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Christianity --- conversion --- way of life --- the Jesus Movement --- the Jesus People
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radical unorthodoxy --- the 1960s --- born again --- the Jesus Revolution --- the Children of God --- the Jesus Movement --- the Family of Love --- doomsday prophecies --- sexuality --- spiritual recovery --- testimony
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Children of God (Movement) --- Sexual ethics --- Enfants de Dieu (Mouvement) --- Morale sexuelle --- The Family --- the Children of God --- the Jesus' Movement --- deprogramming --- flirty fishing --- sexual sharing --- sexual exploitation --- 1993 --- the Branch Davidian Community --- Waco, Texas --- child abuse
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the Jesus Movement --- Pelagianism --- heresy --- ethics --- the catholic movement --- France --- Catholicism --- Charismatic communities --- sects --- canon law --- dissidence --- conformism --- Catholic Action --- lay religious movements --- middle ages --- lay movements --- charismatic renewal
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"The Jesus People movement was a unique combination of the hippie counterculture and evangelical Christianity. It first appeared in the famed "Summer of Love" of 1967, in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district, and spread like wildfire in Southern California and beyond, to cities like Seattle, Atlanta, and Milwaukee. In 1971 the growing movement found its way into the national media spotlight and gained momentum, attracting a huge new following among evangelical church youth, who enthusiastically adopted the Jesus People persona as their own. Within a few years, however, the movement disappeared and was largely forgotten by everyone but those who had filled its ranks. God's Forever Family argues that the Jesus People movement was one of the most important American religious movements of the second half of the 20th-century. Not only do such new and burgeoning evangelical groups as Calvary Chapel and the Vineyard trace back to the Jesus People, but the movement paved the way for the huge Contemporary Christian Music industry and the rise of "Praise Music" in the nation's churches. More significantly, it revolutionized evangelicals' relationship with youth and popular culture. Larry Eskridge makes the case that the Jesus People movement not only helped create a resurgent evangelicalism but must be considered one of the formative powers that shaped American youth in the late 1960s and 1970s."--Publisher information.
Jesus People --- Contemporary Christian music --- United States --- Church history --- 316:2 <73> --- 27 <73> --- Jesus Freaks --- Jesus Movement --- Street Christians --- Pentecostalism --- Revivals --- Youth --- 316:2 <73> Godsdienstsociologie--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- Godsdienstsociologie--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- 27 <73> Histoire de l'Eglise--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- 27 <73> Kerkgeschiedenis--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- Histoire de l'Eglise--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- Kerkgeschiedenis--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- Religious life --- Jesus People - United States. --- Contemporary Christian music - United States. --- United States - Church history - 20th century. --- the Jesus Generation --- Jesus freaks --- San Francisco --- Haight-Ashbury --- the Jesus People Movement in Southern California --- Seattle --- Milwaukee --- New Jersey --- the Jesus Movement --- the Jesus Kids --- Evangelical youth culture --- the Children of God --- salvation --- music and the Jesus People Movement
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This study of the conversion of tribal peoples to Christianity combines case studies with the contributors' theories, challenging anthropologists and sociologists to reassess the varieties of religious experience and the convergent processes involved in religious change.
Conversion --- Christian converts --- Missions --- Religion and politics --- Religion and culture --- Religion --- Philosophy & Religion --- Christianity --- Culture and religion --- Culture --- Political science --- Politics, Practical --- Politics and religion --- Religions --- Christian missions --- Missions, Foreign --- Theology, Practical --- Proselytizing --- Christians --- Converts --- Religious conversion --- Psychology, Religious --- History --- Anthropological aspects --- Religious aspects --- Political aspects --- Christian converts. --- Religion and politics. --- Religion and culture. --- Anthropology --- Christianity. --- Anthropological aspects. --- anthropology. --- buddhism. --- central australia. --- chinese conversion. --- christian conversion. --- christian theology. --- christianity. --- church community. --- colonialism. --- commitment. --- community. --- conversion. --- faith. --- institutional church. --- jesuit mission program. --- jesus movement. --- morality. --- muslim java. --- northern mexico. --- papua new guinea. --- philosophy. --- political economy. --- rationality. --- religion. --- religious change. --- religious conversion. --- religious identity. --- sociology. --- southern african religious history. --- world religions.
