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This book gives practical steps for creating a system that delivers great coaching to church planters. It helps coaches and leaders enhance their coaching efforts in three parts: Part 1: Build a coaching platform; Part 2: Develop great coaches; Part 3: Deliver great coaching.
Church development, New --- Evangelistic work. --- Evangelism --- Proselytizing --- Revival (Religion) --- Theology, Practical --- Discipling (Christianity) --- Religious awakening --- Church planting (Missions) --- Churches, New --- New churches --- Church growth --- Study and teaching. --- Christianity
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The research findings of this qualitative multi-case study disclose five common diffusional patterns: multi-faceted transmission, caring translation, clear turnaround, deep transformation, and continual retransmission.
Church development, New --- Evangelicalism --- Conversion --- Christianity. --- Evangelical religion --- Protestantism, Evangelical --- Evangelical Revival --- Fundamentalism --- Pietism --- Protestantism --- Church planting (Missions) --- Churches, New --- New churches --- Church growth
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Steve Bruce explores Scotland's transformation from the largely devout Presbyterian country of 1900, with the church as a major social force, to the diverse, more secular society of today, when less than 10 per cent of Scots attend church. He bases his study on a career's worth of historical, ethnographic and statistical research, to provide both a coherent description of Scotland's current religious complexion and a considered explanation of the forces that shaped it. Scottish Gods is both a fascinating summary of over a century of religious and cultural change, and a searing analysis of the state of religion in Scotland today by one of our leading social historians.
Scots Catholic growth --- Scotland Orange and Protestant --- religion in a secular culture --- the New Churches --- the Moray Riviera --- Scots Muslims --- sex and politics --- Scotland's religion --- Scotland --- Religion
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This volume explores the intersections of religion, power, and resistance in a fast-changing world. The authors herein seek to disrupt the sociology of religion’s dominant paradigms, especially its overemphasis in Europe and the United States, as well as its preference for official religions as opposed to diverse worldviews in all of their manifestations from around the world: Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, the Middle East, and North and South America. The papers in this volume explore ways of decentering the Global North and of decolonizing the sociology of religion’s core concepts. They explore strategies used by newer and popular forms of religion to challenge existing power structures. Moreover, they examine the intersectionalities that privilege some people’s religious lives and disprivilege others. They show how religion, spirituality, and non-religion are much more complex than the dominant paradigms have led us to believe. This volume seeks to generate robust discussion and critical reflection on new ideas for a divided world, thus contributing to the advancement of the discipline of religious sociology.
Humanities --- Social interaction --- sociology of religion --- post-colonial --- reflexivity --- epistemology --- race --- religion --- violence --- South Africa --- decoloniality --- Chinese religion --- secularization --- Xunzi --- Durkheim --- identity --- African Pentecostalism --- integration --- transnationalism --- diaspora --- religious diversity --- religions --- law --- media --- education --- religious strength --- sex --- gender --- Canada --- religion and migration --- intersectionality --- popular religions --- multiple modernities --- lived religion --- power --- resistance --- social theory --- holistic spirituality --- Ghana’s New Churches --- ideology --- dominant ideology --- alternative ideology --- political power --- social constructionism --- Islamism --- Islam --- Shi’ism --- spiritualism --- rituals --- Iran --- non-religion --- atheism --- persecution --- policy --- diversity --- young people --- spirituality --- complexity --- hybridity --- n/a --- Ghana's New Churches --- Shi'ism
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This volume explores the intersections of religion, power, and resistance in a fast-changing world. The authors herein seek to disrupt the sociology of religion’s dominant paradigms, especially its overemphasis in Europe and the United States, as well as its preference for official religions as opposed to diverse worldviews in all of their manifestations from around the world: Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, the Middle East, and North and South America. The papers in this volume explore ways of decentering the Global North and of decolonizing the sociology of religion’s core concepts. They explore strategies used by newer and popular forms of religion to challenge existing power structures. Moreover, they examine the intersectionalities that privilege some people’s religious lives and disprivilege others. They show how religion, spirituality, and non-religion are much more complex than the dominant paradigms have led us to believe. This volume seeks to generate robust discussion and critical reflection on new ideas for a divided world, thus contributing to the advancement of the discipline of religious sociology.
