According to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948), religious conversion is a fundamental human right. Not all religious traditions accept this. Some allow conversion only to their religion but deny it to their own members. Some distinguish between voluntary conversion, which they accept, and organized proselytism, to which they object. Some accept it as a fact, which they regret, and others threaten converts with the death penalty for leaving the religion into which they were born. However, there are many kinds of conversion: philosophical, intellectual, moral, spiritual, and there are many kinds of religious conversion. The 32nd Conference of Philosophy of Religion at Claremont Graduate University in 2011 addressed this complex issue from religious, legal, philosophical and theological perspectives.
"60 years after publication, the report Towards the conversion of England continues to excite new readers.
He had certainly never heard of any such thing before , but then he had never heard of praying to God and feeling a real buzz from it before either . He decided to go with it . ' Can you do that ? ' David's faith that he should act on ...
Eugene V. Gallagher explores a series of individual cases to assess the current status of the study of conversion : Expectation and Experience : Explaining Religious Conversion ( Atlanta : Scholars Press [ Ventures in Religion 2 , ed .
The Satan-seller
The Gingerbread Man: Pat Williams--then and Now
“ Is Booker Smith a Negro ? ” “ Yeah , he thinks he's such a big man over there , even his color's changed . My momma's a beautiful black lady and my daddy's a white man . I ain't no nigger ! ” “ If your only excuse for slicing Smith is ...
Does this sound like Christianity to you? Much of Mormonism is similar to Islam. Joseph Smith compared himself to Mohammed. This is my story of how God opened my eyes to the truth of Mormonism.
Soon after its publication, the book found its way into the canon of psychology and philosophy, and has remained in print for over a century.
Thomas Chalmers was arguably the most popular Scot and influential churchman of his age.
"While the topic of conversion in Judaism has been extensively covered, no single book has explored the particular aspects of Jewish law related to life after conversion.