men and women, the
answer was clear. They were ready to give witness to Christ in the
face of intense persecution, even if it cost them their lives. From
the stoning of Stephen to Nigerian Christians persecuted by Boko
Haram today, these stories from around the world and through the
ages will inspire greater faithfulness to the way of Jesus,
reminding us what costly discipleship looks like in any age. Since
the birth of Christianity, the church has commemorated those who
suffered for their faith in Christ. In the Anabaptist tradition
especially, stories of the boldness and steadfastness of early
Christian and Reformation-era martyrs have been handed down from
one generation to the next through books such as Thieleman van
Braght's Martyrs Mirror (1660). Yet the stories of more recent
Christian witnesses are often unknown. Bearing Witness tells the
stories of early Christian martyrs Stephen, Polycarp, Justin,
Agathonica, Papylus, Carpus, Perpetua, Tharacus, Probus,
Andronicus, and Marcellus, followed by radical reformers Jan Hus,
Michael and Margaretha Sattler, Weynken Claes, William Tyndale,
Jakob and Katharina Hutter, Anna Janz, Dirk Willems. But the bulk
of the book focuses on little-known modern witness including
Veronika Loehans, Jacob Hochstetler, Gnadenhutten, Joseph and
Michael Hofer, Emanuel Swartzendruber, Regina Rosenberg, Eberhard
and Emmy Arnold, Johann Kornelius Martens, Ahn Ei Sook, Jakob
Rempel, Clarence Jordan, Richard and Sabina Wurmbrand, Tulio
Pedraza, Stanimir Katanic, Samuel Kakesa, Kasai Kapata, Meserete
Kristos Church, Sarah Corson, Alexander Men, Jose Chuquin, Norman
Tattersall, Katherine Wu, and Ekklesiyar Yan'uwa a Nigeria. This
book is part of the Bearing Witness Stories Project, a
collaborative story-gathering project involving Anabaptist
believers from many different traditions.
No matter who wins the next election, Caesar will remain Caesar,
doing some good and some bad. But Christians report to a different
king. This issue starts with a provocation. In his opening letter,
editor Peter Mommsen suggests Christians are too excited about the
wrong politics: "Questions of public justice should matter deeply
to Christians. We dare not be indifferent about securing healthcare
for all and ending interventionist wars; we must seek to reduce
abortions and strengthen families. When an election comes, we
should pray and then, perhaps, lend our support to a candidate we
judge may, on balance, advance social righteousness. But if the
early Christians and the Anabaptists are right, this isn't the
politics that matters most. And so, as a matter of faithfulness, we
should question how much it deserves of our passion and time. Our
allegiance belongs elsewhere." In contrast to an election campaign,
this politics may feel grittier and less glamorous. This issue of
Plough Quarterly explores what this alternate vision of faithful
Christian witness in the political sphere might look like. You'll
find articles on: What two leading political theorists of left and
right agree on What persecution taught Anabaptists about politics
The Bruderhof's interactions with the state Tolstoy's case against
making war more humane How some Christians read Romans 13 under
fascism
This anthology provides the best introduction to the core beliefs
and foundational principles of Anabaptism. This comprehensive book
compiles the writings and statements of thirty-seven
sixteenth-century Anabaptists. Selections are arranged under topics
such as baptism, the church, nonresistance, Jesus the Word,
government, the cross, suffering, discipleship, and relations to
other Christians. This is the third volume in the Classics of the
Radical Reformation, a series of Anabaptist and Free Church
documents translated and annotated under the direction of the
Institute of Mennonite Studies.
Ask any person randomly on the sidewalk what they know about the
Mennonites and chances are their answer will include Mormons, black
clothes and buggies, or general confusion. This short, engaging
book gives a brief account of what Mennonites believe. From the
beginnings of the Anabaptist (or Mennonite) movement in the
16th-century, to biblical interpretation, baptism, understandings
of the church, ethics, and the complex question of
denominationalism, John D. Roth provides a solid framework for
on-going conversations about faithful discipleship in the Mennonite
church today. An online study guide is available for this title.
172 Pages.
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The Purple Crown (Hardcover)
Tripp York; Foreword by John D Roth
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R982
R802
Discovery Miles 8 020
Save R180 (18%)
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The Purple Crown (Paperback)
Tripp York; Foreword by John D Roth
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R622
R517
Discovery Miles 5 170
Save R105 (17%)
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About the Contributor(s): John D. Roth is Professor of History at
Goshen College, where he also serves as editor of The Mennonite
Quarterly Review and director of the Mennonite Historical Library.
He is the author of numerous books and articles on subjects related
to the Radical Reformation and contemporary Anabaptist and
Mennonite theology, including Teaching that Transforms: Why
Anabaptist-Mennonite Education Matters (2011).
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