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Tracing the steps of Jesus and his followers through the season of
Lent to Easter Day and then beyond, these songs are suitable for
music groups or choirs as well as being accessible to
congregations.
Contains 17 songs for the Christmas season. Most of the songs are
for unaccompanied congregational singing, several have been
arranged for choirs, and may serve as anthems or introits. Full
music and notes by the author are provided for each song.
This is a sequel to two highly successful collections of short
songs ("Come All You People" and "There Is One Among Us") for use
in worship. Here the net is thrown wider with material from
AIDs-ridden communities in the developing world side by side with
recent products from the Wild Goose Resource Group. It is an ideal
collection for small choirs, social justice enthusiasts,
multiculturalists and all who regard themselves a global Christian.
For four years, John Bell has been a contributor to Radio 4's
"Thought for the Day", attempting - as the project demands - to
offer a religious perspective on matters of current social and
international importance. Sometimes affirming, sometimes
controversial but always contemporary, these short reflections
represent the prickly interface between faith and politics from the
perspective of a Christian believer.
A wealth of worship resources for Advent, Christmas and Epiphany
from the Wild Goose Worship Group. These litanies, meditations,
monologues, poems, prayers, readings, scripts and symbolic actions
aid the rediscovery of the stories of Christ's birth through adult
eyes. Contents include: ADVENT RESOURCES Behind the corridors of
space (responses) Waiting (meditation) In the beginning of creation
(responses) The people who walked (meditation) Among the poor
(litany) A story of light & darkness (meditation) Open our eyes
(prayer) The desert will sing and rejoice (responses) Lucky day
(script) Prepare the way of the Lord (responses) Mary and the angel
(script) The Magnificat (meditation) Mary, pondering (reading) Mary
and Lizzie (script) We suspect angels (prayer) God of the watching
ones (blessing) Pinning our hopes on Jesus (i) (intercessions)
Pinning our hopes on Jesus (ii) (symbolic action) Into our world as
into Mary's womb (responses) The village gossips (script) The
census (script) How far is it? (symbolic action) Registering hope
(symbolic action) Mary's journey (reading) The diaries of Joseph
and Theodore (script) The Bethel Inn (script) Cloth for the cradle
(symbolic action) In hope, the universe waits (responses) CHRISTMAS
RESOURCES It was to older folk that Jesus came (reading) Light
looked down (responses) This, tonight, is the meeting place
(prologue) The journey of Jesus (reading) The Incarnation (script)
Litany of the Incarnation (litany) When the world was dark
(intercessions) The shepherd (script) And did it happen? (reading)
They have heard it on the hills (proclamation) The Word
(meditation) A perfect disgrace (script) Michael Mouse (script) A
special baby (script) Once in Judah's least known city (reading) A
boy has been born for us (responses) In the face of the Gospel
(intercessions) Anna and Simeon (script) Women weeping (meditation)
EPIPHANY RESOURCES The wise man's journey (reading) The gatekeepers
(script) The soldiers (script) God of God, Light of Light
(responses) God bless us and disturb us (reading)
Spirituality is not a permanent high, a continual blissed out
state. To experience the heights, one has also to know the depths.
In this book based on speeches and sermons delivered in marquees,
cathedrals and local churches, John Bell deals with issues as
diverse as private devotion and public debt. The picture of God
that emerges is not one of a 'celestial sadist' but rather a
compassionate being who asks that we do only what we can, starting
from where we are, to be just and compassionate too. John Bell is a
minister of the Church of Scotland and a member of the Iona
Community. He lectures and preaches throughout the English-speaking
world. With his colleagues in the Wild Goose Worship Group he has
produced several books of congregational songs and collections of
anthems, and is an occasional broadcaster on radio and television.
