PDF The Teaching of Christ Download
- Author: Ronald David Lawler
- Publisher:
- ISBN:
- Category : Religion
- Languages : en
- Pages : 654
eBook downloads, eBook resources & eBook authors
Uncompromising clarity is what makes this catechism a long-time favorite. It explains the teachings of the Church in exceptionally easy-to-understand language, but it never waters down the truth or glides over the hard parts. Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved.
A refreshing truth-over-technique call to small group leaders and Sunday school teachers to stay focused on continually reintroducing people to Jesus whose life and death changes everything.
How can you improve your effectiveness as Christian teachers? Essentially, it is by imitating JESUS CHRIST: The Great Teacher. You may wonder, ‘But how can we imitate Jesus?’ ‘He was the perfect, divine, Son of God.’ Admittedly, you cannot be a perfect teacher. Nevertheless, regardless of your abilities, you can do your best to imitate the way Jesus taught. JESUS CHRIST: The Great Teacher will discuss how you can employ all of his teaching methods when you share the Word of God with others.
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From one of the world’s most influential spiritual thinkers, a long-awaited book exploring what it means that Jesus was called “Christ,” and how this forgotten truth can restore hope and meaning to our lives. “Anyone who strives to put their faith into action will find encouragement and inspiration in the pages of this book.”—Melinda Gates In his decades as a globally recognized teacher, Richard Rohr has helped millions realize what is at stake in matters of faith and spirituality. Yet Rohr has never written on the most perennially talked about topic in Christianity: Jesus. Most know who Jesus was, but who was Christ? Is the word simply Jesus’s last name? Too often, Rohr writes, our understandings have been limited by culture, religious debate, and the human tendency to put ourselves at the center. Drawing on scripture, history, and spiritual practice, Rohr articulates a transformative view of Jesus Christ as a portrait of God’s constant, unfolding work in the world. “God loves things by becoming them,” he writes, and Jesus’s life was meant to declare that humanity has never been separate from God—except by its own negative choice. When we recover this fundamental truth, faith becomes less about proving Jesus was God, and more about learning to recognize the Creator’s presence all around us, and in everyone we meet. Thought-provoking, practical, and full of deep hope and vision, The Universal Christ is a landmark book from one of our most beloved spiritual writers, and an invitation to contemplate how God liberates and loves all that is.
Presentation A deep and luminous spirituality. Commenting on certain parables from the New Testament, Omraam Mikhaël Aïvanhov reveals and sheds light on many subjects: reincarnation and our seven bodies (“Be perfect as your Heavenly Father is perfect”), devote one's energies to a higher ideal, the necessary balance between matter and spirit (“On earth as in Heaven”), the role of the sun in our renewal, the importance of forgiveness, vigilance and psychic protection, etc. 'I know that it is not easy to conceive of God as inseparable from ourselves. But I can give you some exercises which will help. Disciples of an initiatic teaching know that within them dwells a cosmic Being of which they are only dimly aware and that they have to uproot their consciousness from the narrow confines of their own lower nature, so that it can melt into that boundless consciousness within them. This Being, this spark of divinity lives in them, and it is their task to seek until they find it.' Omraam Mikhaël Aïvanhov Table of contents 1 - ‘Our Father Which Art in Heaven' 2 - ‘My Father and I Are One' 3 - ‘Be Ye Perfect, Even as Your Father Who is in Heaven is Perfect' 4 - ‘Seek Ye First the Kingdom of God and His Justice' 5 - ‘On Earth as it is in Heaven' 6 - ‘He That Eateth My Flesh and Drinketh My Blood Hath Eternal Life' 7 - ‘Father, Forgive Them, For They Know Not What They Do' 8 - ‘Unto Him that Smiteth Thee on the One Cheek...' 9 - ‘Watch and Pray'
This book examines how Gregory of Nazianzus, a fourth-century Greek writer famed as 'the Theologian' in the Christian tradition, expressed the mystery of Christ in terms of his own life. It studies Gregory's three genres of writing (orations, poems, and letters) and shows how Gregory developed an 'autobiographical Christology'.