Work A Kingdom Perspective On Labor

Main Author: Ben Witherington
Format: Book 261.8 WIT w - 1
Terbitan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing , 2011
Subjects:
Online Access: http://perpustakaan.alkitab.or.id//index.php?p=show_detail&id=6582
http://perpustakaan.alkitab.or.id//lib/minigalnano/createthumb.php?filename=images/docs/978-0-8028-6541-0.jpeg&width=200
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fullrecord <?xml version="1.0"?> <dc schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><title>Work A Kingdom Perspective On Labor</title><creator>Ben Witherington</creator><subject>Umum</subject><publisher>Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing</publisher><date>2011</date><language>0</language><type>Book:Book</type><identifier>http://perpustakaan.alkitab.or.id//index.php?p=show_detail&amp;id=6582</identifier><identifier>9780802865410</identifier><identifier>13</identifier><description>Most Christians spend most of their waking hours working, yet many regard work as at best a necessary evil just one more unfortunate by-product of humanity s fall from grace. Not so, says Ben Witherington III, and in Work: A Kingdom Perspective on Labor, he considers work as neither the curse nor the cure of human life but, rather, as something good that God has given us to do. In this brief primer on the biblical theology and ethics of work, Witherington carefully unpacks the concept of work, considering its relationship to rest, play, worship, the normal cycle of human life, and the coming Kingdom of God. Work as calling, work as ministry, work as a way to make a living, and the notably unbiblical notion of retirement Witherington s Work engages these subjects and more, combining scholarly acumen with good humor, common sense, cultural awareness, and biblically based insights from Genesis to Revelation. Ben Witherington has given the whole people of God something desperately needed to make sense of Monday to Friday a theology of work that breaks down the heretical sacred-secular distinction. . . . Offers a work-view and life-view that, if embraced, would revitalize the mission of God s people in the world. It s that good. R. Paul Stevens author of The Other Six Days and Taking Your Soul to Work Conducting a critical dialogue with the theological voices of our day, drawing upon the wisdom of the Christian tradition, and offering a sensitive reading of New Testament parables, Witherington delivers sound counsel on the Kingdom meaning of work and its implications for our lives today. Lee Hardy author of The Fabric of This World</description><coverage>USA</coverage><identifier>http://perpustakaan.alkitab.or.id//lib/minigalnano/createthumb.php?filename=images/docs/978-0-8028-6541-0.jpeg&amp;width=200</identifier><type>Other:261.8 WIT w - 1</type><subject>261.8 WIT w</subject><image>http://perpustakaan.alkitab.or.id//lib/minigalnano/createthumb.php?filename=images/docs/978-0-8028-6541-0.jpeg&amp;width=200</image><recordID>slims-6582</recordID></dc>
format Book:Book
Book
Other:261.8 WIT w - 1
Other
author Ben Witherington
title Work A Kingdom Perspective On Labor
publisher Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
publishDate 2011
isbn 9780802865410
topic Umum
261.8 WIT w
url http://perpustakaan.alkitab.or.id//index.php?p=show_detail&id=6582
http://perpustakaan.alkitab.or.id//lib/minigalnano/createthumb.php?filename=images/docs/978-0-8028-6541-0.jpeg&width=200
contents Most Christians spend most of their waking hours working, yet many regard work as at best a necessary evil just one more unfortunate by-product of humanity s fall from grace. Not so, says Ben Witherington III, and in Work: A Kingdom Perspective on Labor, he considers work as neither the curse nor the cure of human life but, rather, as something good that God has given us to do. In this brief primer on the biblical theology and ethics of work, Witherington carefully unpacks the concept of work, considering its relationship to rest, play, worship, the normal cycle of human life, and the coming Kingdom of God. Work as calling, work as ministry, work as a way to make a living, and the notably unbiblical notion of retirement Witherington s Work engages these subjects and more, combining scholarly acumen with good humor, common sense, cultural awareness, and biblically based insights from Genesis to Revelation. Ben Witherington has given the whole people of God something desperately needed to make sense of Monday to Friday a theology of work that breaks down the heretical sacred-secular distinction. . . . Offers a work-view and life-view that, if embraced, would revitalize the mission of God s people in the world. It s that good. R. Paul Stevens author of The Other Six Days and Taking Your Soul to Work Conducting a critical dialogue with the theological voices of our day, drawing upon the wisdom of the Christian tradition, and offering a sensitive reading of New Testament parables, Witherington delivers sound counsel on the Kingdom meaning of work and its implications for our lives today. Lee Hardy author of The Fabric of This World
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