Christian Books
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Serving God Globally: Finding Your Place in International Development
KSh 1,500.00 Add to cart -
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A sequel to Gunton’s bestselling book of Sermons, Theology through Preaching, this book consists of twenty sermons from the later years of Colin’s life. The sermons demonstrate how Colin Gunton communicated his theology to a parish audience and how academic theology can inform preaching practice. The book is introduced by an account of Gunton’s life within Brentwood URC church, where he served as associate minister for over twenty-five years. This account offers a more rounded piciture of the man to those of his readers who knew only the academic side of his work. Two interpretative essays explore how Gunton understood the life of the church and the ministry of preaching, the place of an academic theologian within that, and how the work of preaching affected the development of Gunton’s theology. Gunton placed significant value on the preaching ministry, of the connection he saw between that ministry and the work of theology, and of his own conviction that preaching was a necessary task. This book explores through essay and example how these intellectual convictions were worked out in his own life.
KSh 1,450.00 Add to cart - Compare
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Science & Its Limits: The Natural Sciences in Christian Perspective (Contours of Christian Philosophy)
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ncountering the History of Mission: From the Early Church to Today (Encountering Mission)
KSh 1,800.00 Add to cart - Compare
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Interpreting the Pauline Epistles: 5 (Guides to New Testament exegesis)
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Signposts to God: How Modern Physics and Astronomy Point the Way to Belief
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During the last three decades, reflections on the growth of scientific knowledge have inspired historians, sociologists, and some philosophers to contend that scientific objectivity is a myth. In this book, Kitcher attempts to resurrect the notions of objectivity and progress in science by identifying both the limitations of idealized treatments of growth of knowledge and the overreactions to philosophical idealizations. Recognizing that science is done not by logically omniscient subjects working in isolation, but by people with a variety of personal and social interests, who cooperate and compete with one another, he argues that, nonetheless, we may conceive the growth of science as a process in which both our vision of nature and our ways of learning more about nature improve. Offering a detailed picture of the advancement of science, he sets a new agenda for the philosophy of science and for other “science studies” disciplines.
KSh 1,900.00 Add to cart












