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DreamSeeker Magazine Autumn 2011
Welcome to the new Autumn 2011 issue of DREAMSEEKER MAGAZINE. Edited by Michael A. King and sponsored by Cascadia Publishing House LLC, DSM links readers interested in attending to "voices from the soul" with Anabaptist-related writers committed to exploring from the heart--with passion, depth, and flair--their own visions and the issues of the day.
Category:EssaysReads:206Uploaded:11 / 08 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionDreamSeeker Magazine Spring-Summer 2011
Welcome to the new Spring-Summer 2011 issue of DREAMSEEKER MAGAZINE. Edited by Michael A. King and sponsored by Cascadia Publishing House LLC, DSM links readers interested in attending to "voices from the soul" with Anabaptist-related writers committed to exploring from the heart--with passion, depth, and flair--their own visions and the issues of the day.
Category:Magazines/NewspapersReads:309Uploaded:06 / 04 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionWinter 2011 DreamSeeker Magazine
Welcome to the new Winter 2011 issue of DREAMSEEKER MAGAZINE. Edited by Michael A. King and sponsored by Cascadia Publishing House LLC, DSM links readers interested in attending to "voices from the soul" with Anabaptist-related writers committed to exploring from the heart--with passion, depth, and flair--their own visions and the issues of the day.
Category:Magazines/NewspapersReads:495Uploaded:02 / 26 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionA Mennonite Woman: Exploring Spiritual Life and Identity eBook
In A MENNONITE WOMAN, part narrative, part theology, part spiritual memoir, Dawn Ruth Nelson asks us to wake up to what is shaping us spiritually as contemporary Christians in North American culture. Discover why Mennonites have been drinking deeply from contemplative spiritual formation wells in the last 30 years. Experience the story of twentieth-century Mennonite agrarian spirituality through the lens of one woman’s life and one seminary. "Nelson’s search leads from her grandmother’s life in Mennonite community, through peace work in Ireland and engagement with the Roman Catholic tradition, and finally to the essential inner/outer balance of the Anabaptist spiritual tradition—a response of discipleship made possible by the spiritual connection to the living vine, Jesus Christ." —C. Arnold Snyder, Professor of History, Conrad Grebel University College, Waterloo, Ontario "Although Nelson’s six suggestions for contemporary spirituality are focused on Mennonite tradition and experience, their transforming power make them applicable for anyone desiring Christian formation." —Joann Wolski Conn, Professor of Christian Spirituality, Neumann University "You can live a long time in a spiritual tradition without seeing it clearly, which makes it hard to either claim its gifts or compensate for its weaknesses. This book helps readers do both." —Rachel Miller Jacobs, Spiritual Director; Worship Resources Coordinator, Leader magazine "Rooting Mennonite spirituality within the earthy settledness of her grandmother’s story, Nelson lovingly shows the way toward a spirituality of pilgrimage, in the company of Jesus." —Sara Wenger Shenk, Presiden, Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary "Nelson’s work nudges us to look at our spiritual roots and keep finding pathways toward a renewed, contemplative, genuinely Mennonite spirituality for our day." —Marcus G. Smucker teaches at Eastern Mennonite Seminary (Lancaster Campus) and the Kairos School for Spiritual Formation
Category:Religion & SpiritualityReads:824Uploaded:12 / 19 / 2010ShareAdd to collectionAutumn 10 DreamSeeker Magazine
Welcome to the new Autumn 2010 issue of DREAMSEEKER MAGAZINE. Edited by Michael A. King and sponsored by Cascadia Publishing House LLC, DSM links readers interested in attending to "voices from the soul" with Anabaptist-related writers committed to exploring from the heart--with passion, depth, and flair--their own visions and the issues of the day.