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Nineteenth-century European thought, especially in Germany, was increasingly dominated by a new historicist impulse to situate every event, person, or text in its particular context. At odds with the transcendent claims of philosophy and--more significantly--theology, historicism came to be attacked by its critics for reducing human experience to a series of disconnected moments, each of which was the product of decidedly mundane, rather than sacred, origins. By the late nineteenth century and into the Weimar period, historicism was seen by many as a grinding force that corroded social values and was emblematic of modern society's gravest ills. Resisting History examines the backlash against historicism, focusing on four major Jewish thinkers. David Myers situates these thinkers in proximity to leading Protestant thinkers of the time, but argues that German Jews and Christians shared a complex cultural and discursive world best understood in terms of exchange and adaptation rather than influence.After examining the growing dominance of the new historicist thinking in the nineteenth century, the book analyzes the critical responses of Hermann Cohen, Franz Rosenzweig, Leo Strauss, and Isaac Breuer. For this fascinating and diverse quartet of thinkers, historicism posed a stark challenge to the ongoing vitality of Judaism in the modern world. And yet, as they set out to dilute or eliminate its destructive tendencies, these thinkers often made recourse to the very tools and methods of historicism. In doing so, they demonstrated the utter inescapability of historicism in modern culture, whether approached from a Christian or Jewish perspective.
Historicism --- Jewish learning and scholarship --- Judaism --- History --- Historiography --- Breuer, Isaac, --- Cohen, Hermann, --- Rosenzweig, Franz, --- Strauss, Leo. --- History. --- Historiography. --- Agudat Yisrael. --- Balfour Declaration. --- Benjamin, Walter. --- Breuer, Salomon. --- Cassirer, Ernst. --- Conservative Revolution. --- Davos conference. --- Denominationalism. --- Dilthey, Wilhelm. --- Ehrenfreund, Jacques. --- Enlightenment. --- Erets Yisrael. --- Fischer, Kuno. --- Frankfurt am Main. --- Funkenstein, Amos. --- Geiger, Abraham. --- Geisteswissenschaft. --- Guttmann, Julius. --- Hegelianism. --- Heidegger, Martin. --- Jewish nation. --- Jewishness. --- Kassel. --- Kellerman, Benzion. --- Kierkegaard, Søren. --- Kulturprotestantismus. --- Lazarus, Moritz. --- Luther, Martin. --- Marr, Wilhelm. --- Meinecke, Friedrich. --- Naturwissenschaft. --- Neue Kusari. --- Nordau, Max. --- Otto, Rudolf. --- Rabbinic Judaism. --- Revelation. --- Rosenheim, Jacob. --- Scholem, Gershom. --- Uganda proposal. --- anti-historicism. --- assimilation. --- biblical prophets. --- communitarianism. --- conversion to Christianity. --- cultural bifocality. --- ecclesiastical history. --- historical Jesus movement. --- historicism. --- philosophy. --- positivism. --- post-structuralism. --- systematic theology.
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Jesus People --- 232 --- Jesus Freaks --- Jesus Movement --- Street Christians --- Pentecostalism --- Revivals --- Youth --- Jezus Christus. Christologie: dogmatisch. De Verbo incarnato --- Religious life --- Jesus Christ --- -Jesus Christ --- -Christ --- Cristo --- Jezus Chrystus --- Jesus Cristo --- Jesus, --- Jezus --- Christ, Jesus --- Yeh-su --- Masīḥ --- Khristos --- Gesù --- Christo --- Yeshua --- Chrystus --- Gesú Cristo --- Ježíš --- Isa, --- Nabi Isa --- Isa Al-Masih --- Al-Masih, Isa --- Masih, Isa Al --- -Jesus, --- Jesucristo --- Yesu --- Yeh-su Chi-tu --- Iēsous --- Iēsous Christos --- Iēsous, --- Kʻristos --- Hisus Kʻristos --- Christos --- Jesuo --- Yeshuʻa ben Yosef --- Yeshua ben Yoseph --- Iisus --- Iisus Khristos --- Jeschua ben Joseph --- Ieso Kriʻste --- Yesus --- Kristus --- ישו --- ישו הנוצרי --- ישו הנצרי --- ישוע --- ישוע בן יוסף --- المسيح --- مسيح --- يسوع المسيح --- 耶稣 --- 耶稣基督 --- 예수그리스도 --- Jíizis --- Yéshoua --- Iėsu̇s --- Khrist Iėsu̇s --- عيسىٰ --- History of doctrines --- -Jewish interpretations --- Person and offices --- -History of doctrines --- Jesus people --- Christ --- Jewish interpretations. --- Person and offices. --- عيسىٰ
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The life and times of the New Testament's most mystifying and incendiary bookFew biblical books have been as revered and reviled as Revelation. Many hail it as the pinnacle of prophetic vision, the cornerstone of the biblical canon, and, for those with eyes to see, the key to understanding the past, present, and future. Others denounce it as the work of a disturbed individual whose horrific dreams of inhumane violence should never have been allowed into the Bible. Timothy Beal provides a concise cultural history of Revelation and the apocalyptic imaginations it has fueled.Taking readers from the book's composition amid the Christian persecutions of first-century Rome to its enduring influence today in popular culture, media, and visual art, Beal explores the often wildly contradictory lives of this sometimes horrifying, sometimes inspiring biblical vision. He shows how such figures as Augustine and Hildegard of Bingen made Revelation central to their own mystical worldviews, and how, thanks to the vivid works of art it inspired, the book remained popular even as it was denounced by later church leaders such as Martin Luther. Attributed to a mysterious prophet identified only as John, Revelation speaks with a voice unlike any other in the Bible. Beal demonstrates how the book is a multimedia constellation of stories and images that mutate and evolve as they take hold in new contexts, and how Revelation is reinvented in the hearts and minds of each new generation.This succinct book traces how Revelation continues to inspire new diagrams of history, new fantasies of rapture, and new nightmares of being left behind.
