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You’ll be surprised to know this: A solid 20% of adult Americans deal with some type of mental illness. Depression, anxiety, stress, obsessive-compulsive disorder, phobias, mood disorders and a lot more. Having bad physical health is a prominent reason why people suffer from mental illness. Health is a state of complete harmony of the body, mind and spirit. The question that arises here is “how to maintain a perfect physical health to avoid mental illness?” “Buck-Naked & Blessed” (Lower Body); Instructional Coaching on How To Workout While Working In provides a practical answer to this question. The book has two main parts; Buck-Naked contains physical health tips coupled with private youtube tutorial links, workout charts and guide fitness levels to get your body in ideal shape, and the Blessed part takes a deeper dive into mental health support and services required for healing and rejuvenation of mind. Bonus? You can track your progress with Q&A and workbook entries on the go! Backed with renowned fitness expert Coach Ekong’s tremendous knowledge and 15+ years of experience in training and physical health, this book has a proven plan to get your mental and physical health in order in the shortest possible time, so you too can stay Buck-Naked and Blessed! Limited time offer: Buy a paperback from Coach Ekong’s website https://LIFECHANGINC.COM and get a Kindle Ebook copy for free!
Of the worlds major religions, only Christianity holds to a doctrine of original sin. Ideas are powerful, and they shape who we are and who we become. The fact that many Christians believe there is something in human nature that is, and will always be, contrary to God, is not just a problem but a tragedy. So why do the doctrines assumptions of human nature so infiltrate our pulpits, sermons, and theological bookshelves? How is it so misconstrued in times of grief, pastoral care, and personal shame? How did we fall so far from Gods original blessing in the garden to this pervasive belief in humanitys innate inability to do good? In this book, Danielle Shroyer takes readers through an overview of the historical development of the doctrine, pointing out important missteps and overcalculations, and providing alternative ways to approach often-used Scriptures. Throughout, she brings the primary claims of original sin to their untenable (and unbiblical) conclusions. In Original Blessing, she shows not only how we got this doctrine wrong, but how we can put sin back in its rightful place: in a broader context of redemption and the blessing of humanitys creation in the image of God.
The next entry in the Minute Meditations series comes The Beauty of God's Blessings. Following in the success of Bedside Blessings, this latest title is a beautiful gift book compiling 365 short excerpts from W Publishing, Thomas Nelson, and J. Countryman female authors such as Catherine Marshall,Elisabeth Elliot, Leslie Williams, and Harriet Crosby. Each reading is accompanied with Scripture. It follows in succession with the look, format, cover design and styling of Bedside Blessings but with full-color interior.
When youth minister Jehovah Jireh married his wife in 1993, he could not foresee the troubles and heartache that were to manifest. In Out of a Storm Comes a Blessing, he shares his story as a man of God tormented by a deceitful wife. Through his testimony, he tells how he discovered he had wed a woman with a jezebel spirit who joined an occult group that practiced sorcery and witchcraft. The story narrates how God shows up, defeats Satan in his schemes to overthrow a warrior for Jesus Christ, and teaches the devil a lesson on touching one of his anointed. Out of a Storm Comes a Blessing chronicles how Jireh’s ex-wife tried all she could to disgrace him and ruin is character, but he never gave up on God or ministry. He chronicles how the trials and tribulations only allowed him to grow stronger in the Lord and in the power of his might, turning a curse into a blessing.
YOU can never speak of the VICTORY unless you have experienced what it takes to get there! When I first started writing this book, I wanted to expose and hurt the people who inflicted pain and sufferring on my once-young and innocent life. I wanted everyone to know the ugliness I had endured through being molested and raped, which pushed me to nearly throw my life away on a Suicide Monday. One GLORIOUS day, Gods grace found me! Its a journey and remarkable transformation from being bound by so much negativity and rage to someone now at liberty through the Word of God! God empowered my life to be blessed so that I can speak on what it is to Be a Blessing!