What we sing shapes what we believe - this is an incontrovertible
truth as regards the song of the Church. It has led many Westerners
to believe that Jesus was a silent baby (Away In A Manger) and a
docile child (Once In Royal David's City). It has suggested that
militarism is an apt metaphor for discipleship (Onward Christian
Soldiers) and this misconception is closely allied to decay (Abide
With Me). It has also led to the assumption that, as regards
religion, 'the West is the best' (O'er Those Gloomy Hills of
Darkness, etc). This is not to discount the value of these and
other favourite texts. It is, rather, to suggest that the songs we
sing reflect the theology of our times, and theology is always in
process because God is always on the move. The songs in this
collection are not the antidote but rather a supplement both to
traditional hymnody and to the narrow spectrum of biblical and
emotional content in much praise and worship material. They are
songs intended, as the title (which comes from the words of Jesus)
suggests, to liberate us from limited horizons. Hence there are:
songs which shun dated, churchy language and instead embrace
contemporary speech; songs which prove that the southern hemisphere
has more to offer than Kumbaya; songs which take the world
seriously, because God takes it seriously; songs which allow
worship to be more than predictable praise; songs which challenge
the dominance of a performance mentality because they are meant for
all to sing. Because we have never set out to provide peerless
performances of flawless music, we hope that this album will not
just be something to listen to, but may encourage all of God's
people to sing.
This is a sequel to two highly successful collections of short
songs ("Come All You People" and "There Is One Among Us") for use
in worship. Here the net is thrown wider with material from
AIDs-ridden communities in the developing world side by side with
recent products from the Wild Goose Resource Group. It is an ideal
collection for small choirs, social justice enthusiasts,
multiculturalists and all who regard themselves a global Christian.
This text is a highly accessible analysis by John L. Bell, one of
the world's leading experts on congregational song.
This Element is an exposition of second- and higher-order logic and
type theory. It begins with a presentation of the syntax and
semantics of classical second-order logic, pointing up the
contrasts with first-order logic. This leads to a discussion of
higher-order logic based on the concept of a type. The second
Section contains an account of the origins and nature of type
theory, and its relationship to set theory. Section 3 introduces
Local Set Theory (also known as higher-order intuitionistic logic),
an important form of type theory based on intuitionistic logic. In
Section 4 number of contemporary forms of type theory are
described, all of which are based on the so-called 'doctrine of
propositions as types'. We conclude with an Appendix in which the
semantics for Local Set Theory - based on category theory - is
outlined.
New, revised and expanded edition of this much-loved unrecorded
dialogue between Jesus and his eager disciple, Peter. Ideal as
discussion starters or scriptural reflections in small groups and
church services or for personal study. These scripts use up-to-date
language and present a modern perspective on perennial issues such
as faith, money, marriage, vocation, sex, healing, taxes,
ecological concern, committment, children, the kingdom of heaven
and many more.
This luminous book on texts Jesus knew and quoted is the fruit of
the author's lifelong engagement with the Psalms. As a broadcaster
and writer, John is loved for being entirely genuine and, in the
words of Archbishop Justin Welby, 'his cogent and penetrating
contributions reach an audience well beyond the churches'. Here
John explores the Psalms as they relate to daily life, drawing on
stories and personal testimonies to help us to rejoice, grieve or
draw encouragement from this most extraordinary and fascinating
collection of sacred poems and songs.
This book explores and articulates the concepts of the continuous
and the infinitesimal from two points of view: the philosophical
and the mathematical. The first section covers the history of these
ideas in philosophy. Chapter one, entitled 'The continuous and the
discrete in Ancient Greece, the Orient and the European Middle
Ages,' reviews the work of Plato, Aristotle, Epicurus, and other
Ancient Greeks; the elements of early Chinese, Indian and Islamic
thought; and early Europeans including Henry of Harclay, Nicholas
of Autrecourt, Duns Scotus, William of Ockham, Thomas Bradwardine
and Nicolas Oreme. The second chapter of the book covers European
thinkers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: Galileo,
Newton, Leibniz, Descartes, Arnauld, Fermat, and more. Chapter
three, 'The age of continuity,' discusses eighteenth century
mathematicians including Euler and Carnot, and philosophers, among
them Hume, Kant and Hegel. Examining the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries, the fourth chapter describes the reduction of
the continuous to the discrete, citing the contributions of
Bolzano, Cauchy and Reimann. Part one of the book concludes with a
chapter on divergent conceptions of the continuum, with the work of
nineteenth and early twentieth century philosophers and
mathematicians, including Veronese, Poincare, Brouwer, and Weyl.
