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Can you find what's hidden? Explore new worlds as you search for people, animals, and objects on each page! Search for a winged lion in Venice, a surfer in Sydney, a samba parade in Rio de Janeiro, a historic emperor in Beijing, a famous park in Nairobi, and much more! Learn how a king of Jaipur built giant tools to study the stars, and what's buried beneath the streets of Paris. Check out ballet in Moscow and sports in Dubai! Each page of this Seek and Find book is a window into the history and cultures of the world we share! Every page is packed with things to discover and colorful characters to spot, making the book fun to revisit again and again. Colorful images bring facts and history to life. Things to find are presented visually on each spread, so kids not yet reading can search, too. Great for parents and young children to share together, and for older kids to try on their own. Hardcover. Full color throughout. 32 pages. 9-3/4 inches wide by 12 inches high. Ages 3 to 9.
Look for Freddie and his friends, surrounded by a variety of zany people and objects, in many interesting settings. Each scene includes a list of objects and characters to find.
The ESV Seek and Find Bible is the ideal first "real" Bible for pre-readers and young readers, ages 5 to 9, to grow up with.
This book has eyes—and an irresistible cover! Kids will delight in this innovative seek-and-find picture book that may be read from front to back and from back to front! Two adorable characters embark on an over-the-top game of hide-and-seek through eleven richly detailed scenes, including a lively neighborhood, a bustling shop, an offbeat office space, a festive concert, and more. Open the book from the front to search for one of the characters. Then, open the book from the back to search for the other. It's two hide-and-seek experiences in one book. As the characters move through each illustrated spread, their colors change, too, adding to the abundant fun.
We know that God has a purpose for each of us. However, knowing exactly what He wants us to do can oftentimes be unclear. In Seek, Find, Pursue, well examine the lives of people whose stories are recorded in the book of Acts. Just like us, these people struggled to know and live for Gods purpose, and their stories will help us discover how we can: • Seek Gods calling • Find what He wants us to do • Pursue His calling for us Well gain a clearer understanding of Gods will for our lives and His purpose for each of us individually. And by knowing and following Gods calling, well experience the confidence, peace, and fulfillment that He desires for every one of us.
This collection of poems, written by a veteran psychologist, contemplates the works of nature and touches on many human experiences and concerns. It is one man's reflection on the world around him, on unseen worlds, and the people he loves. With a playful and sometimes practical approach, the author addresses universal life themes, ranging from a child's leaving home to facing death. His relaxed and informal style appeals to a wide audience of readers, including those who do not usually enjoy reading poetry.
This is the second of three volumes in Oliver O’Donovan’s masterful “Ethics as Theology” project. In his first volume -- Self, World, and Time -- O’Donovan discusses Christian ethics as an intellectual discipline in relation to the humanities, especially philosophy, theology, and behavioral studies, and in relation to the Christian gospel. In Finding and Seeking O’Donovan traces the logic of moral thought from self-awareness to decision through the virtues of faith, hope, and love. Blending biblical, historico-theological, and contemporary ideas in its comprehensive survey, this second volume continues O’Donovan’s splendid study in ethics as theology and adds significantly to his previous theoretical reflection on Christian ethics.
As bearers of the divine image, all of us are storytellers and artists. However, few people today believe in truth that is not empirically knowable or verifiable, the sort of truth often trafficked through direct forms of communication. Drawing on the works of Soren Kierkegaard, Benson P. Fraser challenges this penchant for direct forms of knowledge by introducing the indirect approach, which he argues conveys more than mere knowledge, but the capability to live out what one takes to be true. Dr. Fraser suggests that stories aimed at the heart are powerful instruments for personal and social change because they are not focused directly on the individual listener; rather, they give the individual room or distance to reconsider old meanings or ways of understanding. Indirect communication fosters human transformation by awaking an individual to attend to images or words that carry deep symbolic force and that modify or replace one's present ways of knowing, and ultimately make one capable of embodying what he or she believes. Through an examination of the indirect approach in Kierkegaard, Jesus, C. S. Lewis, and Flannery O'Connor, Fraser makes a strong case for the recovery of indirect strategies for communicating truth in our time.
That there are four canonical versions of the one gospel story is often seen as a problem for Christian faith: where gospels multiply, so too do apparent contradictions that may seem to undermine their truth claims. In Gospel Writing Francis Watson argues that differences and tensions between canonical gospels represent opportunities for theological reflection, not problems for apologetics. Watson presents the formation of the fourfold gospel as the defining moment in the reception of early gospel literature -- and also of Jesus himself as the subject matter of that literature. As the canonical division sets four gospel texts alongside one another, the canon also creates a new, complex, textual entity more than the sum of its parts. A canonical gospel can no longer be regarded as a definitive, self-sufficient account of its subject matter. It must play its part within an intricate fourfold polyphony, and its meaning and significance are thereby transformed. In elaborating these claims, Watson proposes nothing less than a new paradigm for gospel studies — one that engages fully with the available noncanonical material so as to illuminate the historical and theological significance of the canonical.
Have you ever wondered where God was when things seem to be going wrong in your life? Maybe you have even asked why. In A Father's Love, author James Sienkiewicz takes you on a journey seeking the answers to those questions as the storms of life hit.