|
Worship in an Age of Anxiety
Paperback
|
The history of the theology of worship is riddled with examples of clergy and worship leaders who have sought to manipulate their parishioners' anxiety in order to spur repentance and turn people toward God. Even if such ends may be desirable—at what cost?
In Worship in an Age of Anxiety, Jordan challenges this utilitarian approach, offering a critical assessment of contemporary as well as historical evangelical figures such as D. L. Moody and Billy Graham whohave deployed anxiety as a tool for conversion.
Proposing a completely different model, Jordan takes up various elements of worship, including:
In doing so, he develops a practical theology of worship that also turns people toward God but within a healing framework.
While worship alone cannot heal anxiety, it can be a time and place where, rather than being manipulated, anxiety can beacknowledged, accepted, and offered to God.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Anxiety Today
2. Anxiety, Repentance, Relief, Repeat: Explicit Messages About Anxiety in Evangelical Worship
3. Implicit Practical Theologies of Anxiety in Evangelical Worship Today
4. A HealingApproach to Liturgical Time: Years, Weeks, and Days
5. A Healing Approach to Liturgical Space: Room to Flourish in a Technological Age
6. A Healing Approach to Church Music: Evaluating the Script We've Inherited
7. A Healing Approach to Preaching: Faithful to Text, Self, and Listener
8. A Healing Approach to the Sacraments: More Than Words, More Than Me
Conclusion
General Index
Scripture Index