Thomas and Betty Jones grew up in the coal mining camps of southwest Virginia, a dusty, barren place where people had to work hard just to survive. Both their fathers were coal miners, as were many of the early African-American men who came to Wise County from the deep south beginning in the early 1920s. After their marriage they left the area, but fate soon brought them back. A series of difficult, but well thought out decisions led Betty to work underground in the mines for nearly 20 years and Thomas to give up a promising broadcasting career to be a full-time father. They also decided to raise their seven children in the same place they were raised, but in a very specific way. The result was all seven going off to college and their two boys, Thomas Quinn and Julius, becoming running backs in the National Football League. Blessings From the Dust is the story of two determined parents and their struggle to raise their children successfully in the barren and deprived coal mining region of southwest Virginia. It is a saga of family, place, hard work, sacrifice, determination, education and ultimately love. When Thomas and Betty Jones made a conscious decision to raise their growing family in the coal-mining towns of Big Stone Gap and Appalachia they knew they'd have their work cut out for them. That's because their goal was to have all seven children go to college and then make their marks away from Wise County. How they did it and the sacrifices they made - such as Betty working underground in the coal mines for nearly 20 years - is detailed with honesty and candor. Although this is a memoir of one African-American family, it is really an American success story, as well.
WHAT A LONG, STRANGE JOURNEY IT’S BEEN… “Just think. A boy from the weakest class, with no special abilities at all, defeating the Demon King. Doesn’t that sound way cooler?!” One mountain of manatite, one trigger-happy wizard, and one party of lovable lunatics make quick work of the barrier around the Demon King’s fortress. But just as they ready themselves to storm the castle proper, they run into Aqua—the person they were trying to rescue in the first place. Yet with their happy ending already in hand, Kazuma says the unthinkable: “How much do you think the bounty is on the Demon King?” And so, our gutless NEET finds himself on a collision course with the biggest baddie of all! Kazuma, Aqua, Megumin, and Darkness are going to need help from some very familiar faces to bring this world-renowned isekai comedy to a satisfying conclusion!
Returning Home Aint Easy But it Sure Is A Blessing is a very moving and penetrating work that every African whether he or she intends on repatriating to Africa or not, should read. It is an invaluable guide to all Africans who are desperately trying to make their way back home. To re-locate is not a simple matter. It requires a determination to succeed, a firm faith in God the Almighty and patience to learn and re-learn. The power of this book prepares a plan for those wanting to return home to re-acquaint themselves with the land of their Afrikan ancestors. This book shows wisdom, extreme sensibility, and sense of humor necessary to help one to re-settle and make their home in Ghana or anywhere in Africa for that matter. The discourse also includes Ghanaian law as it relates to the subject of Dual Citizenship and The Right of Abode for Afrikans born in the Diaspora. This book can help those who may choose to walk the path of Return, but should also be read by those who do not intend to re-locate as it is a book, which imparts valuable information about a country in Africa, one of the countries that many African-Americans repatriate toGhana. Her straightforward choice of words makes for an admirable, enjoyable, serious and commendable read.
This National Book Critics Circle Award is “an entrancing attempt to catch what falls between: the irreducibly personal, messy, even embarrassing ways reading and living bleed into each other, which neither literary criticism nor autobiography ever quite acknowledges" (The New York Times). “Stories, both my own and those I’ve taken to heart, make up whoever it is that I’ve become,” Peter Orner writes in this collection of essays about reading, writing, and living. Orner reads and writes everywhere he finds himself: a hospital cafeteria, a coffee shop in Albania, or a crowded bus in Haiti. The result is a book of unlearned meditations that stumbles into memoir. Among the many writers Orner addresses are Isaac Babel and Zora Neale Hurston, both of whom told their truths and were silenced; Franz Kafka, who professed loneliness but craved connection; Robert Walser, who spent the last twenty-three years of his life in a Swiss insane asylum, working at being crazy; and Juan Rulfo, who practiced the difficult art of silence. Virginia Woolf, Eudora Welty, Yasunari Kawabata, Saul Bellow, Mavis Gallant, John Edgar Wideman, William Trevor, and Václav Havel make appearances, as well as the poet Herbert Morris--about whom almost nothing is known. An elegy for an eccentric late father, and the end of a marriage, Am I Alone Here? is also a celebration of the possibility of renewal. At once personal and panoramic, this book will inspire readers to return to the essential stories of their own lives.