The first systematic look at associate pastors including their demographics, background in ministry, where they serve, their experiences in ministry, and how they compare to solo pastors and heads of staff.
Use this resource to minister to youth and young people in the wake of a recent school shooting tragedy.
Tributes, Districts, Reapings and Mockingjays … The Hunger Games trilogy is ready to commence in your youth room!
Join the millions of readers, young and not so young, in entering this fantastic and powerful story of a post-apocolyptic world dependent on its young to survive.
You are invited to use this free resource, developed by two Presbyterian youth workers, to explore themes of courage, friendship and alliance!
Financial Summary from the 2011 Pentecost Offering.
Learn about the practice of fasting in the Bible and the Reformed tradition.
See related pages: Ash Wednesday, Season of Lent, Presbyterian Worship
See locations where your One Great Hour of Sharing and designated gifts were at work in 2011.
"Worshiping the Triune God" is a 2010 document of the World Communion of Reformed Churches that seeks to identify central things and primary principles for worship. The document is composed as a series of beatitudes or wisdom sayings, with succinct and evocative statements on worship from an international and ecumencially Reformed perspective. This would be a good resource for sessions and worship committees to study and discuss. Related sites: Presbyterian Worship, Resources and Publications.
Visit the 22oth General Assembly (2012) Web site.
The final 2010 membership figures for each presbytery, and (in the right hand column) the number of commissioners the presbytery is entitled to elect in accordance with the formula in G-3.0501.
This Common Agreement on the Mutual Recognition of Baptism is a landmark statement arising from the 2003-2007 Catholic-Reformed Dialogue in the United States. This summary document includes the text of the Common Agreement (eight points) and a set of eleven pastoral recommendations toward tangible expressions of mutual recognition of Baptism. Related sites: Baptism, Sacraments, Invitation to Christ, Presbyterian Worship.
There is a distinctive, fourfold pattern of action that can be seen each time Jesus shares a meal with his disciples: taking, blessing (or giving thanks), breaking, and giving. This study guide demonstrates that pattern, seeking to deepen and enrich our understanding of the sacrament of the Lord's Supper.