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Preaching Prophetic Care (Hardcover)
Phillis Isabella Sheppard, Dawn Ottoni Wilhelm, Ronald J Allen
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R1,608
R1,270
Discovery Miles 12 700
Save R338 (21%)
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Under the Oak Tree (Hardcover)
Ronald J Allen, John S. McClure, O. Wesley Allen
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R1,222
R983
Discovery Miles 9 830
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In June 1983 the Astronomical Institute of the State University of
Groningen, founded by Kapteyn about 100 years ago, celebrated its
one-hundredth anniversary. At the suggestion of its Chairman, R.J.
Allen, the Kapteyn Institute invited the International Astronomical
Union to mark the centenary by holding a Symposium on "The Milky
Way Galaxy". The purpose of the Symposium was to review recent
progress in the study of our Galaxy, to define current problems,
and to explore prospects for future development. The Symposium
programme would emphasize the large-scale characteristics of our
Galaxy, and highlight both the historical development of our
understanding of the Milky Way Galaxy and the importance of studies
of external galaxies to this understanding. The Symposium was
sponsored by four IAU Commissions: 33 (Structure and Dynamics of
the Galactic System), 28 (Galaxies), 34 (Interstellar Matter) and
41 (History of Astronomy). The Scientific Organizing Committee,
listed on page xviii, represented a broad range of nationalities
and of expertise, including two historians of science. A meeting of
the Committee, held during the IAU General Assembly at Patras,
provided an excellent opportunity to discuss plan and format of the
Symposium, topics and speakers; thereafter, the-Committee was
regularly consulted by letter and telephone. IAU Symposium 106 was
held at Groningen on 30 May - 3 June 1983, in the new building
occupied by the Kapteyn Institute since January 1983. There were
about 200 participants, coming from as many as 25 countries.
A faith should be a living thing. What we believe necessarily
evolves in response to insights into the Bible, to questions or
doubts we face, to changes in life circumstances, or to things that
happen in the larger world. Nevertheless, Christians often find it
helpful to identify what they can most fully believe at a given
moment. Such clarity empowers the present and leads us toward the
future. Such moments can also be mile markers by which we measure
our faith journey.
In each chapter the first section lists the most common ways a
certain topic is understood in the Bible. The second section
identifies important ways the church has interpreted that topic
since the Bible's inception. The third section introduces
contemporary perspectives. With that foundational knowledge,
readers can make a judgment as to which viewpoints seem more or
less persuasive to them personally. Finally, each chapter ends with
questions for reflection for individuals or small groups.
This collection of sermons by noted homileticians illustrates
thirty-four distinct styles of contemporary and traditional
preaching.
Various ideas float around about the subject of last things,
leading many Christians to conclude that they don’t know what to
think about the subject. Yet at the core of the Christian doctrine
of last things lies two simple and complementary hopes: that God
ever and always offers hope for our individual futures and for the
future of the whole world. In this helpful book, Allen and Cornwall
explain how we don’t have to subscribe to sensationalist theories
or sketchy interpretations to believe in Christian hope. They walk
the reader through the central biblical teachings on last things
and then show the ways the church has interpreted those teachings
throughout the centuries. In a respectful way, the authors
demonstrate that end-time beliefs centered on the Rapture came into
existence only recently, and they then offer several more
life-affirming, contemporary interpretations as alternatives. The
book includes a study guide and web-based appendixes designed to
help pastors develop both topical and lectionary-based sermon
series on Christian hope.
The lectionary is a helpful homiletical tool. But there are times
when lectionary preaching does not meet a congregation s needs.
Sermon Treks offers preachers and students an invigorating
selection of new sermon-planning trails, for use as sermon series
or for single sermons. The options presented here are practical and
theologically responsible. Some are rooted in ancient forms of
proclamation; others are new. All provide clear but creative
guidance for the preacher, and a path that will lead to more
effective sermons."
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