By Anne Thomas
Christian Post Correspondent
Thu, Jun. 26 2008 09:31 AM EDT
A new book hitting shelves this week flies in the face of gloomy predictions of church decline by setting out exactly why so many people still head to their local churches each Sunday.
What Am I Doing Here? is the latest offering from Church House, the publishing group of the Church of England. It brings together cartoonist Dave Walker and author Hilary Brand to give readers a fresh but no-nonsense explanation of the Anglican faith.
The pocket-size book uses the main weekly communion service to not only explain why people go to church but also what happens once they are there.
Spread across 72 pages, it begins by explaining the “wonder and wow factor” of worship before moving on to repentance and forgiveness, and ends with an explanation of the renewal that comes through the re-enactment of the Last Supper.
What Am I Doing Here? has already won acclaim from Ian Hislop, broadcaster and Private Eye editor. He said, “Most books nowadays explain why people don’t go to church anymore. It is good to find one that explains why people still do.”
The book’s simple approach makes it an ideal resource for newcomers to church that can be used especially in emerging church initiatives, Back to Church Sunday or other mission initiatives.
The Church of England’s Sunday services bring together around 1.7 million people each month. The Bishop of Croydon, the Rt. Rev. Nick Baines, said that the book’s down-to-earth and jargon-free style would help explain exactly what happens when they join a service.
“Written from the perspective of an ordinary ‘person in the pew,’ this book is a wonderfully direct, simple and informative guide to what goes on in church and takes us on the brief journey we make when we worship together,” he said.
“It debunks some of the myths about church – for example, that only ‘self-righteous’ people go to church,” he continued. “Church is for all people – the ragbag of saints and sinners that we are – and Hilary Brand’s simple clarity and Dave Walker’s cartoons should make it a more welcoming place particularly for those who don’t go to church, but might like to.”
The book was put together in response to recent research from Tearfund revealing that 3 million people, or 6 percent of the adult population, would come back to church if they received a personal invitation.
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1 comments:
Hmm... might be interesting to check out. I think there can be a variety of reason why people go to church. When I was a kid, my basic reasons for going to church was because my parents went every Sunday and I had some friends my age there. It wasn't until college that I had a deep, spiritual awakening, openning my heart fully to Christ, and understood the true reason for going to church.
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