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Drawing Ever Closer is a daily devotional for women based on the books of Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Songs.In these devotions you will¿discover the heart of worship¿learn how to walk in wisdom¿understand your purpose in life¿explore love and passion¿gain a godly perspective on pain.Start your day in the transforming truth to be gleaned in these poetic books, and let His truth establish in you a firm foundation of worship, wisdom, purpose, passion, and a godly response to pain. "Send forth your light and your truth, let them guide me; let them bring me to your holy mountain, to the place where you dwell" (Psalm 43:3).
'The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.' 'Thy word is a lamp to my feet.' 'Search me, O God, and know my heart!' Such phrases leap to mind whenever Christians lift their hearts to God. For many, in fact, the Psalms are the richest part of the Old Testament. Derek Kidner provides a fresh and penetrating guide to Psalms 73—150. He analyzes each psalm in depth, comments on interpretative questions and brings out the universal relevance of the texts. He also gives special help on the psalmists' cries for vengeance. Together with its companion volume (Psalms 1—72), both of which were formerly part of the Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries series, this introduction and commentary will inspire and deepen personal worship.
"Tioba, and Other Tales" by Arthur Colton is a collection of 11 stories. Tioba is the first story followed by A Man For A' That, The Green Grasshopper, The Enemies, A Night's Lodging, On Edom Hill, Sons Of R. Rand, Conlon, St Catherine's, The Spiral Stone, and The Musidora Sonnet. Excerpt: "In the evening an Arcadian, an elderly man and garrulous, came up to see what it might be that glimmered among his pulp-trees. He was a surprise, and not as Arcadian as at first one might presume, for he sold milk and eggs and blueberries at a price to make one suddenly rich. His name was Fargus, and he it was whose hay-cutter clicked like a locust all day in the meadow-lands. He came and made himself amiable beside us, and confided anything we might care to know which experience had left with him. "That's Tioba," he said. "That's the name of that mountain." And he told us the story of one whom he called "Jim Hawks," and of the fall of Tioba."
This work presents an absorbing sea adventure with intriguing characters and a gripping plot. A page-turner that will keep the readers curious. Excerpt from "The Belted Seas" "Captain Thomas Buckingham was a smallish man of fifty, with a bronzed face, or you might say iron, with respect to its rusty colour, and also it was dark and immobile. But now and then there would come a glimmer and twist in his eyes, sometimes he would start in talking and flow on like a river, calm, sober, and untiring, and yet again he would be silent for hours. Some might have thought him melancholy, for his manner was of the gravest."