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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 253.082
EAN num: 9781581347500
ISBN number: 1581347502
Label: Crossway Books
Manufacturer: Crossway Books
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 176
Printing Date: January 17, 2006
Publishing house: Crossway Books
Sale Popularity Level: 242938
Studio: Crossway Books
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Susan Hunt and Ligon Duncan walk through the Scriptures to help readers better understand what it means to have an effective, biblical women’s ministry in the church. The benefits of women’s ministries are great: training and discipling, evangelizing, and reaching out to the poor and needy. This book, written by seasoned ministry leaders, provides many proven tools to help start a women’s ministry in your church.
“What sets this book apart is not only the authors’ careful thought but their compelling personal examples. The result is a deeply biblical yet intensely practical guide that will greatly benefit not only women, but pastors as well.”
—C. J. Mahaney, Sovereign Grace Ministries
“In this day and age, we need more courageous visionaries who seek to release women in ministry while honoring the complementarian framework of God’s Word. This is a helpful resource for all who wish to join in this pursuit.”
—Mary A. Kassian, Distinguished Professor of Women’s Studies, Southern Baptist Seminary, Louisville
“Women’s Ministry is a biblically rich reflection of the authors’ very thesis—when men and women humbly and joyfully complement each other’s God-given roles and gifts, spiritual grace flows for the nurture of His Church.”
—Peter Lillback, Senior Pastor, Proclamation Presbyterian Church; president, Westminster Theological Seminary
“Finally, Ligon Duncan and Susan Hunt have given the church a clear theological framework from which to build an effective women’s ministry.”
—Randy Stinson, Executive Director, Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood
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Rated by buyers
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Duncan and Hunt do an excellent job of remaining faithful to the text and bringing out practical helps. If you are a pastor who wants good ideas grounded in the Scriptures on how women's ministries ought to run, this is the right book for you. Every piece of advice is based on the authors' love for God's Word and their desire to see the Body of Christ built up. Excellent resource for pastors and anyone interested in women's ministries in the church.
Rated by buyers
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My husband brought this home from the Shepherd's Conference for me - and it is SO good! It's written from a very Biblical perspective, and has a big focus on submission and discipleship. There is so much in here: older ladies discipling younger ladies, godliness, submission, compassion, serving others, and Biblical womanhood. It's loaded with Scripture throughout. You don't have to be involved in leadership of a women's group for this to be relevant. I wholeheartedly recommend it for all women - and for their pastors!
Rated by buyers
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Women's Ministry in the Local Church, authored by J. Ligon Duncan and Susan Hunt, is a practical book that seeks to provide guidance on how and why a church can and should have an effective women's ministry. It is a timely book, arriving at a point when the church is in need of this type of biblical guidance. The role of women in the church has been an area of great dispute of late, though thankfully, it seems that Scripture will prevail. However many evangelical women, and even those who may appear to be mature Christians, are functional feminists because, as the authors point out, "the world's paradigm for womanhood is the only one they have heard." The church has much ground to make up.
Within this book Duncan and Hunt construct a framework of theology through which a local church will be able to implement a ministry that honors God's plan and purpose for the church. Rather than moving against or beside the church, the ministry will become one with the church, supporting and complementing other ministries while encouraging and edifying women. According to the authors, the purpose of this book is to strengthen Christ's church by presenting a practical theology of women's ministry in the local church. The book answers five questions that are fundamental to a successful, biblical ministry for and by women:
* Why should a church have a women's ministry - what is the biblical apologetic?
* Who is responsible for the women's ministry in a church?
* How does a women's ministry relate to the other ministries in a church?
* What are the tasks of a women's ministry?
* How does a church implement a biblical approach to women's ministry?
The book presents a covenantal and complementarian approach to womanhood and to women's ministry in the church. "There is nothing more beautiful, satisfying, delightful, and God-glorifying than when men and women live and work together in complementarity." Duncan provides five things he feels that each church needs to do in connection with a practical embrace of biblical womanhood:
* We need to cultivate godly, feminine, Christian women.
* We need to promote healthy Christian marriages.
* We need to promote godly, monogamous, heterosexual marriages.
* We need to cultivate among our Christian women a joyous embrace of godly, healthy, Christian, male spiritual leadership in the church.
* We need to help Christian women appreciate the manifold areas of service that are open to them in the church and to equip them distinctively as women to fulfill their ministry.
In discussing these areas of service Hunt points out that the primary question should not be what is permissible but what is needful for women to do. And that is the focus of the book: What can women do to fulfill their unique calling and to serve the Lord with their giftedness? The heart of the book is an examination of five reasons why women's ministry is important to every healthy evangelical church. These reasons are:
* Submission: Through it we have the opportunity to address helpfully the issue of the nature of manhood and womanhood, an issue that is very much at the heart of the cultural transition that we find ourselves in right now.
* Compassion: The Bible teaches so much and so clearly on manhood and womanhood. A church that wants to be biblical will want to make sure the women of the congregation embrace and implement this teaching.
* Community: When biblical manhood and womanhood are denied or altered or unpracticed, that results in disasters for marriages, families, and churches. Women's ministry provides a safe and secure environment where these issues can be addressed.
* Discipleship: We ought to have an intentional, deliberate approach to female (and male) discipleship because men and women are different, and these differences need to be recognized, taken into account, and addressed in the course of Christian discipleship.
* Scripture: The denial or twisting of the Bible's clear teaching on manhood and womanhood is one of the central ways that biblical authority is being undermined in our times. Women's ministry provides a forum to understand issues of biblical authority.
While this is not a book I would be likely to buy of my own accord, I am grateful that it was supplied to me and I was surprised to find how much I enjoyed it. On the Reformation21 Blog Philip Ryken recently endorsed the book by saying, "I am not aware of any other resource that so effectively gives a biblical rationale for women's ministry without distorting the overall shape of the local church -- putting women's ministry in its proper context." I agree with that statement and, like Dr. Ryken, and glad to recommend this book to pastors, elders or anyone who might be involved in women's ministry.
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