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  • The Song in the Night

    The Song in the Night

    Can you imagine what it might have been like for the ancients to hear and perform their Scripture in song?

    The Song in the Night is a groundbreaking exploration of the musicality embedded in the Hebrew Bible. ​ Utilizing the deciphering key inferred by Suzanne Haïk‐Vantoura, MacDonald reveals the ancient melodies hidden within the text, offering a fresh perspective on these sacred writings. ​ This meticulously researched work, supported by advanced computer software, brings to life the beauty and depth of the Scriptures through music.

    Perfect for theologians, musicians, and anyone interested in the intersection of faith and art, this book invites readers to experience the Bible as a carefully constructed and beautiful song.

  • The Space Between

    The Space Between

    Should your faith and your spirituality be a matter of simply private concern, or should they connect to social action?

    This book explores the disconnect between social and religious progressivism. The author maintains that both social and religious notes are essential for those who want to further a progressive agenda that creates equity and compassion, restores the dignity of all people, and ensures the full participation of all in common life, common wealth, and the common good.

    The Space Between builds bridges across the space between these elements, both between social and religious belief, but also between contemplative action and active contemplation. This book is an vigorous and unashamed call for social action, but specifically a social action that grows from contemplation, but also for the balance and strength that comes from resting and waiting.

    Learn more on the author’s web site, Spiritual Activism Life.

  • The Spirit’s Fruit

    The Spirit’s Fruit

    “When I was a boy, I had a really wicked temper. It was short and it was brutal. I would get in fights every recess.”

    With that personal beginning, Dr David Moffett-Moore escorts each student into their own personal study of The Spirit’s Fruit: A Participatory Study Guide. We are called together as Christians to a fruit-filled life. While God blesses us with one or more gifts as He wills, none of us receive all the gifts. But all of us are encouraged to live a Christ-led life in which all the fruit of the Spirit may grow in abundance.

    Dr. Moffett-Moore gives us wonderful tools for discussion and prayer to break up any hard ground and pour Christ’s Living Water into our spirits so the study itself aids more fruitful growth.

    The Participatory Study Series from Energion Publications is designed to invite Bible students to become a part of the community of faith that produced the texts we now have as scripture by studying them empathetically and with an aim to learn and grow spiritually. Each author is free to emphasize different resources in the study, and individual students, group leaders, and teachers are encouraged to enhance their study through the use of additional resources.

  • The Third Way

    The Third Way

    It’s difficult to be a pilgrim in a consumer world. A pilgrim is someone who looks more toward the destination than his present place. A consumer sets up shop as he secures more to consume, and invests his time, resources, and energy into guaranteeing there will always be more to consume. In Luke 17:33 Jesus says, “If you cling to your life, you will lose it, and if you let your life go, you will save it.”

    Finding our pilgrim path is the focus of this book to prepare the reader for the mission team they have chosen to be a part of. Come along with Pastor Chris

  • The Traveler’s Advance

    The Traveler’s Advance

    Joshua Hawkins is twenty-five years old, a young vice-president for his father’s clothing company, Avarice, and has been given every opportunity to live the American Dream. Joshua Hawkins is twenty-five years old…twenty-five years old, and dead. But Joshua is soon finding out that being dead may be just the thing he needs in order to truly live. Following in the same vein of “The Pilgrim’s Progress” by John Bunyan, the reader is invited to journey with Joshua from death to life. To abandon the burden upon their back, and release the chains that bind. The path will not be easy, but it must be traveled. For at the path’s end, lies eternal life.

  • The Triune Nature of God

    The Triune Nature of God

    Pastor/Theologian Robert Cornwall brings his knowledge of church history to help the reader grasp the complex topic of the Trinity. Arguably the concept of “trinity” is the linchpin to many other doctrines. Using the history of his own Disciples of Christ tradition as one of the expressions of the Stone-Campbell movement, which avoids creeds very effectively in examining how we distinguish between the statements and events of scripture and our theological reflections on them.

    The Triune Nature of God is Volume 37 in Energion’s Topical Line Drives series. TLD booklets are designed to demonstrate a point of scholarship directly and quickly. They are theological and biblical. An efficient way to learn the basics of a topic and how you can keep going and dig deeper.

  • The Unbroken Road

    The Unbroken Road

    “I turned the corner. The aisle stretched before me as the music escalated. My white slippers brushed over the red roses.My heart thumped. I had waited so long for this moment. Had I really made it this far? Hundreds of eyes twinkled their approval.But did they really think I was crazy? I could almost hear the question I had been asked before, ‘Do you think it will be worth the wait?’ Here I was at this pinnacle moment. My first kiss.” These are the lessons of a young woman’s life. It may seem an unusual narrative as she saved her heart for love and grew up knowing that being “different” was a gift. From her childhood years in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina to the stark poverty and tremendous courage and faith of the Ethiopians, this is a riveting and inspiring story of God’s sovereignty and faithfulness.