Part two of this book covers contemporary mathematics, discussing
topology and manifolds, categories, and functors, Grothendieck
topologies, sheaves, and elementary topoi. Among the theories
presented in detail are non-standard analysis, constructive and
intuitionist analysis, and smooth infinitesimal analysis/synthetic
differential geometry. No other book so thoroughly covers the
history and development of the concepts of the continuous and the
infinitesimal.
Twenty-five beautiful songs from the World Church with an emphasis
on Africa. Contents: GloriaSanto, santo santoSenhor tempiedade de
nosHe came downStand firmHalle, halle, halleMay God draw nearThe
Lord is my lightKyrie eleisonJesus Christ our living LordJesus
saranamLet the world in concert singSara shristeImelaWa wa wa
emimimoBlessed be GodAmen, Alleluia!Amen siakudumisaNdingen'
endumisweniMayenziweMany and greatAgios o TheosKyrie eleisonYour
kingdom comeJesu tawa pano
Specifically designed for congregational use, this contains 255
songs for straightforward arrangements, either four-part harmony or
with piano accompaniment.
This is the second 'book of bits' for worship produced by the Wild
Goose Worship Group. Its predecessor, Cloth For the Cradle, was
received with great enthusiasm by clergy and laity alike. This book
traces Jesus' road to the cross through Lent, Holy Week and Easter.
Its prime purpose is to resource worship that enables people to
sense the hope, apprehension and joy of Easter as felt by Jesus'
friends. The range and diversity offers a unique source of elements
for lay and clergy worship planners and enablers. All of the
material has been used in celebrations and services of public
worship, but little has been previously published.
Biblical songs of justice, World Church songs of protest and praise
and songs of experience from late 20th century Britain.
This is a collection of 25 meditations for use in public worship.
Covering a range of personal, pastoral and biblical themes, these
meditations can be used as part of congregational worship, with
smaller assemblies (such as a prayer group) or in a house group or
youth fellowship. Notes accompanying each meditation suggest
appropriate situations for its use.
John Bell collects scripts from his radio show 'Thought for the
day', offering a religious perspective on matters of current social
and international importance.
This is the second collection of sermons and addresses where John
L. Bell proves that he is not one to shy away from the challenges
provided by biblical stories. And likewise he proves startingly
adept at articulating the often uncomfortable questions the Bible
poses for contemporary life. Paul, Job, Jeremiah, Elijah and
Zachariah are among the biblical characters the author examines,
his reflections covering a wide range of life issues and situations
from patience and love to transfiguration and death, and
incisively, in what is the longest piece in the collection, the
events of September 11th 2001.
This collection of responsive prayers, dialogues, monologues,
extended scripts and other pieces forms the third book in the
series started by "Cloth for the Cradle" and "Stages on the Way".
While these first two focused on the beginning and ending of Jesus'
earthly life, "Present on Earth" is concerned with the years
inbetween - with the encounters and conversations, the rumour and
reputation, the moments of deep assurance and equally deep
provocation which marked Jesus' three year ministry. As a resouce
for worship and group work this material makes us aware ina very
immediate way of the vulnerable intimacy which God in becoming
human.
One of the most remarkable recent occurrences in mathematics is the
re-founding, on a rigorous basis, the idea of infinitesimal
quantity, a notion which played an important role in the early
development of the calculus and mathematical analysis. In this new
and updated edition, basic calculus, together with some of its
applications to simple physical problems, are presented through the
use of a straightforward, rigorous, axiomatically formulated
concept of 'zero-square', or 'nilpotent' infinitesimal - that is, a
quantity so small that its square and all higher powers can be set,
to zero. The systematic employment of these infinitesimals reduces
the differential calculus to simple algebra and, at the same time,
restores to use the "infinitesimal" methods figuring in traditional
applications of the calculus to physical problems - a number of
which are discussed in this book. This edition also contains an
expanded historical and philosophical introduction.
This collection contains 17 new songs for the Christmas season.
Most of the songs are for congregational singing, several have been
arranged as for choirs qand may serve as anthems or introits. Full
music and notes by the author are provide for each song, and most
of the tunes are suitable for unaccompanied singing in harmony or
unision and are designed to be easy to teach and learn. New
arrangements of two traditional folk tunes have been included. A
companion tape - containing all of these songs sung by the Wild
Goose Worship Group - is also available.
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