Kirjojen hintavertailu. Mukana 12 595 353 kirjaa ja 12 kauppaa.

Kirjailija

Jennifer M. Buck

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 5 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 2016-2025, suosituimpien joukossa Reframing the House. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

Mukana myös kirjoitusasut: Jennifer M Buck

5 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 2016-2025.

Quaker Theology

Quaker Theology

Jennifer M. Buck

BLOOMSBURY PUBLISHING PLC
2025
sidottu
In this essential overview of practical Quaker theology, Buck takes everyday issues in the Christian life and examines the particulars of how Quakers address those issues today. In doing so, this work extends the Quaker voice into the 21st century, converging Quaker tradition within our modern cultural context.Buck artfully integrates old ideas from Christian history into new movements of the Holy Spirit. In doing so, she examines the daily lives of Spirit-led Quakers, from eating habits to scriptural approaches, in order to evaluate effectively what it means to be an Evangelical Friend today.
Quaker Theology

Quaker Theology

Jennifer M. Buck

BLOOMSBURY PUBLISHING PLC
2025
nidottu
In this essential overview of practical Quaker theology, Buck takes everyday issues in the Christian life and examines the particulars of how Quakers address those issues today. In doing so, this work extends the Quaker voice into the 21st century, converging Quaker tradition within our modern cultural context.Buck artfully integrates old ideas from Christian history into new movements of the Holy Spirit. In doing so, she examines the daily lives of Spirit-led Quakers, from eating habits to scriptural approaches, in order to evaluate effectively what it means to be an Evangelical Friend today.
Quakers, Social Work, and Justice Concerns: Quakers and the Disciplines: Volume 7
In this volume of the Friends Association for Higher Education's series on Friends and the academic disciplines, ten authors apply theory and history of Quaker work for social change in offering insight into how Friends have approached social work. This collection of essays is divided into three sections. The first considers theory of social work and change. Christy Randazzo applies the work of John Paul Lederach to a theological understanding of Quaker testimony and social action. Daniel Rhodes shares about his application of Quaker principles in his educational work with social work students. Douglas Bennett describes the history and development of Quaker organizations in addressing social issues. A second section looks at individual Quakers' lives and their work. Paul Anderson examines the life of prison reformer Elizabeth Fry, Mark Bredin discusses progressive reformer Lucretia Mott, and Wendy Grab considers the Quaker influences on social work pioneer Jane Addams. The third section considers collective work of Friends in addressing social issues. Nelson Bingham explores the creation of the first mental hospital, the York Retreat, begun by Friends in England. Max L. Carter describes the work of Friends among Midwestern Indians in the early 1800s. Linda B. Selleck draws from her book Gentle Invaders to share the history of Quaker women's educational work among African Americans before and after the Civil War. Jennifer Buck details Quaker involvement in the women's Suffrage movement. About the Editors: Max L. Carter taught in Friends secondary schools in Ramallah and Philadelphia and at Earlham College and Guilford College, retiring in 2015 from Guilford as the William R. Rogers Director of Friends Center and Quaker Studies. Jennifer M. Buck is an Assistant Professor of Practical Theology at Azusa Pacific University. She holds a PhD in Philosophy of Religion and Theology from Claremont Graduate University and an MDiv from Fuller Theology Seminary. Daniel Rhodes is currently the undergraduate director of the Social Work program at UNC-Greensboro. Daniel received his PhD in Educational Leadership with a graduate certificate in Women and Gender Studies from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 2008. Erin Johnson, MSW is currently BSW Director of Field Education, Assistant Professor of Social Work at George Fox University. Contributors: Christy RandazzoDoug BennettDaniel Rhodes (editor)Paul Anderson (series editor)Mark BredinWendy GrabNelson BinghamMax L. Carter (editor)Linda B. SelleckJennifer M. Buck (editor)
Reframing the House

Reframing the House

Jennifer M Buck

Pickwick Publications
2016
sidottu
Reframing the House continues the conversation of global theology as the future of the church. Jennifer Buck tells how women's voices from Africa, Asia, and Latin America serve as a critique of Evangelical theology of the church in the West. Three voices are highlights here from the Majority world: Mercy Oduyoye, a Ghanaian feminist theologian as representative of Africa; Kwok Pui-lan, a Chinese feminist theologian as representative of Asia; and Maria Pilar Aquino, a Mexican feminist theologian representative of the Americas. Working with these women along with Quaker, political, and feminist voices, this work presents a constructive global ecclesiology, exploring areas such as salvation, sin, peacemaking, and more. LONG ENDORSEMENTS INCLUDED HERE ""This is a fantastic book. Jen Buck offers a wonderfully original work simultaneously critiquing outmoded models of the church while offering fresh and invigorating options built from the multitude of voices scattered across the earth. She helps us understand some of the most complex features of contemporary and feminist theology without sacrificing a robust commitment and confidence in the person and work of Christ. This is sure to become a leading voice in the field."" --Gayle D. Beebe, President, Westmont College ""Dr. Buck provides a needed resource for Evangelicals today who search to expand theological and ecclesial frames that may no longer hold increasingly diverse questions concerning faith and life. Buck's search for truth leads her to reap the wisdom of other theological voices and methods, ones that are sorely needed for contemporary Evangelicalism and the church. This is one of those works that challenges Evangelicalism out of an ecclesiological and theological past and into a bolder future."" --Mark Chung Hearn, Director of Contextual Education and Assistant Clinical Professor of Contextual Education and Ministry, Seattle University School of Theology and Ministry ""Jennifer Buck's Reframing the House gives a voice to Majority World women who have not been heard much in Western discussions about the nature of the church. And Buck uses their voice to propose a constructive global ecclesiology that has implications for the way we think about sin, salvation, and the existence of the church as an alternative society to the sexism, racism, ethnocentrism, individualism, and all the other -isms that even infect the contemporary church. She does this with graciousness and humility, yet conviction. There is no generic Christianity; the noun always requires an adjective--something we in the West often overlook. That is why Buck's book is needed: it participates in the answer to the Apostle Paul's prayer in Ephesians that we might come to know the dimensions of Christ's love 'with all the saints.'"" --Dennis Okholm, Azusa Pacific University ""This book should be celebrated for its deep feminist, ecumenical, and global commitments. Buck mines the richness of the work of three trailblazing feminists from the Third World--Mercy Oduyoye, Kwok Pui-Lan, and Maria Pilar Aquino--to show how and why the Western evangelical 'house' needs to be 'reframed.' Readers will find their theological horizons broadened, their appreciation of world Christianity deepened, and their understanding of the important contributions that feminism provides enhanced."" --Grace Yia-Hei Kao, Author; Associate Professor of Ethics, Claremont School of Theology; Codirector of the Center for Sexuality, Gender, and Religion Jennifer Buck holds a PhD in Philosophy of Religion and Theology from Claremont Graduate University and an MDiv from Fuller Theological Seminary. She teaches theology, biblical studies, and practical theology at Azusa Pacific University and Hope International University, as well as serving in preaching and teaching roles at her church.