SHOPPING HOME
      >  The Books Store   >  Religion & Spirituality   >  Religious Studies   >  Theology   >  Liberation Theology   <<<   YOU ARE HERE

Shopper's Delight

The Books Store
A Peculiar People: The Church As Culture In A Post-Christian Society


Image: Shopper's Delight: Liberation Theology in The Books Store ~ A Peculiar People: The Church As Culture In A Post-Christian Society
 
 

A Peculiar People: The Church As Culture in a Post-Christian Society

 
 
Average Rating:    out of 8 Reviews
Price: $17.00
Sale: $7.30
 
Manufacturer: InterVarsity Press
EAN (European Article Number): 9780830819904
Number of Items: 1
 
 
Binding: Paperback
Author: Rodney Clapp
Publisher: InterVarsity Press
Dewey Decimal Number: 262
Publication Date: 1996-11
Reading Level: 251
 
 
Description: Voted one of Christianity Today's 1997 Books of the Year!Christians feel increasingly useless, argues Rodney Clapp, not because we have nothing to offer a post-Christian society, but because we are trying to serve as "sponsoring chaplains" to a civilization that no longer sees Christianity as necessary to its existence. In our individualistic, technologically oriented, consumer-based culture, Christianity has become largely irrelevant.The solution is not to sentimentally capitulate to the way things are. Nor is it to retrench in an effort to regain power and influence as the sponsor of Western civilization. What is needed is for Christians to reclaim our heritage as a peculiar people, as unapologetic followers of the Way. Within the larger pluralistic world, we need to become a sanctified, subversive culture that develops Christian community as a truly alternative way of life. Christians must learn to live the story and not just to restate it.Writing inclusively with considerable verve, Clapp offers a keen analysis of the church and its ministry as we face a new millennium.
 
order Shopper's Delight: Liberation Theology in The Books Store ~ A Peculiar People: The Church As Culture In A Post-Christian Society
 
 
 
 

Customer Reviews
 
Worst Reviews Latest Reviews Best Reviews
 
Review Summary: This book will push you to think outside the box Date: 2001-03-26
 
Details: Rodney Clapp's book totally transformed my view of the nature and purpose of the church. Instead of viewing the church as a collection of individuals with a particular philosophy, ideology, or political agenda; Clapp identifies the church as a community that composes a new culture. This culture, he says, should be in the business of transforming society and individuals through what he calls "sanctified subversion". That is, instead of withdrawing from the mainstream culture into our own Christian ghetto (the all too prevalent fortress mentality found among most politically and theologically conservative Christians), he says that the church must seek to interact with and redeem the things of secular society by modeling a new kind of community. However, this transformation should be about developing the church into a genuine culture and subtly reaching out to the culture around it rather than about the church dominating secular society through round after round of political power plays in the so-called "culture wars." The issue is not "taking back America" but taking back the church, allowing it to genuinely be the church as distinct, but not isolated from the broader culture.

Clapp presents an odd but appealing mixture of Reformed, Anabaptist, and postmodern perspectives. He crosses boundaries of liberal and conservative, traditional and postmodern, historic and contemporary. If you like closed, neatly defined categories of what is acceptable for the church you won't like this book. But if you want a book that presents and radical (but historic) vision of what the church should be then I highly recommend this book.

 
Review Summary: This book will push you to think outside the box Date: 2001-03-26
 
Details: Rodney Clapp's book totally transformed my view of the nature and purpose of the church. Instead of viewing the church as a collection of individuals with a particular philosophy, ideology, or political agenda; Clapp identifies the church as a community that composes a new culture. This culture, he says, should be in the business of transforming society and individuals through what he calls "sanctified subversion". That is, instead of withdrawing from the mainstream culture into our own Christian ghetto (the all too prevalent fortress mentality found among most politically and theologically conservative Christians), he says that the church must seek to interact with and redeem the things of secular society by modeling a new kind of community. However, this transformation should be about developing the church into a genuine culture and subtly reaching out to the culture around it rather than about the church dominating secular society through round after round of political power plays in the so-called "culture wars." The issue is not "taking back America" but taking back the church, allowing it to genuinely be the church as distinct, but not isolated from the broader culture.

Clapp presents an odd but appealing mixture of Reformed, Anabaptist, and postmodern perspectives. He crosses boundaries of liberal and conservative, traditional and postmodern, historic and contemporary. If you like closed, neatly defined categories of what is acceptable for the church you won't like this book. But if you want a book that presents and radical (but historic) vision of what the church should be then I highly recommend this book.

 
Review Summary: Dynamic Holiness in a Postmodern World Date: 2000-06-12
 
Details: This is an excellent book for those who want to be challenged out of today's complacent Christianity. Clapp provides a clear vision of how the church can be dynamic and authentic in a postmodern society. He calls the church to an awareness of the syncretism that exists in our own time, and renews the vision of an authentic church that is its own distinct culture.
 
Previous Reviews
 

Similar Products
 
  Resident Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony
 
  The Politics of Jesus
 
  The Challenge of Jesus: Rediscovering Who Jesus Was and Is
 
  Drama of Scripture, The: Finding Our Place in the Biblical Story
 
  The Next Christendom: The Coming of Global Christianity
 

This Product is similar to and may be found in the Following Categories:
 
 

General AAS Qualifying Textbooks Custom Stores
Specialty Stores Books General
Christian Living Christianity Religion & Spirituality
Subjects Books General AAS
Christian Living Christianity Religion & Spirituality
Subjects Books General
Church History Christianity Religion & Spirituality
Subjects Books General AAS
Church History Christianity Religion & Spirituality
Subjects Books General
Theology Reference Christianity
Religion & Spirituality Subjects Books
Ecclesiology Theology Christianity
Religion & Spirituality Subjects Books
General AAS Christianity Religion & Spirituality
Subjects Books Social Theology
Theology Religious Studies Religion & Spirituality
Subjects Books General
Theology Religious Studies Religion & Spirituality
Subjects Books General AAS
Theology Religious Studies Religion & Spirituality
Subjects Books General
Religion & Spirituality Subjects Books
General AAS Religion & Spirituality Subjects
Books Paperback Mass Market
Trade Binding (binding) Refinements
Books Printed Books Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements Books