Search Constraints
« Previous |
1 - 10 of 2,316
|
Next »
Search Results
-
Creator: Christopher Duraisingh Date: 1998 Contributing Institution: World Council of Churches Description: "Report of the Conference on World Mission and Evangelism that took place in Salvador, Brazil, 24 November-3 December 1996, under the theme 'Called to one hope--the Gospel in diverse cultures'."--Page [vii], The route to Salvador / Guillermo Cook -- "Laudate omnes gentes" : the Conference begins / Christopher Duraisingh -- Conference message -- Acts of commitment -- Reports from the sections -- Gospel and culture / Metropolian Kirill of Smolensk and Kaliningrad -- Called to one hope : the Gospel in diverse cultures / Musimbi R.A. Kanyoro -- A German perspective / Cornelia Füllkrug-Weitzel -- An Australian aboriginal perspective / Wali Fejo -- A Brazilian perspective / Robinson Cavalcanti -- A Jamaican perspective / Marjorie Lewis-Cooper -- The Bible in context : an Indian story / K.M. George -- The UK : a post-Christian, post-modern context / Kristin Ofstad -- Interpreting the Bible in a central African context / Jean-Samuel Hendje Toya -- The Bible in the African American cultural context / Prathia Hall Wynn -- From each culture, with one voice : worship at Salvador / Jean S. Stromberg -- Sharing the riches of the Bible across cultures : Bible studies at Salvador / Sister Monica Cooney -- "Thuma mina"--"Send us, Lord" : the Conference closes / Christopher Duraisingh -- Salvador : a signpost of the new in mission / Christopher Duraisingh, Foreword by Ana Langerak, xiv, 234 pages ; 21 cm, and Includes bibliographical references View Full Item at World Council of Churches -
Creator: Palmer, Earl F. Date: 2001 Contributing Institution: Princeton Theological Seminary Library Description: Copyright © 2001 Earl F. Palmer. Presented here with permission of Earl F. Palmer. View Full Item at Princeton Theological Seminary Library -
Creator: Palmer, Earl F. Date: 1983 Contributing Institution: Princeton Theological Seminary Library Description: Pastor Palmer's topic addressed, "Biblical authority: A pastor's perspective." View Full Item at Princeton Theological Seminary Library -
Creator: Graebner, Thomas. Date: 1925 Contributing Institution: Princeton Theological Seminary Library View Full Item at Princeton Theological Seminary Library -
Creator: Luecke, Richard, 1923- Date: 1975 Contributing Institution: Princeton Theological Seminary Library View Full Item at Princeton Theological Seminary Library -
Creator: Filson, Floyd V. (Floyd Vivian), 1896-1980 Date: 1956 Contributing Institution: Princeton Theological Seminary Library Description: Lecture 3 of 5 View Full Item at Princeton Theological Seminary Library -
Creator: Green, Barbara and Bartha, Tibor Date: 1982 Contributing Institution: Princeton Theological Seminary Library Description: Audio recording has background static but is still intelligible, Sermon text: Matthew 14:13-21, and Recorded in Miller Chapel at 11:30 a.m. View Full Item at Princeton Theological Seminary Library -
Creator: Metzger, Bruce M. (Bruce Manning), 1914-2007 Date: 1998 Contributing Institution: Princeton Theological Seminary Library Description: TSF Noontime Forum, Recorded at the Mackay Campus Center Auditorium, and Topic: "Three ways of reading the bible-academically, homiletically, and devotionally." View Full Item at Princeton Theological Seminary Library -
Creator: Froehlich, Karlfried Date: 1990 Contributing Institution: Princeton Theological Seminary Library Description: Part 1 of a series on Christian interpretation of the Decalogue given as alumni lectures at Princeton Theological Seminary, May 31 - June 1, 1990. and The fascinating understanding of this the longest of the biblical "Ten Words" went from the prohibition of all figural art in Judaism and the early Christian Fathers, which was continued by a resurgence of iconoclasm in the 8th century AD and in parts of the Protestant Reformation, to a slow process of acceptance under the pressure of the surrounding culture. The Christian East justified icons by an incarnational argument and by stressing the intention of the command as combatting idol worship, not art in general. The West embraced Pope Gregory the Great's endorsement of images as an educational tool for the illiterate, and the main Reformers of the 16th century promoted the existing middle course: "We neither worship nor destroy," allowing at least some form of figural art in the religious life of their adherents. View Full Item at Princeton Theological Seminary Library