1. Solitude and silence : the journey begins -- 2. Lectio Divina : encountering scripture through sacred reading -- 3. The Jesus prayer : there is power in His name -- 4. Apophatic prayer : be still and know -- 5. The examen : God in day-to-day life -- 6. Creativity and the divine : to create is to pray -- 7. Journaling : writing what God shows us -- 8. Body prayer : the body and the spiritual life -- 9. Walking toward God : the journey made visible -- 10. Praying in nature : contemplation and creation -- 11. Prayer and life in the world : the rubber meets the road -- 12. A praying community : bringing it all together.
Lektion 1 Alphabet und Aussprache Lektion 2 Guten Tag! Lektion 3 Wie geht es dir? Lektion 4 Meine Familie Lektion 5 Meine Wohnung
Lektion 6 Wiederholungen Lektion 7 Meine Hobbys Lektion 8 Im Urlaub Lektion 9 Auf der Straße Lektion 10 Einfach oder hin und zurück?
Lektion 11 Auf dem Campus Lektion 12 Wiederholungen Lektion 13 Bei der Bank Lektion 14 Im Hotel Lektion 15 Im Museum
Lektion 16 Im Restaurant Lektion 17 Beim Arzt Lektion 18 Wiederholungen Lektion 19 Im Kaufhaus Lektion 20 Eine Geburtstagsfeier
Lektion 21 Ein Telefongespräch Lektion 22 Ich gehe oft bergsteigen Lektion 23 Regierung und Parlament der Bundesrepublik Deutschland Lektion 24 Wiederholungen
Framing : engaging the intelligence of practice --
1. Spooning : how bodies shape knowledge -- Swimming : how the practice of lectio divina heals and transforms -- Camping : practical wisdom in everyday life -- Dancing : movies and rhythms that engage local wisdom -- Rocking : practical wisdom at work in pop culture --
2. Eclipsing : the loss and recovery of practical wisdom in the modern West -- Disciplining : academic theology and practical knowledge -- Imagining : biblical imagination as a dimension of Christian practical wisdom -- Unknowing : spiritual practices and the search for a wisdom epistemology --
3. Collaborating : an invitation to experiment, an expression of thanks.
I: The world of antiquity. -- 1. The ancient family. -- 2. The ancient city. -- 3. The ancient cosmos. --
II: A moral revolution. -- 4. Theworld turned upside down: Paul. -- 5. The truth within: moral equality. -- 6. Heroism redefined. -- 7. A new form of association: monasticism. -- 8. The weakness of the will: Augustine. --
III: Towards the idea of fundamental law. -- 9. Shaping new attitudes and habits. -- 10. Distinguishing spiritual from temporal power. -- 11. Barbarian codes, roman law and christian institutions.-- 12. The Carolingian compromise. --
IV: Europe acquires its identity. -- 13. Why feudalism did not recreate ancient slavery. -- 14. Fostering the peace of God. -- 15. The papal revolution: aconstitution for Europe?. -- 16. Natural law and natural rights. --
V: A New Model of Government -- 17. Centralization and the new sense of justice. -- 18. The democratizing of reason. -- 19. Steps towards the creation ofnation-states. -- 20. Urban insurrections. --
VI. The birth pangs of modern liberty. -- 21. Popular aspirations and the friars. -- 22. The defence of egalitarian moral institutions. -- 23. God'sfreedom and human freedom joined: Ockham. -- 24. Struggling for representative government in the church. -- 25. Dispensing with the renaissance. --
Pt. 1. Beginnings AD 1-325 -- 1. Jesus: his life, ministry, death and its consequences -- 2. The church begins: from Jerusalem to Rome -- 3. Establishing Christianity: challenges to the new faith --
4. Spreading the good news: how and why Christianity expanded -- 5. Archaeology and earliest Christianity: what archaeologist can - and cannot - illuminate -- 6. What the first Christians believed: the faith is defined -- 7. How the first Christians worshipped --
pt. 2. Acceptance and Conquest: AD 325-600 -- 8. Constantine and the Christian Empire: Christianity recognized -- 9. Councils and Creeds: defining and defending the faith -- 10. Buildings and belief: early church structures -- 11. Worship and the Christian year: the making of the Christian calendar --
