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If you struggle in your faith walk or lack victory over sinful habits, Discovering Gods Truth will bring personal revival to you. It will wet your appetite to taste and see that the Lord is good. That God understands us and wants to bring us into a closer relationship with Him is a theme that comes like crashing waves upon the shore of the readers mind. You will learn how the enemy has deceived mankind and how to overcome temptation. The messages are written as poetry in a style that is easy to read, but the depth of commitment to Gods will is apparent from the first poem to the last. Whether you are still on the sidelines of believing or you are a mature believer, this book will grip your mind and heart to put God first in your life. For a fire of love and passion for God burns in these messages that will warm the coldest heart. Fellowship with all three persons of the Godhead will deepen as you read the book. The reader will learn the importance of prayer, meditating on Gods Word and how to walk by faith and deny the flesh. Putting on the mind of Christ and being empowered by the Spirit are truths taught in these messages. Readers will gain wisdom and strength to live victoriously in the midst of trials, praising and thanking God because of His presence in their lives.
It took me several days of wondering absent-mindedly, with the paper before me blank while my pen urged me to put down the very first sentence on my view about my very first adventure. It is truly my first adventure. It does not matter how far I had gone in the past churning out one manuscript after another. It does not matter any longer the dire experience having to sit all alone with over twenty years of scribbling on both rough and clean sheet of papers. I had to put down what had come into my head that is dying to be tabled down. There was an inexplicable inner joy and contentment for me in writing, even if it were rubbish. This first adventure, as I am about to christen it, is by all means not my first manuscript. It has, however, come to take the honor of the first book based on several circumstances that had befallen me. This book has become the first experience the same way a junior sibling in a family may get married and bear offspring before the senior ones. A breakthrough could be essentially a subjective experience. This experience has called for celebration on my part to see this first book out. It is not a matter of how well it does in the market, but what holds me honour is that it came out at all. Over the years, anyone who had been so close to me had always wondered what sort of person I am. They cannot explain what I am doing sitting down alone, staying away from friendship, both male and female, just to write. I have reasoned along with them as well to such an extent that I cannot still say this is the sort of person I am. I ask myself whether writing makes any sense at all, but the devotion is indisputable. This is based mostly on my propensity to sit down alone and write. Just write. I often wonder myself why I write. I kept piling up papers that I have written poetry and prose over the years that during my university years, without any seriousness with my geology, I kept writing. I did it to the detriment of my degree course. And also back in my secondary school days that I believed I would have come out with better grades if I had at no time given any chance to writing. The only time when the writing suffered a setback in the sense that the dedication to it ebbed slightly was when I started work as a junior manager in the corporate world. Even at that the spirit had been established in the previous ten years before my corporate career commenced. Writing nevertheless hanged on to me like a bone accidentally swallowed during a meal. The dream to be an author did not start just one day. I had become acquainted with virtually every literary author ever known, and there was hardly an author that is not my role model. This is evident in that I cannot point to any one author in the sphere of literature as the single most important inspiration. Hence, I had to wander into the field of science, classical music and popular music, traditional life and philosophy to find heroes and heroines. The determination to be an author made me encounter setbacks in terms of financial consideration, but I never let it deter me. I laugh saying deter me because it had come to be part of me in such a way that I knew deep inside that it would just happen no matter the age I get to. I became certain of this when I read articles about men and women who became authors at the ripe old age of seventy. Seventy years old is not a ripe old age when we consider the theme of the last poem in this collection titled 'Baby'. The other major challenge I had which could have turned me back from being an author was someone who I had hoped would assist me. We attended the same secondary school. He was one who had had certain pretense to writing and who after several years of leaving the tertiary institution had ventured unsuccessfully into the printing and publishing line to which he had been accustomed to stark mediocrity. Continued in book . . .
Reprint of the original, first published in 1859. The publishing house Anatiposi publishes historical books as reprints. Due to their age, these books may have missing pages or inferior quality. Our aim is to preserve these books and make them available to the public so that they do not get lost.
This small collection of poems, the first by author Rachel Starr Thomson, celebrates the Christian hope and experience of redemption and new creation-even in the midst of a fallen world. Built around a long poem entitled "Kyrie," each piece is a celebration of God's mercy and our redemption in Christ.
In her first-ever collection of essays, poet and novelist Lorna Goodison interweaves the personal and political to explore themes that have occupied her working life: her love of poetry and the arts, colonialism and its legacy, racism and social justice, authenticity, and the enduring power of friendship. Taking her title from one of Kingston's oldest markets, a historic meeting place that was almost destroyed by fire, she introduces us to a vivid cast of characters and remembers moments of epiphany—in a cinema in Jamaica, at New York's Bottom Line club, and as she searched for a black hairdresser in Paris and drank tea in London's Marylebone High Street. Enlightening and entertaining, these essays explore not only daily challenges but also the compassion that enables us to rise above them. Goodison's poet's eye, profound vision and glorious combination of metaphysical and post-colonial sensibilities confirm her as a major figure in world literature.