Category:Magazines/NewspapersReads:743Uploaded:10 / 22 / 2010ShareAdd to collectionSummer 2010 DreamSeeker Magazine
Welcome to the new Summer 2010 issue of DREAMSEEKER MAGAZINE. Edited by Michael A. King and sponsored by Cascadia Publishing House LLC, DSM links readers interested in attending to "voices from the soul" with Anabaptist-related writers committed to exploring from the heart--with passion, depth, and flair--their own visions and the issues of the day
Category:Magazines/NewspapersReads:761Uploaded:07 / 05 / 2010ShareAdd to collectionSpring 2010 DreamSeeker Magazine
Welcome to the new Spring 2010 issue of DREAMSEEKER MAGAZINE. Edited by Michael A. King and sponsored by Cascadia Publishing House LLC, DSM links readers interested in attending to "voices from the soul" with Anabaptist-related writers committed to exploring from the heart--with passion, depth, and flair--their own visions and the issues of the day.
Category:Magazines/NewspapersReads:627Uploaded:04 / 22 / 2010ShareAdd to collectionFree download Winter 10 DreamSeeker Magazine
Welcome to the new Winter 2010 issue of DREAMSEEKER MAGAZINE. Edited by Michael A. King and sponsored by Cascadia Publishing House LLC, DSM links readers interested in attending to "voices from the soul" with Anabaptist-related writers committed to exploring from the heart--with passion, depth, and flair--their own visions and the issues of the day.
Category:Magazines/NewspapersReads:872Uploaded:01 / 26 / 2010ShareAdd to collectionMUTUAL TREASURE: Seeking Better Ways for Christians and Culture to Converse eBook
Rejecting both Christian withdrawal from and confrontational approaches to culture, this book calls for engaging others by coming alongside them, building relationships of trust through which to seek mutual treasure. In addition to the editors, contributors include (in order of appearance) Stephen V. Monsma, James E. Waller, Paul DeWeese, Susan Emmerich, David Thom, Jack Hafer, Marvin R. Wilson, Tammy Krause. As Nicholas Wolterstorff, Noah Porter Professor Emeritus of Philosophical Theology, Yale University, observes, "The editors do not just argue that Christians can be more effective agents of redemption by respectful dialogue than by aggressive confrontation; they present eight highly diverse and imaginative case studies in which this actually happened. It's a timely and very important contribution." Mark Noll, Francis A. McAnaney Professor of History, University of Notre Dame, believes "The book deserves careful attention-read it and think!" Rejecting both Christian withdrawal from and confrontational approaches to culture, this volume calls for engaging others by coming alongside them, building relationships of trust through which to seek mutual treasure. "We can learn much," observes Eastern Mennonite University President Loren Swartzentruber,from the book's "stories of meaningful interaction with those who hold differing points of view." Or as Jeanne Heffernan Schindler, Department of Humanities, Villanova University puts it, the "collection challenges us to think creatively about the demands of discipleship in a divided world." And Randall Balmer,Professor of American Religious History at Barnard College, Columbia University, believes "the approaches offered here are eminently worthy of emulation." Speaking in the Foreword, Richard Mouw sees things this way: "Fortunately there are several points on the engagement spectrum between military campaigns and preparation for marriage, and this excellent book of essays has located exactly the right point: friendship. To be a friend is to come alongside of the other person. It is to make room in one's own consciousness for the other person's hopes and fears. To be a friend is to be committed to an ongoing dialogue, a process of genuine listening and empathetic responding."
Category:Books - Non-fictionReads:1,666Uploaded:11 / 18 / 2009ShareAdd to collectionWHAT DOES THE BIBLE REALLY SAY ABOUT HELL? Wrestling with the Traditional View eBook DigEd
Peter J. Dyck, author of Getting Home Before Dark, believes that “Klassen is to be commended for writing this book. What he has done so well is examine carefully all significant references to hell in the Old and New Testaments and shown that none provides clear evidence of the existence of the commonly held view of hell.” Meanwhile Robert K. Johnston, Professor of Theology and Culture, Fuller Theological Seminary, says that “Readers will be encouraged to focus on the grace of Jesus Christ, a grace not complete until the last sheep is found (Matt. 18) and the lost son comes home (Luke 15).”
Category:Religion & SpiritualityReads:3,029Uploaded:10 / 22 / 2009ShareAdd to collection

