FINDING FAITH, LOSING FAITH: STORIES OF CONVERSION AND APOSTASY by Scot McKnight and Hauna Ondrey�SOCIETY WITHOUT GOD: WHAT THE LEAST RELIGIOUS NATIONS CAN TELL US ABOUT CONTENTMENT by Phil Zuckerman

2009 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 408-410
Author(s):  
RYAN T. CRAGUN
Keyword(s):  
2008 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 193-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birgit Hertzberg Kaare

Abstract What are the actual inner processes taking place when youth shape and share stories about their lives through digital storytelling? In the present study, we follow an experiment in religious education in a local congregation outside Oslo. In the autumn of 2005, the Church of Norway initiated a project wherein young people raised questions of faith and life in short biographical mini-films called ‘Digital Faith Stories’. As the title suggests, digital tools are central to the project. We focus on the youth participants, analysing their role as media producers and following the construction of their stories. The adult leaders of the project are also given some attention. The analysis shows that the method of ‘Digital Storytelling’ might lead to a more systematic educational method for including the lifeworld of the young in religious training. The research has been carried out in cooperation with Prof. Knut Lundby.


Author(s):  
Leonid Kishkovsky

A brief description of the 20th century ecumenical journey and the Global Christian Forum (GCF) provides the setting for some specific reflections from the US context and the Orthodox perspective. A development similar to the GCF has led to the formation of Christian Churches Together in the USA which is more inclusive of the five Christian families in the USA (Afro-American, Catholic, Evangelical and Pentecostal, Orthodox, Protestant) than the National Council of Churches. The experience of CCT has shown that the GCF meets an urgent need of our time: enabling all Christian churches to encounter one another in Jesus Christ through the sharing of faith stories. The Orthodox faith story is about the presence of the Kingdom among us, the eschatological character of life, the source of which is the Eucharist, and the joy of seeing the Risen Christ in the neighbor.


Books Ireland ◽  
2001 ◽  
pp. 66
Author(s):  
Brian Power ◽  
Vivienne Belton ◽  
Edward Daly ◽  
J. Anthony Gaughan ◽  
Sean O'Conaill
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Lily Mendoza

Undoing all forms of domination – including, in particular, religious domination – remains a crucial imperative of our time, given that domination constitutes a spirit-killing dynamic that distorts, oppresses and throws living beings (both human and non-human alike) out of synch with themselves. One form of domination in colonial contexts is the totalising claim to a monopoly of ‘the’ truth that effectively delegitimises and demonises all other ways of seeing the world. This essay grapples with the question: What happens when the ‘One True Story’ encounters other faith stories? Riffing off my (coedited) anthology, Back from the Crocodile’s Belly: Philippine Babaylan Studies and the Struggle for Indigenous Memory (dedicated to the memory of the Filipino indigenous women and men healers impaled on stakes by early Spanish missionaries and left on river banks for crocodiles to feast on), I narrate my personal journey growing up as a Filipina Methodist pastor’s kid, becoming a born-again believer and an aspiring Christian missionary trained by Philippine Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship and the Navigators, and belatedly coming to grips with my relationship to my country’s colonial history and its consequences for me and my people’s struggle for wholeness and authenticity. What happens when my wholly formed Christian subjectivity becomes challenged by the resurrecting call of spirit to indigenous and earth well-being? Informed by a multilayered cultural memory, I trace my faith learnings from an encounter with deep ancestry in the ‘belly of the beast’ and its larger significance for today’s social movement struggles for sustainability and global coexistence.


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