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All Shall Be Well (Hardcover)
Gregory Macdonald, Robin A. Parry
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R1,960
R1,540
Discovery Miles 15 400
Save R420 (21%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Biblical Cosmos (Hardcover)
Robin A. Parry; Illustrated by Hannah Parry
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R1,172
R945
Discovery Miles 9 450
Save R227 (19%)
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Welcome to the weird and wonderful world of the Bible. Robin Parry
takes the reader on a guided tour of the biblical cosmos with the
goal of opening up the Bible in its ancient world. He then goes
further and shows how this very ancient biblical way of seeing the
world is still revelatory and can speak God's word afresh into our
own modern worlds.
If worship is God centered, and God is the Trinity, then worship
should be Trinity centered. 'Worshipping Trinity' explores the
meaning and implications of that simple claim. Written for church
leaders, worship leaders, and songwriters, as well as for those
interested in theology, this volume explains why the Trinity
matters so much and explores practical ways our worship can be made
more Trinitarian. This second edition is fully updated and
expanded.
Synopsis: If worship is God centered, and God is the Trinity, then
worship should be Trinity centered. Worshipping Trinity explores
the meaning and implications of that simple claim. Written for
church leaders, worship leaders, and songwriters, as well as for
those interested in theology, this volume explains why the Trinity
matters so much and explores practical ways our worship can be made
more Trinitarian. This second edition is fully updated and
expanded. Endorsement: "The book has become a classic--and rightly
so. There is nothing else like it. It brings first-rate theology
and astute practical wisdom to the very heart of the church's life.
And the second edition is even better than the first " --Jeremy
Begbie, Duke Divinity School "Robin Parry is a fine theologian who
writes accessibly and engagingly. I hope this second edition will
be very widely read. It has the capacity to enable the renewal of
the life and worship of the church." --John Inge, Bishop of
Worcester, UK Praise for the First Edition: "This is an extremely
helpful book " --Matt Redman, songwriter and worship leader "Robin
Parry has given us a terrific resource with which we can see a
clearer picture of the God we worship." --Keith Getty, hymn writer
"Robin Parry calls us higher up and further in through this
well-written, clear, and important book." --Brian McLaren, pastor
and author "Not merely theologically profound, but lucid,
accessible, and profoundly relevant." --Alan J. Torrance,
University of St. Andrews, UK "This is a most important book."
--Graham Cray, Bishop of Maidstone, UK "I found my own spirit was
stirred by simply reading the excellent central chapters. . . .
This is a book well worth reading and one I wholeheartedly
recommend." --Terry Virgo, New Frontiers, UK "Bloody good "
--Andrew G. Walker, King's College, UK "I cannot recommend this
work highly enough. Pastors, worship leaders, and mature Christians
must read this and practice the sort of Trinitarian worship Parry
recommends." --Myk Habets, Carey Baptist College, New Zealand
Author Biography: Robin Parry is an editor for Wipf and Stock
Publishers. He is also author of Old Testament Story and Christian
Ethics and the coeditor of Great Is Thy Faithfulness? Reading
Lamentations as Sacred Scripture.
Synopsis: Lamentations is a book that has never had a place of
honor at the table of Christian spirituality. This is an
unfortunate state of affairs because its challenging poetry has
much to offer. This volume explores the how the biblical book of
Lamentations may be engaged afresh so that it can function as Holy
Scripture for the ekklesia. Four main chapters consider issues in
hermeneutics, exegesis, the use of Lamentations in worship, and
pastoral reflections. These chapters have been supplemented by
seventeen reception history studies written by an international
team of Jewish and Christian scholars. These studies introduce a
wide range of interpretations and uses of the book of Lamentations
from throughout the history of Judaism and Christianity. They
include examinations of the use of Lamentations in Isaiah 40-55,
the Targum, Rashi, and contemporary Jewish thought, the Patristic
period, Calvin, Jewish and Christian worship, music, Rembrandt, and
psychological and feminist interpretation. Appendices include new
English translations of LXX Lamentations and Targum Lamentations.
