Morling Press: 5 books

Cover of Congregational Transformation in Australian Baptist Church Life: New Wineskins Volume 1
by
Language: English
Release Date: April 24, 2015

This first volume of the New Wineskins series introduces the very best of current research and reflection on congregational transformation among Australian Baptists. This volume's authors share the conviction that Baptist congregations must find new ways of engaging with the increasingly secular context...
Cover of On the Way to Faith

On the Way to Faith

Personal Encounters with Jesus in John's Gospel

by Ken Manley
Language: English
Release Date: April 27, 2015

The personal encounters between Jesus and various individuals as recorded in John's Gospel have long fascinated and inspired readers. The Evangelist tells how Jesus met with different types of people including his mother, a religious leader, a marginalised and unhappy woman, a condemned woman, a blind...
Cover of Reimagining Home

Reimagining Home

Understanding, reconciling and engaging with God's stories together

by
Language: English
Release Date: March 31, 2019

The 5th Conference of the Australian Association for Mission Studies, Whitley College, Melbourne, 2–5 July 2017 This book is the creatively titled, collective output of the international mission scholars and mission practitioners who gathered at Whitley College, Melbourne, for the 5th Conference...
Cover of Who Do I Think I Am?

Who Do I Think I Am?

Exploring personal identity and what it means to be "in Christ"

by David Claydon
Language: English
Release Date: April 28, 2015

Am I important ? How do I know who I am? Does my view of myself impact my spiritual health? Does it affect my relationship with my Creator? Does it determine how others relate to me? Will it determine how I live?
Cover of Church.History@WhyBother?
by Peter Elliott
Language: English
Release Date: December 14, 2015

“What’s the point of studying Church History?” “How can things that happened so long ago be relevant to life today?” The book you’re holding tackles these and other similar questions, demonstrating that the past perpetually informs the present. Written as an email dialogue between a Church...
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