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God is Not Black-and-White

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There are many differing theological perspectives in the church today. The church is often too quick to tell people they are wrong theologically--rather than pursuing a conversation that allows the body of Christ to wrestle with various theological assumptions. In God is Not Black and White, Robert Snitko seeks to disrupt the disunity within a diverse church. In a very theological yet practical way, this book roots itself in the Apostle''s Creed as the foundation for Christianity, noting that Christians as a whole ought to agree on the gospel of Christ, the Trinity, and the incarnation as primary doctrines. When it comes to secondary doctrinal issues, church history proves that individuals have come to various theological conclusions. Perhaps one''s theological interpretation comes from presuppositions such as upbringing, cultural context, life circumstances, or even experience. Whatever the case may be, we need to put an end to division in the church--as we seek unity within a theologically diverse church. This book urges Christians to have a theological conversation that pursues unity--as we seek to love one another in the gospel through restoration, healing, and reconciliation.""Robert Snitko offers us a wonderful pastoral call for unity, understanding, and the witness to reconciliation promised in Jesus Christ. With a sharp mind and a pastor''s heart Snitko draws us all back to the Apostle''s Creed and the centrality of Christ for a unity that can actually witness to the depths of God''s love in our pluralistic age. This book is timely, engaging, and insightful.""--Andrew Root, Professor of Youth and Family Ministry, Luther Seminary""Snitko makes a sincere and wise presentation, encapsulating theology as ''beautiful mystery.'' The awareness of those theological positions that are primary, and those that are secondary, is a helpful designation. He provides guidelines for determining both, arising from his burden for unity in the Church of Jesus Christ in truth and love.""--Bruce Fields, Professor of Faith and Culture, Trinity International University""Robert Snitko carefully identifies a number of important issues--''secondary doctrines''--about which Christians can reasonably disagree and debate. But he truly does us a favor by providing wise counsel, born of his personal journey, as to how to do so with love by listening to one another and truly growing together. To practice his advice is to practice real tolerance within the body of Christ, permitting variations that do not impinge upon the heart of the gospel without ignoring genuine differences.""--Sanjay Merchant, Associate Professor of Theology, Moody Bible InstituteRobert Snitko serves as one of the pastors at The Branch Community Church in Chicago, IL. He earned his MA in Theology from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and his BA in Biblical Studies from Moody Bible Institute. He actively speaks at camps, cohosts of the Soma Podcast, and is the author of Lessons Learned from Jonah. Robert and his wife, Maggie, live on the northwest side of Chicago.

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  • Sprog:
  • Engelsk
  • ISBN:
  • 9781532639074
  • Indbinding:
  • Paperback
  • Sideantal:
  • 90
  • Udgivet:
  • 25. december 2017
  • Størrelse:
  • 137x213x5 mm.
  • Vægt:
  • 249 g.
  • BLACK NOVEMBER
Leveringstid: 2-3 uger
Forventet levering: 7. december 2024

Beskrivelse af God is Not Black-and-White

There are many differing theological perspectives in the church today. The church is often too quick to tell people they are wrong theologically--rather than pursuing a conversation that allows the body of Christ to wrestle with various theological assumptions. In God is Not Black and White, Robert Snitko seeks to disrupt the disunity within a diverse church. In a very theological yet practical way, this book roots itself in the Apostle''s Creed as the foundation for Christianity, noting that Christians as a whole ought to agree on the gospel of Christ, the Trinity, and the incarnation as primary doctrines. When it comes to secondary doctrinal issues, church history proves that individuals have come to various theological conclusions. Perhaps one''s theological interpretation comes from presuppositions such as upbringing, cultural context, life circumstances, or even experience. Whatever the case may be, we need to put an end to division in the church--as we seek unity within a theologically diverse church. This book urges Christians to have a theological conversation that pursues unity--as we seek to love one another in the gospel through restoration, healing, and reconciliation.""Robert Snitko offers us a wonderful pastoral call for unity, understanding, and the witness to reconciliation promised in Jesus Christ. With a sharp mind and a pastor''s heart Snitko draws us all back to the Apostle''s Creed and the centrality of Christ for a unity that can actually witness to the depths of God''s love in our pluralistic age. This book is timely, engaging, and insightful.""--Andrew Root, Professor of Youth and Family Ministry, Luther Seminary""Snitko makes a sincere and wise presentation, encapsulating theology as ''beautiful mystery.'' The awareness of those theological positions that are primary, and those that are secondary, is a helpful designation. He provides guidelines for determining both, arising from his burden for unity in the Church of Jesus Christ in truth and love.""--Bruce Fields, Professor of Faith and Culture, Trinity International University""Robert Snitko carefully identifies a number of important issues--''secondary doctrines''--about which Christians can reasonably disagree and debate. But he truly does us a favor by providing wise counsel, born of his personal journey, as to how to do so with love by listening to one another and truly growing together. To practice his advice is to practice real tolerance within the body of Christ, permitting variations that do not impinge upon the heart of the gospel without ignoring genuine differences.""--Sanjay Merchant, Associate Professor of Theology, Moody Bible InstituteRobert Snitko serves as one of the pastors at The Branch Community Church in Chicago, IL. He earned his MA in Theology from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and his BA in Biblical Studies from Moody Bible Institute. He actively speaks at camps, cohosts of the Soma Podcast, and is the author of Lessons Learned from Jonah. Robert and his wife, Maggie, live on the northwest side of Chicago.

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