sociology of religion --- post-colonial --- reflexivity --- epistemology --- race --- religion --- violence --- South Africa --- decoloniality --- Chinese religion --- secularization --- Xunzi --- Durkheim --- identity --- African Pentecostalism --- integration --- transnationalism --- diaspora --- religious diversity --- religions --- law --- media --- education --- religious strength --- sex --- gender --- Canada --- religion and migration --- intersectionality --- popular religions --- multiple modernities --- lived religion --- power --- resistance --- social theory --- holistic spirituality --- Ghana’s New Churches --- ideology --- dominant ideology --- alternative ideology --- political power --- social constructionism --- Islamism --- Islam --- Shi’ism --- spiritualism --- rituals --- Iran --- non-religion --- atheism --- persecution --- policy --- diversity --- young people --- spirituality --- complexity --- hybridity --- n/a --- Ghana's New Churches --- Shi'ism
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Church development, New. --- Evangelistic work. --- Church development, New --- Evangelistic work --- פעילות אוואנגלית --- Evangelism --- Proselytizing --- Revival (Religion) --- Theology, Practical --- Discipling (Christianity) --- Religious awakening --- פיתוח הכנסייה, חדש --- Church planting (Missions) --- Churches, New --- New churches --- Church growth --- Christianity --- New Testament. --- הברית החדשה. --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- ביקורת, פרשנות וכד' --- Bible. --- Acts (Book of the New Testament) --- Acts of the Apostles --- Chongdo haengjŏn --- Sado haengjŏn
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Wie war es nur möglich, dass aus einer kleinen Gruppe von Jüngern Jesu innerhalb von drei Jahrhunderten eine Kirche heranwuchs, die im Römischen Reich zur bestimmenden geistigen Macht wurde? Der Autor lüftet dieses Geheimnis: Die Christen haben sauerteigartig gewirkt, indem sie sich in ihren Privathäusern in einer Art Hausgemeinde von maximal 40 Personen trafen. Durch ihr persönliches Zeugnis in Wort und Tat lösten sie damit eine Bewegung aus, die für die nächsten zwei Jahrtausende bestimmend werden sollte. [Brunnen]
Ecclesiology --- Paul [Apostle] --- Church development, New --- Church history --- Church --- Apostolic Church --- Christianity --- Church, Apostolic --- Early Christianity --- Early church --- Primitive and early church --- Primitive Christianity --- Fathers of the church --- Great Apostasy (Mormon doctrine) --- Church planting (Missions) --- Churches, New --- New churches --- Church growth --- Biblical teaching --- Bible. --- Ba-yon Tipan --- Bagong Tipan --- Jaji ma Hungi --- Kainē Diathēkē --- New Testament --- Nouveau Testament --- Novo Testamento --- Novum Testamentum --- Novyĭ Zavet --- Novyĭ Zavi︠e︡t Gospoda nashego Īisusa Khrista --- Novyĭ Zavit --- Nuevo Testamento --- Nuovo Testamento --- Nye Testamente --- Perjanjian Baru --- Dhamma sacʻ kyamʻʺ --- Injīl --- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
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This volume explores the intersections of religion, power, and resistance in a fast-changing world. The authors herein seek to disrupt the sociology of religion’s dominant paradigms, especially its overemphasis in Europe and the United States, as well as its preference for official religions as opposed to diverse worldviews in all of their manifestations from around the world: Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, the Middle East, and North and South America. The papers in this volume explore ways of decentering the Global North and of decolonizing the sociology of religion’s core concepts. They explore strategies used by newer and popular forms of religion to challenge existing power structures. Moreover, they examine the intersectionalities that privilege some people’s religious lives and disprivilege others. They show how religion, spirituality, and non-religion are much more complex than the dominant paradigms have led us to believe. This volume seeks to generate robust discussion and critical reflection on new ideas for a divided world, thus contributing to the advancement of the discipline of religious sociology.
Humanities --- Social interaction --- sociology of religion --- post-colonial --- reflexivity --- epistemology --- race --- religion --- violence --- South Africa --- decoloniality --- Chinese religion --- secularization --- Xunzi --- Durkheim --- identity --- African Pentecostalism --- integration --- transnationalism --- diaspora --- religious diversity --- religions --- law --- media --- education --- religious strength --- sex --- gender --- Canada --- religion and migration --- intersectionality --- popular religions --- multiple modernities --- lived religion --- power --- resistance --- social theory --- holistic spirituality --- Ghana's New Churches --- ideology --- dominant ideology --- alternative ideology --- political power --- social constructionism --- Islamism --- Islam --- Shi'ism --- spiritualism --- rituals --- Iran --- non-religion --- atheism --- persecution --- policy --- diversity --- young people --- spirituality --- complexity --- hybridity --- sociology of religion --- post-colonial --- reflexivity --- epistemology --- race --- religion --- violence --- South Africa --- decoloniality --- Chinese religion --- secularization --- Xunzi --- Durkheim --- identity --- African Pentecostalism --- integration --- transnationalism --- diaspora --- religious diversity --- religions --- law --- media --- education --- religious strength --- sex --- gender --- Canada --- religion and migration --- intersectionality --- popular religions --- multiple modernities --- lived religion --- power --- resistance --- social theory --- holistic spirituality --- Ghana's New Churches --- ideology --- dominant ideology --- alternative ideology --- political power --- social constructionism --- Islamism --- Islam --- Shi'ism --- spiritualism --- rituals --- Iran --- non-religion --- atheism --- persecution --- policy --- diversity --- young people --- spirituality --- complexity --- hybridity
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