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This book provides a sustained, critical and theological engagement with arguably the most crucial aspect of contemporary society - its diversity. The author finds in the social theory of Isaiah Berlin a number of fruitful ways to reframe the debate over these questions, and to contribute to a more positive conversation regarding our fundamental differences. The book focuses particularly on Berlin's critique of monism and idealistic utopianism, arguing that pluralism does not represent a failure in the nature of human society, but a superabundance of possibilities in a created world gr
Berlin, Isaiah --- Christianity and other religions --- Religious pluralism --- Christianity --- Religious tolerance --- Christianity and other religions. --- Syncretism (Christianity) --- Religions --- Christianity. --- Relations --- History --- Berlin, Isaiah, --- Berlin, Yeshaʻyah, --- Berlin, Yeshaʻyahu, --- Берлин, Исайя, --- Berlin, Isaĭi︠a︡, --- ברלין, ישעיהו --- Birlīn, Īzāyā, --- برلين، ايزايا
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Now that institutional churches are in decline, the author challenges them to rediscover a vocation, to follow Jesus Christ even at the risk of failing to survive. Without detailing the face of the future church, he asserts that there is life after death for the worshipping body of Christ.
Church. --- Christianity. --- Christianity --- Religions --- Church history --- Ecclesiastical theology --- Ecclesiology --- Theology, Ecclesiastical --- People of God --- Theology
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Assurance (Theology) --- Atonement --- History of doctrines --- Campbell, John McLeod, --- Edwards, Jonathan,
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The world of the psalmist is ever alert to the Lord's reign. Even the unspeakable, the sorrow of oppression, the terror at the unknown, the anguish of the unjustly wronged—all these voices of lament are transformed into voices of praise. In In the House of the Lord, Michael Jinkins poses the question "What would it mean for us to inhabit the world of the psalmist?" and in so doing draws us into a world that has long awaited our arrival.Focusing primarily on the psalms of lament, Jinkins shows what it would mean for us to learn to inhabit the world of the psalms: to enter a world where we recognize the reign of the Lord, to practice the habitation of God as a living discipline, and to discern the sacred quality of all life. He examines why the psalms are neglected in the hymns and liturgies of many churches and offers an introduction to the scope of the psalms. By providing a pastoral and liturgical reflection on the psalms, Jinkins shows in practical terms how individuals and communities can "inhabit" the psalms to make them a genuine framework for their faith life.The psalms invite us to enter into that world which shaped the theology and self-understanding of the people of Israel for centuries. In the House of the Lord offers a previously unimagined source for congregational leadership, pastoral care and counseling, spiritual renewal, and worship.
Laments in the Bible --- Bible. --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- Liturgical use.
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Nonprofit organizations --- Leadership. --- Associations sans but lucratif --- Leadership --- Management. --- Gestion
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