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The church is in disarray. Theologians and commentators speak of the demise of evangelicalism. Are they alarmists? Is Christianity as we know it in the process of dying? Writer, scholar, teacher, and missionary Dr. David Alan Black thinks that the answer does not lie in the politics of the left or the right. In fact, he doesn't think that Jesus tells us what our politics should be. He doesn't see answers in Christian nationalism. But even further, he sees serious flaws in the very structure of our churches and denominations that prevent us from truly being obedient to the gospel. The solution…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The church is in disarray. Theologians and commentators speak of the demise of evangelicalism. Are they alarmists? Is Christianity as we know it in the process of dying? Writer, scholar, teacher, and missionary Dr. David Alan Black thinks that the answer does not lie in the politics of the left or the right. In fact, he doesn't think that Jesus tells us what our politics should be. He doesn't see answers in Christian nationalism. But even further, he sees serious flaws in the very structure of our churches and denominations that prevent us from truly being obedient to the gospel. The solution lies, not in renewal, revival, or even in reformation, but rather in restoration-a restoration of the church organized as Jesus intended it and according to the example provided by the earliest church sources in the New Testament. To make the church and its members true servants of Jesus Christ again, we need to change our entire paradigm-to The Jesus Paradigm.
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Autorenporträt
Abidan Paul Shah has his PhD in New Testament Textual Criticism and teaches New Testament and Greek at Carolina University, Winston Salem. Also, he has been serving as the senior pastor of Clearview Church in Henderson for over twenty-three years. David Alan Black has taught New Testament and Greek at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary for twenty-four years. He is the author/editor of numerous books including New Tesatment Textual Criticism, Rethinking New Testament Textual Criticism, The Pericope of the Adulteress in Contemporary Research, and Perspectives on the Ending of Mark.