Endorsements: "The question mark in this title points to the fact
that sadness, loss, and grief are now the order of the day in
Western culture. For that reason the book of Lamentations now draws
great attention and energy among us. This book, with its long
historical sweep of interpretations and its broad ecumenical reach
in rereading Lamentations, is sure to become a point of reference
for our continuing response to the question. The question of the
title requires endless, continuing engagement among us. These pages
provide guides and models for continuing answering." -Walter
Brueggemann Columbia Theological Seminary "The essays in Great is
Thy Faithfulness? focus upon one question: How is Lamentations a
word of God? Responses are deep, rich, and many. They draw from
interpretations, contemporary and ancient, Jewish and Christian,
and from the arts, pastoral care, and liturgical usage. They reveal
how Lamentations has been and can be embraced by believers. For
pastors and classrooms, this book promises to stir up conversation,
questions, and faith." -Kathleen M. O'Connor Columbia Theological
Seminary Editor Biographies: Robin A. Parry is an Editor at Wipf
and Stock Publishers. He is the author of a commentary on
Lamentations in the Two Horizons series. Heath A. Thomas is
Assistant Professor of Old Testament & Hebrew at Southeastern
Seminary in Wake Forest, North Carolina. He is author of Poetry
& Theology in Lamentations: The Aesthetics of an Open Text
(Sheffield Phoenix Press, forthcoming).
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In the End, God . . . (Hardcover)
John A. T Robinson; Edited by Robin A. Parry; Foreword by Gregory Macdonald
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R1,078
R875
Discovery Miles 8 750
Save R203 (19%)
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All Shall Be Well (Paperback)
Gregory Macdonald, Robin A. Parry
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R1,313
R1,057
Discovery Miles 10 570
Save R256 (19%)
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Foreword by Gabriel Fackre
Will God one day save all people through Christ's atoning work?
That is the question at the heart of the debate in this volume -- a
debate sure to challenge readers, whatever their current
perspective.
Featuring evangelical writers of exceptional insight and
sensitivity, "Universal Salvation?" offers a conversation worth
everyone's attention. The volume opens with a rigorous three-part
defense of Christian universalism by philosopher Thomas Talbott,
who argues that Scripture teaches the ultimate salvation of all
people, including those in hell. Gabriel Fackre in his foreword
calls Talbott's work the most thoughtfully wrought argument for
universalism to date from within the contemporary evangelical
community. The rest of the book gathers incisive responses to
Talbott by Christian scholars from different disciplines, who
evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of Talbott's arguments, take
his thought in new directions, or explain why they think he is
mistaken. Talbott then responds to his critics.
The aim of this volume is not to persuade people that
universalism is true but to open up a fairer debate on a
controversial subject of continuing importance to theologians and
nontheologians alike. By exploring universal salvation from
biblical, philosophical, theological, and historical perspectives,
the book helps readers think through the issues more carefully than
has been possible with resources previously available.
Traditional scholarly commentaries aspire to open up biblical texts
in the light of their ancient social and cultural contexts. In this
commentary Robin Parry seeks to take the insights of such works
seriously yet also move far beyond them by considering Lamentations
within ever-expanding canonical and contemporary contexts. How do
the words of Lamentations resonate when read in the context of
Jeremiah? Or in the contexts of Isaiah 40-55, the New Testament,
the history of Christian anti-Semitism, or the suffering of victims
today? The question at the heart of this unusual engagement with
the text is -How can Lamentations function as Christian scripture?-
Parry argues that the key to answering this question is to follow
the ancient liturgical tradition of the church and to see the text
in the light of the death and resurrection of Israel's Messiah --
Jesus. According to Parry, Lamentations is Israel's Holy Saturday
literature -- the cries of those caught between the death of
Jerusalem and its resurrection. In this context Christians are able
to make connections between this anguished Israelite poetry, the
sufferings of Jesus, and the sufferings of the world. These
biblical-theological links have the potential to open up fresh and
imaginative theological, doxological, and pastoral encounters with
a sadly neglected biblical book.
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