The Episcopalians have used the so - odd - volume
Prayer Book Studies series as a means of informing clergy and laypeople as to the reasons for changes and of instructing them on how to make the most effective use of the revised liturgies.
Not exact matches
God is famous in the family dinners and protest marches, in the re-reading of a favourite
book to small children and in Wednesday night Bible
studies open to the public, in the
prayers of the unknown and the faith of the uncelebrated.
Do a personal or group
study around Forgive Us: Confessions of a Compromised Faith by Soong - Chan Rah, Mae Elise Cannon, Lisa Sharon Harper, and Troy Jackson This powerful
book provides historical information, reflection, and
prayers around Christian complicity in sins against God's creation, indigenous people, African Americans and people of color, women, the LGBTQ community, immigrants, Jews and Muslims.
The scholar metaphor is useful for worship and Bible
study, but
books like Andrew Murray's With Christ in the School of
Prayer don't have much to say about faithfulness in the workplace.
After all the evangfundibapticostal exhortations,
studies,
books and retreats on
prayer, it wasn't until I began learning to sit in silence that healing, peace and hope began to return.
I have
studied many religions, read numerous
books attended many services to learn, but I have always been a Catholic... and this person is not of religion that I know of, he attended the muslims day of
prayer and not any other..
Several years back I did a
study on that
book and discovered that his
prayer contains is more about himself than anything else.
A fitting conclusion for a
study of the Sermon on the Mount is a
prayer from the
Book of Common Order:
Huffington Post: Shakespeare and the
Book of Common
Prayer One of the last mysteries left in the
study of Shakespeare's plays is the biggest of them all: How do they achieve their particular magic?
I tried confession, more Bible
study, longer
prayer times, accountability partners, Christian
books and online filtering programs.
When the Azusa Street Mission (generally considered the cradle of modern Pentecostalism)[1] was born in Los Angeles, a Methodist congregation in Valparaiso had already taken its first steps toward Pentecostalism by holding
prayer groups and
studying the
book of Acts.
«Christian living» has long been the catchall category for
books about
prayer, faith, spirituality, and Bible
study.
She is currently finishing a second
book, written with co-author W. David Todd of the Smithsonian Institution: a
study of a Renaissance automaton in the Smithsonian collection and the legend behind it, entitled «A Machine, a Ghost, and a
Prayer: The Story of a Sixteenth - Century Mechanical Monk.»