ARTICLE What Does a Healthy Church Look Like? (Part 1) Finally, a complete guide to the vibrant, dynamic, empowered, totally awesome, and really, robust church. Tracy Keenan, Ralph W. Neighbour, Jr., Steve Sjogren, Erwin McManus, Lee Eclov
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Your doctor says you're healthy, no signs of disease; blood pressure and
weight are within normal limits.
The fitness instructor says you're in terrible shape, resting pulse and body-fat
percentage are way above normal; flexibility is poor, and you just flunked
the treadmill test.
If both can be right, what does it mean to be healthy? And following the
same analogy, what does it mean for a church ...
ARTICLE Community from Scratch How one pastor is building Christian community where it doesn't come easy. An interview with Eugene Rivers
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In the shadow of inner-city crack houses, Eugene Rivers preaches a
radical gospel.
It's the same message he preaches to Boston politicians, gangs, and the
Christian Coalition: love, radical love.
Educated on the streets and at Harvard, Rivers's journey from gang member
to minister began when he was confronted with his own mortality while listening
to Billy Graham on the radio. Rivers, 49, now pastors ...
ARTICLE Unity in Diversity Welcome people of different family structures, economic conditions, ages, races, educations, and religious backgrounds. from BuildingChurchLeaders.com
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Click an image or title below to order any of these recommended resources.
Building Unity in the Church of the New Millenniumby Dwight Perry, editor
This collection of articles helps ministry leaders promote unity among those of different races, classes, and genders within the church. The message: to love as Christ commanded, the church must learn to incorporate, reach out to, and become unified with ...
POWERPOINT Unity in Diversity Over a dozen handouts for your church leaders to help attain unity among the many different people in your congregation. by BuildingChurchLeaders.com
When A Woman Finds Her Voice Women give up something central to their message by imitating men. by Carolyn Custis James
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I can't recall an election year that has generated more interest and excitement than the one held in November 2008. One of the "moments" that captured a lot of attention (as well as considerable flack) was when Hillary Clinton, campaigning in New Hampshire, dropped her professionalism and her stump speech to speak simply and transparently from her heart.