  • The Vicar of Tent Town

    The Vicar of Tent Town

    What would you think if your pastor spent the night in tent town?

    Pastor Shauna Hyde brings her experience in, not only ministering to the homeless, but becoming such a welcome part of their world, that she is known as “The Vicar of Tent Town.”

    I struggle to be accepting and understanding when organizations refuse to work together because an issue is more important than people. I become angry, distressed, and depressed when churches cannot put differences aside in order to transform the loves of those who are desperate to feel the touch of God. I can say that I have had upscale dinners with the wealthy and split a sandwich under a bridge with the not so wealthy. I can say I have had lunch with movie stars and I have rocked a homeless man to sleep. I have been at both ends of the spectrum and have seen the beauty that makes up humanity. Just when I think I am done and cannot love anymore because I am tired of the games people play and the silly things they get upset about, someone will show me the beauty of their souls – the place where God is and I know I can still love and show grace. — Shauna Hyde

  • They Will Run and Not Grow Weary

    They Will Run and Not Grow Weary

    Are you a runner? Do you want to be? Are you running the race toward God’s high calling for you? This is the book for you.

    There are plenty of devotional books available these days. No matter what your activity, there’s a devotional book for that. Many of these books are sweet, some are helpful, and some are fun, but few are both uplifting and challenging at the same time.

    David Alan Black is a biblical scholar and serious theological thinker who also runs — on his own, 5k, half marathons, marathons, and ultramarathons. In this book he connects running with one’s spiritual journey. In these 52 devotionals, you’ll find some of that strength for your journey, drawn from scripture and the experience of running, as well as the broader experience of life as a teacher, missionary, and family man.

    Whether you are just looking out your front door and thinking, “I should get more exercise” or are an experienced runner, this book will help you reach your next goal.

  • Those Footnotes in Your New Testament

    Those Footnotes in Your New Testament

    Have you ever seen a passage in the New Testament that was placed in brackets, or a footnote at the bottom of a page referring to “ancient authorities” or “manuscripts”?

    Most people scratch their heads and just keep reading, but these notes are very important. So is understanding why they’re even there.

    In this short introduction, Thomas W. Hudgins explains for the average reader the need for, criteria of, and some misconceptions associated with New Testament textual criticism.

  • Thrive

    Thrive

    Are there any solutions to dying churches?

    Many historic Protestant churches lost their way when the ground beneath their feet began to shift in the last part of the 20th century. Back then, congregations became confused about why so many Americans had become indifferent toward church-going. They became anxious about their shrinking numbers and aging membership. How would they survive? They could not see the way forward.

    But now, a few ordinary congregations are finding their way into the future by cultivating certain spiritual habits which transform them so that they, in turn, can transform the world.

    Dr. Ruth A. Fletcher shares her pastoral experience, judicatory work,consulting ministry, and personal research in which she has discerned some spiritual practices that characterize congregations that are thriving.

    This is an excellent read whether you are a pastor, church leader or concerned member of a fellowship groaning in the labor of reaching out to the “disenfranchised others.”

    Thrive is the third volume in the Academy of Parish Clergy’s Guides to Practical Ministry series.

  • Tithing After the Cross

    Tithing After the Cross

    Some in the church find it very difficult to talk about money, but it’s a subject that cannot be avoided.

    The church needs money to continue to function. Missionaries need money to carry the gospel. As a result, however reluctant we are to talk about it, we have to do so. And when we do so, we often generate more confusion and resentment than cash.

    Some churches require that members be tithers before they can take positions of leadership. This in turn can result in a sort of spying by one believer on another. How much do we each earn? Is our giving equal to 10% of our income?

    On the other hand there are those who discount tithing, and consider themselves tithers because they give two or three percent of their income. They may say that they “tithe” 3% of their income.

    But what exactly does the Bible teach about tithing and how does that apply to us today? Is there a way for us to become grace-filled givers? Can stewardship, giving, and financing the work of building the kingdom become a joy rather than a duty or a source of dissension?

    David Croteau has written at length on this topic before. In this volume of the Areopagus Critical Christian Issues series, he undertakes a brief examination of tithing, stewardship, and giving. He starts by asking just what the Israelites were called on to give by the scriptures. He then follows through the various arguments in favor of tithing as a law applicable to Christians and shows how these arguments fail. Finally, he discusses a basis for gracious, joyful giving as God directs each of us.

    In just 96 pages (including all the front matter) you’ll find your understanding of Christian stewardship changed. You won’t find here a license for apathy or selfishness. Instead, you’ll find a challenge to discover and do God’s will in your finances as in every other area of your life.

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