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The Long Mile (Paperback)
Oliver Pendlington, Sharon James-Alderton; Illustrated by Sharon James-Alderton
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R305
Discovery Miles 3 050
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Is Christianity Good for the World? shows that through history and
across the globe, true followers of Christ have challenged
injustice and abuse, and provided care for the needy—living out
their conviction that every person is created in God’s image.
The study of women in Graeco-Roman antiquity has a long history but
many recent developments-prominent among which are the rise of
feminist theory and theoretical and interpretive work in material
culture-have transformed approaches to the study of women's lived
experiences in antiquity. This four-volume collection brings
together the best scholarship that has both established the field
and moved it forward. The articles collected here are
interdisciplinary, bringing into conversation the full range of
evidence for women in the classical world: historical, literary,
legal, medical, inscriptional, mythic, artistic (e.g., sculpture,
frescoes, paintings, terracottas), and the material found in
archaeological excavations, including evidence from burials, finds
from houses, and the remains of food processing and textile
production. Ideology is relevant to each volume, as both Greek and
Roman societies had highly developed ideologies and cultural ideals
that exercised profound and pervasive influence over women's lives.
Social class is implicated in these ideologies in ways that are
made evident in every genre of source material. Women in the
Classical World, edited by two of the leading scholars in the
field, presents in one reference source a complete picture of women
in Ancient Greece and Rome, based on a vast of array of sources.
This material has not been collected together in one place before.
We are surrounded by lies. They are incorporated into the worldview
of our culture. We daily absorb them, and these lies can have
deadly effects on individuals, societies and whole civilisations.
Sharon James investigates the origins of some of these lies and
looks at how we have got to the point where 'my truth' is as valid
as 'your truth', and absolute truth is an outdated way of thinking.
In examining the evidence of history, she highlights the
consequences of applying dangerous untruths. She also looks at how
Christians often respond to the culture's lies - in silence,
acquiescence or celebration of them - and why these responses can
be as harmful as the lies themselves. In the second part she turns
to the truth which leads to real liberation and justice. She shows
why we don't need to be ashamed of Christ, or intimidated by the
claims of those who are militantly opposed to the Bible. This book
aims to equip Christians to navigate the minefield of current
claims. To understand our inherent human significance, to know
genuine freedom, and to work for real justice, we need to know the
truth. Chapter headings include: Part One: The Lies We Are Told 1.
There is no God and no Absolute Morality * Ludwig Feuerbach
(1804-72): God is Just a Comfort Blanket * Charles Darwin
(1809-82): Made Atheism Intellectually Possible * Karl Marx
(1818-83): Overthrow the Old Society * From Dream to Nightmare 2.
'No God': From Atheism to Death Camps * Friedrich Nietzsche
(1844-1908): No Transcendent Morality * Sigmund Freud (1856-1939):
To be Human is to be Sexual * Wilhelm Reich (1897-1957): Father of
the Sexual Revolution * Margaret Sanger (1879-1966): Sex as
Salvation * Sexual Liberation: Triumph or Tragedy? 3. 'No Absolute
Morality': From Relativism to Fatherlessness * Five Ways to
Destabilize Society 4. 'No Universal Truth': The Death of Common
Sense 5. 'No Universal Humanity': Divided We Fall 6. False
Prophets: The Compromised Church Part Two: The Truth We Must Hold
7. The Biblical Worldview: Foundation of Truth, Freedom and Dignity
* God the Creator * Created in His Image * We Are All Sinners * We
Can All be Forgiven 8. The Biblical Worldview: Foundation of Human
Flourishing * God's Good Design: Family * God's Good Design: Work *
God's Good Design: Communities * God's Good Design: Nations 9. The
Biblical Worldview: Christ is King - Hope for the Future 10. What
Should I Do Now?
Many people today would say that Christianity has done more harm
than good to our world. Sharon James argues, however, in seeking to
love their neighbour and reflect God’s moral character the
followers of Jesus have had a largely positive impact on our
society. James takes a number of areas – education, healthcare,
justice, human dignity – and traces the ways in which these
benefits have spread with the gospel. Â Chapter Headings:
Freedom Religious Liberty Justice Protecting Life The Dignity of
Women Philanthropy Healthcare Education for All The Creation
Mandate and the Value of Work History: The Triumph of Christ
Â
We all view the world through a certain lens. Depending on our
upbringing, geography, experiences and a whole host of other
influences, we will see life a certain way. Our understanding of
truth, justice, love, and good and evil is shaped by what we hear
and are taught. Using real-life stories and poignant historical
overviews, Sharon James writes to equip the next generation with
the wisdom needed to think through some of the most divisive
cultural issues of our day.
The world has embraced the idea that gender is something that can
be decided by individuals. As Christians encounter colleagues,
friends and family members who identify as a gender other than the
one they were born, we need to be informed and equipped with
knowledge about what the issues are, what different terms mean and
what the Bible has to say about these things. While we walk the
line between loving our neighbour and not buying into the world's
lies, Sharon James helps us in this informative and practical
guide.
This volume of essays focuses on the thought of John Gill, the
doyen of High Calvinism in the transatlantic Baptist community of
the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
Among the topics covered are Gill's trinitarian theology, his
soteriological views, his Baptist ecclesiology, and his use of
Scripture. Other papers are more focused, examining, for instance,
his clash with the Arminian Methodist leader John Wesley over the
issues of predestination and election, a clash that decisively
shaped Wesley's perspective on Calvinism.
The tercentennial of Gill's birth in 1997 is a fitting occasion to
issue this study of a man whose systematic theology and exposition
of the Old and New Testaments formed the mainstay of many
eighteenth-century Baptist ministers' libraries and who has never
been the subject of a major critical study.
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