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Why do so many evangelicals flock to liturgical traditions today?
Robert Webber first explored the question in this thoughtful and
engaging classic in 1989; now evangelical scholar and pastor Lester
Ruth updates the conversation. Much remains of Webber s beloved
original text, including his discussion of Anglicanism s six great
gifts: mystery and awe, Christ-centered worship, sacramental
reality, historical identity, participation in catholic traditions
and holistic spirituality. Ruth adds fresh stories from
evangelicals who have followed Webber s footsteps on the Canterbury
trail, along with new essays that highlight the diversity of
Anglican expressions today."
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Flow (Paperback)
Lester Ruth
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R499
R414
Discovery Miles 4 140
Save R85 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Seeking to tell worship history in the same way it is usually
experienced, Walking Where Jesus Walked is a document-rich snapshot
of the church in Jerusalem in the late fourth century. / Here the
reader journeys with a woman visiting Jerusalem as the highlight of
a Holy Land pilgrimage in the last part of the fourth century. As
she marvels at the new churches built at so many sites associated
with Jesus Christ, she notes how remembrance shaped by Scripture
and fitting to the time and place serves as the bedrock for this
churchs worship. Ruth helps todays reader hear the preaching which
caused shouts of delight at the tomb of Christ, know the readings
which lead the congregation to weep in the shadow of Calvary, and
see the new buildings which sought to manifest Gods glory at the
places where Jesus had walked, died, and risen from the grave. / By
pairing contemporary descriptions, artistic portrayals, and worship
texts with various commentaries to guide readers, this first in a
series of case studies of particular worshiping communities from
around the world and throughout Christian liturgical history aims
to allow a worshiper today to think concretely and contextually
about some of the continually important issues for Christian
worship.
Think mid-twentieth-century Baptist evangelism, and the figure that
comes immediately to mind is likely Billy Graham. But far removed
from the glitz and glamor of televised crusades, what did typical
Baptist mission field evangelism and worship really look like? In
this latest volume in the Church at Worship series, Lester Ruth and
Eric L. Mathis draw from a rich selection of primary sources to
immerse readers in the worship life of Conservative Baptists in
northwest Argentina from 1948 to 1964. Combining historical,
theological, and practical perspectives, this book offers a vital
educational resource for Christian ministers engaged in or
preparing for cross-cultural ministry, introduces readers to a
worshiping community that may be unfamiliar to them, and represents
a significant contribution to liturgical history.
The Church at Worship is a series of documentary case studies of
specific worshiping communities from around the world and
throughout Christian history that can inform and enrich worship
practices today. In this third volume, Longing for Jesus, Lester
Ruth vividly portrays a prominent African-American holiness church
in Jackson, Mississippi, in the early twentieth century. Ruth's
rich selection of primary documents presents readers with a vibrant
snapshot of this dynamic church and its pastor, Charles Price
Jones, caught between factors that threatened the existence of the
congregation itself: Jim Crow racism, conflicting visions for the
church, appropriate Christian piety, and social aspirations. In the
midst of conflicts inside and outside, the church fought to create
a space where it could worship Jesus as it saw fit.
The Worship & Song Resources Edition is organized this way:
Part One: Christian Year (Advent Christmastide Epiphany Day, Season
after Epiphany, Lent Holy Week Eastertide Pentecost Day, Season
after Pentecost Trinity All Saints Christ the King). Part Two:
General Acts of Worship, including prayers, psalm prayers,
statements of faith, invitation and confession of sin, offertory
prayers, daily praise and prayer, and more."
Representative writings of early American Methodists illustrating
their spirituality and lives.
This book presents primary source material from the writings of
early American Methodists (ca. 1770-1820). Ruth topically organizes
and sets each reading in context. Materials from Francis Asbury,
Thomas Coke, Peter Cartwright, as well as rank-and-file Methodists
are included. Ruth's book demonstrates that early Methodism was
made up of both men and women and both Black and White persons. The
primary material includes sermon outlines, journal and diary
entries, excerpts from correspondence, hymnody and poetry,
theological reflections, and contemporaneous historical
descriptions.
For early American Methodists, quarterly meetings were great
festivals at the heart of Methodism's liturgical life. The meetings
lasted several days and could attract thousands. In this volume,
Lester Ruth offers a revisionist description of worship at the
quarterly meetings in early American Methodism (ca. 1772-1825). The
author describes the quarterly meeting as the setting in which
early Methodism most "dramatized" itself for public view as graced
fellowship. He explores each of the liturgical dynamics of this
experience, including the distinction between public and private
worship, the loud exuberance of American Methodists, the vivid
proclamation of God's Word, the role of the sacraments and of
Wesley's liturgical innovations, the power of fellowship as
eschatological manifestation, and the interaction between the
personal experience of grace and ecclesial inclusion.
Using narrative, testimonies from leaders and members, and
photographs, this book tells the story and explains the remarkable
influence of the Vineyard Church of Anaheim on both the early years
of the Vineyard movement and the emergence of contemporary worship
in the broader church. Not only does this volume present an
in-depth look at the congregation's pastor, John Wimber, and the
church's first several years, it also tells an inspiring story of
revival and renewal for people hungering for deeper knowledge of
God. With interviews, sermon excerpts, sidebars, timelines, and a
glossary of terms to enhance the text, Worshiping with the Anaheim
Vineyard addresses core issues about knowing God intimately for all
Christians.
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