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Glimpses of Canaan Land is a compilation of different topics that should be of great interest to Christians and non-Christians alike. With heartfelt passion, spiritual understanding and a well-grounded knowledge of Scripture, the author offers these writings to those who want to know more about the fundamentals. Composed in an easy to read style, yet with depth and unique biblical discernment, Glimpses of Canaan Land would be a marvelous devotional tool or compelling Bible study for individual or group study. Subject matter has a wide range. A few of the chapter topics are: Heavenly Scenes; The Approaching Voyage; Kadesh-Barnea; James the Just; The Land Called Moriah; Age of Laodicea; and the awe-inspiring Trilogy of Love. You will want to return often to Glimpses of Canaan Land for a new and refreshing infusion of biblical inspiration. Remember, as Christians, each of us should be on a personal quest to learn more about Gods Holy Word.
A prize-winning historian traces the life and accomplishments of the 19th-century activist for women's rights and free speech, featuring coverage of her arrests for promoting progressive views about sexuality and her role as a case subject by an early Freudian scholar.
It has been my high privilege to have some practical experience as the earthly wife of an angel from the unseen world. In the interests of psychical research, I have tried to explore this pathway of communication with the spiritual universe, and, so far as lay in my power, to make a sort of rough guidebook of the route. For not all wives of heavenly bridegrooms travel the same path at first. There are roads running into this one from every religion and folklore under the sun, since the pathway of marital relations on the Borderland was once, and still is, as I hope to show, one of the main thoroughfares connecting our world with the world beyond the grave.
Cotton, crucial to the economy of the American South, has also played a vital role in the making of the Mexican north. The Lower Río Bravo (Rio Grande) Valley irrigation zone on the border with Texas in northern Tamaulipas, Mexico, was the centerpiece of the Cárdenas government’s effort to make cotton the basis of the national economy. This irrigation district, built and settled by Mexican Americans repatriated from Texas, was a central feature of Mexico’s effort to control and use the waters of the international river for irrigated agriculture. Drawing on previously unexplored archival sources, Casey Walsh discusses the relations among various groups comprising the “social field” of cotton production in the borderlands. By describing the complex relationships among these groups, Walsh contributes to a clearer understanding of capitalism and the state, of transnational economic forces, of agricultural and water issues in the U.S.-Mexican borderlands, and of the environmental impacts of economic development. Building the Borderlands crosses a number of disciplinary, thematic, and regional frontiers, integrating perspectives and literature from the United States and Mexico, from anthropology and history, and from political, economic, and cultural studies. Walsh’s important transnational study will enjoy a wide audience among scholars of Latin American and Western U.S. history, the borderlands, and environmental and agricultural history, as well as anthropologists and others interested in the environment and water rights.