12. Clergy, Bishops, and Pope: the church builds an organisation -- 13. The church in North Africa: the making of a distinctive tradition -- 14. The fall of the Roman Empire: how and why it came to an end -- 15. Ascetics and monks: the rise of Christian monasticism --
pt. 3. A Christian Society: AD 600-1500 -- 16. The West in crisis -- 17. The Eastern church -- 18. Flowering: the Western church: reform and resurgence --
19. Monasticism in the West -- 20. The Orthodox church in Eastern Europe and Russia -- 21. An age of unrest: the Western church in the late middle ages --
pt. 4. Reform and renewal: 1500-1650 -- 22. Seeds of renewal: the origin of the Reformation -- 23. Reformation -- 24. A flood of bibles: scripture in the vernacular --
25. The radical reformation: the Anabaptists -- 26. The Catholic Reformation -- 27. Art and the spirit: Christianity and its cultural expression --
pt. 5. Reason, revival, and revolution 1650-1789 -- 28. Expansion worldwide: European missions -- 29. Awakening: the Evangelical revival and the great awakening -- 30. Reason and unreason: the rise of rationalism -- 31. The Russian church: 1500-1900 --
pt. 6. Cities and Empires 1789-1914 -- 32. Europe in revolt: church and state in the nineteenth century -- 33. The first industrial nation: the industrial revolution and the British churches --
34. A crusade among equals: revivalism, abolition, and evangelism in the USA -- 35. A world come of age: science and philosophy challenge Christianity -- 36. Outposts of empire: the nineteenth-century missionary explosion --
pt. 7. A Century of Conflict 1914-2001 -- 37. An age of ideology: nationalism, communism, and individualism take on Christianity -- 38. An age of anxiety: theological thinking in troubled era -- 39. Pentecostalism and the charismatic movement --
40. The arts in the Christian West -- 41. Organizing for unity -- 42. An age of liberation --
pt. 8. Epilogue: A New Millennium -- 43. Present and future: the church in an ever-changing world.
I: Getting Started on the Journey 1 Principles and Methods of Biblical Interpretation 2 A Comprehensive Doctrine of Creation and Implications for Scientific Study 3 Knowledge and Faith in Pursuing Origins Questions 4 Creation Through the Lenses of Science and Theology
II: Cosmic Origins 5 Cosmic Origins: Genesis 1:1 - 2:4 6 Electromagnetic Radiation and the Scale of the Universe 7 The Expanding Universe 8 The Big Bang Model and Contemporary Cosmology 9 Lives and Deaths of Stars and Fine-Tuning 10 Biblical and Theological Perspectives on the Origins of the Universe
III: Origin and Geologic History of Earth 11 Origin of the Earth and Solar System 12 Historical Roots of Geology: Catastrophism and Uniformitarianism 13 The Genesis Flood 14 The Rock Cycle and Timescales of Geologic Processes
15 Rocks of Ages: Measuring Geologic Time 16 Plate Tectonics: A Theory for How the Earth Works 17 Reading Earth's History in Rocks and Fossils 18 Biblical and Theological Perspectives on Earth History
IV: Origin of Life on Earth 19 From Spontaneous Generation to Abiogenesis 20 Prebiotic Chemistry: Preparing the Primordial Soup 21 Biological Information: Proteins and Nucleic Acids 22 Alternative Scenarios for Life's Origin 23 Biblical and Theological Perspectives on the Origin of Life
V: Origin of Species and Diversity of Life 24 Development of the Theory of Evolution 25 The Modern Synthesis of Evolution 26 Exploring the Evidence About Evolution: Phylogeny and Fossils 27 Development of an Extended Synthesis of Evolution 28 Biblical and Theological Perspectives on the Origin of the Diversity of Life
VI: Human Origins 29 Human Origins: Genesis 2 – 3 30 Human Origins: Evidence from Physical Anthropology 31 Human Origins: Genomic Evidence 32 Biblical and Theological Perspectives on the Image of God
VII: Concluding Postscript 33 Biblical and Theological Perspectives on New Creation, Creation Care, and Science Education