Eschatology. --- Bible. --- Influence. --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- History. --- Antipope. --- Apocalypse. --- Balaam. --- Bernard McGinn (theologian). --- Book of Revelation. --- Books of Kings. --- Case Western Reserve University. --- Cataclysm (Dragonlance). --- Christendom. --- Christian mission. --- Christian right. --- Christian theology. --- Christian. --- Christianity. --- Clarence Larkin. --- Clergy. --- Colonialism. --- Consummation. --- David Cronenberg. --- Deity. --- Diocletian. --- Dispensationalism. --- Divine judgment. --- End time. --- Enthronement. --- Evangelicalism. --- Ex nihilo. --- Ezekiel. --- False prophet. --- Fornication. --- Futurist. --- God. --- Gog and Magog. --- Hal Lindsey. --- Hildegard of Bingen. --- Horror film. --- Humus. --- I Wish (manhwa). --- Illustration. --- Image of God. --- Incense. --- Irenaeus. --- Israelites. --- Jehovah's Witnesses. --- Jesus movement. --- Jews. --- Joachim of Fiore. --- John of Patmos. --- John the Apostle. --- Lake of fire. --- Lecture. --- Lenny Kravitz. --- Lucas Cranach the Elder. --- Manuscript. --- Many Waters. --- Narrative. --- New Testament. --- New media. --- Nicolas Cage. --- Old Testament. --- Oxford University Press. --- Persecution. --- Preface (liturgy). --- Premillennialism. --- Prophecy. --- Protestantism. --- Psalms. --- Religion. --- Religious text. --- Resurrection of the dead. --- Revelation 12. --- Rhetoric. --- Sacred history. --- Satan. --- Satanism. --- Scivias. --- Scofield Reference Bible. --- Sea monster. --- Second Coming. --- Second death. --- Seminar. --- Sermon. --- Serpents in the Bible. --- Seven churches of Asia. --- Seven seals. --- Spirituality. --- Technology. --- The City of God (book). --- The Other Hand. --- Theology. --- Throne room. --- Timothy Beal. --- Vulgate. --- Western Christianity. --- Whore of Babylon. --- Woodcut. --- Writing. --- Youth for Christ. --- Zombie.
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Aum Shinrikyo --- the Baha'i faith --- the Brahma Kumaris --- the Branch Davidians --- the Christadelphians --- Christian Science --- the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints --- Mormons --- the Church of Scientology --- the Church Universal and Triumphant --- Summit Lighthouse --- Eckankar --- Elan Vital --- the Exclusive Brethren --- Falun Gong --- Falun Dafa --- The family --- Children of God --- Freemasonry --- Friends of the Western Buddhist Order --- the International Churches of Christ --- ISKCON --- the International Society for Krishna Consciousness --- the Jehovah's Witnesses --- The Jesus Movement --- the Nation of Islam --- the New Kadampa Tradition --- NKT --- Oneness Pentecostalism --- the Order of the Solar Temple --- Rajneesh --- Osho International --- Rastafarianism --- Rosicrucianism --- AMORC --- Sahaja Yoga --- the Satya Sai baba Society --- Soka gakkai International --- Spiritualism --- the Sufi movement --- the Theosophical Movement --- Transcendental Meditation --- Rosicrucianism --- AMORC --- Sahaja Yoga --- the Satya Sai baba Society --- Soka Gakkai International --- Spiritualism --- the Sufi movement --- the Theosophical Movement --- Transcendental Meditation --- the Unification Church --- the Worldwide Church of God --- New Age religion --- Satanism --- the Church of Satan --- the Temple of Set --- UFO religions --- the Aetherius Society --- the Raelian Church --- Heaven's Gate --- Paganism --- Wicca --- Druidry --- the Northern Tradition --- Shamanism --- Heathenism
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