In May 2006 Dave Andrews taught a day-long seminar at Carey Baptist College - this DVD contains the 4 sessions from that seminar.
If you have a heart for the community in which you live but you are not sure where to get started, this DVD is for you. If you long to find ways to love the people who live on the margins of your society, this DVD is for you. Designed to be used alongside Dave Andrews' book of the same title (Piquant Editions, 2006), this is a resource for both personal and small group use. Not only does it provide the reasons why compassionate community work needs to be a priority, it gives practical guidance on how to make it happen.
The 4 sessions on this DVD:
Session 1: The Characteristics Of Christlike Community Work – How we can work with the disadvantaged the way Christ did… (42 minutes)
Session 2: The Trinity As A Divine Model For Human Community – How we can embody heaven on earth in our own backyard… (47 minutes)
Session 3: The Trinity As A Method For Community Development – How we can flesh out the love of God in three dimensions... (45 minutes)
Session 4: The Trinity As A Matrix For Organisational Transformation – How we can turn our churches upside down and inside out… (52 minutes)
Dave and Ange Andrews have worked in communities with marginalised groups of people in Australia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Nepal for more than thirty years.
Currently they belong to the Waiters' Union, an inner-city Christian community network in Brisbane that supports Aborigines, refugees and people with disabilities.
Dave is the Author of:
'Can You Hear the Heartbeat' (Hodder & Stoughton 1989),
'Building a Better World' (Albatross, 1986),
'Christi-Anarchy' (Lion, 2001),
'Not Religion, But Love' (Lion, 2001/Pilgrim Press, 2003/Tafina, 2005),
'Compassionate Community Work: An Introduction Course for Christians' (Piquant Editions, 2006).
Find out more about Dave Andrews at www.daveandrews.com.au
Video Preview
Price: $30.00 +P&P (GST included)
<< careymedia (DVD resources) index < Church Then and Now | After One Eight - Mission Then and Now >