10 Apr A Blueprint for Christian Discipleship – Book Review
Watson begins his book by taking stock of the current situation facing the church in the contemporary United States....
Watson begins his book by taking stock of the current situation facing the church in the contemporary United States....
Norman Geisler, a well-known author of apologetics among conservative Christians, and his son David Geisler team up to write this book....
Although organized topically, with each chapter titled after a specific practice of ministry, Go Grow Your Church! is written as a narrative, covering the experience of Rev. James F. Miller from the time he began his pastorate at DuPage African Methodist Episcopal Church in DuPage...
If your parishioners think about their faith, they will appreciate you taking the time to read God is Good, God is Great....
Lost and Found is a research-based volume to speak to the status of the younger unchurched and to give ideas and thoughts about how the church can provide ways to reach and transform them....
What a title and how appropriate, Mad Church Disease - a title I wish I had thought of. Who can forget the Mad Cow disease epidemic of a few years ago when pictures of cattle carcasses were stacked in a heap for all to see...
A 'wild Jesus?' Exactly, say these two native Australians whose earlier writings have helped to shape the ongoing theological conversation about 'missional church' in recent years (The Forgotten Ways, Exiles, The Shaping of Things to Come, Seeing God in the Ordinary)....
In SimChurch Doug Estes takes as his basic assumption that the world has moved into the digital age, bound together by technology....
Given the many demands placed upon pastors, and the hectic pace of life in which we all live and die, The Bereavement Ministry Program: A Comprehensive Guide for Churches is an invaluable resource....
Two words in the title of this book may have grabbed your attention as they did mine: “spirituality” and “community”. Both are hot topics in the church and academy, although they often generate more heat than light....