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Sit back and buckle up for the roller-coaster ride Pastor Rachelle Jones takes you on of her life growing up as the middle daughter of pastors in the heart of Cleveland, OH, during the eighties in this telling personal memoir, Who is Going to Protect Me? . . . The Preacher's Kid. Your emotions are certain to run the gamut as she shares intimate details about the effects of feeling ostracized, bullied, and the pain of heartbreak. She reveals the struggle to overcome these obstacles and more, as she matured into womanhood. She comes to learn that even though life does not always unfold as expected, God and His perfect plan are at work for a greater purpose even when it does not feel as if He is near. With a vulnerable honesty, Pastor Jones's story is encouraging, proving that the hardest tragedies can be overcome and God' glory can be revealed despite any present misfortune. This intimate autobiographical account is positive proof that it is possible to overcome the harshest calamities, experience divine emotional healing, and see God's plan advance, giving us a heart to help others in need of the same.
Follow God's process for growth and learn how you can benefit from life's challenging experiences with this book by bestselling inspirational author T.D. Jakes. In this insightful book, #1 New York Times bestselling author T.D. Jakes wrestles with the age-old questions: Why do the righteous suffer? Where is God in all the injustice? In his most personal offering yet, Bishop Jakes tells crushing stories from his own journey-the painful experience of learning his young teenage daughter was pregnant, the agony of watching his mother succumb to Alzheimer's, and the shock and helplessness he felt when his son had a heart attack. Bishop Jakes wants to encourage you that God uses difficult, crushing experiences to prepare you for unexpected blessings. If you are faithful through suffering, you will be surprised by God's joy, comforted by His peace, and fulfilled with His purpose. Crushing will inspire you to have hope, even in your most difficult moments. If you trust in God and lean on Him during setbacks, He will lead you through.
Advice on how to care for pastors' kids and allow them to find their own faith and identity. Pastors' kids are often burdened by others' expectations, but there is a wonderful solution, both at home and in the church: grace. In this revised, refreshed version of Barnabas Piper's best-known book, the author candidly shares his own experiences as son of pastor and bestselling author John Piper, offering a challenge to our churches and to the families at their very heart: how to care for pastors' kids and allow them to find their own faith and identity. Foreword by John Piper.
Cliffe Knechtle offers clear, reasoned and compassionate responses to the tough questions skeptics ask.
In the early eighties fed up with ten years of infidelity from an abusive husband, Cece and her five children left Arkansas running for their lives. They would soon find that the fast-paced California life of drugs, gangs, ghetto living, and prison would be equally as painful as what they left behind. Her story is one of survival, choices and consequences, and finally finding redemption after years of making the wrong choices the only way of life, but not a good way...and not a good life. This is a demonstration that an “about face” turnaround can be made, but only if the desire is sincere. The journey of this family witnesses the “Amazing Grace” saga of generational curses that are bound on earth, as they are bound in Heaven. Become a part of a mother’s conscious desire and need to change the course, and quality of her life by aligning her choices with the will of God. This is a must-read book!
The Preacher's Kid is the story of Frankie, a young woman trying to discover who she is other than the rebellious youngest daughter of a preacher. Frankie learns that her past is an important part of her present and future. This is spanking fiction intended for adults. This story contains the spanking of adult women.
My name is Donald Vivian Owens III (aka Zig Zag), born Oct. 10, 1951. Born in East Texas, I was a country boy raised by a stay-at-home mom and Baptist Preacher father. Then when I was 20 years old, moved to Dallas joined an outlaw motorcycle club known today as Scorpions M/C. I have been a member of the Scorpion Motorcycle club now for 42 years and now Chaplain. My first book took you through the series of events that ultimately ended with my spending 7 years in a federal prison. I shared with you my experiences and the transformations I experienced both during and after my served time. Now let me share with you more about me as an individual. Take a look at my life as a child, a young adult and an adult, along with personal encounters and how they shaped me into who I am today. These are my memoirs
This is the story of a small family and their grandpa, through his work, held them together. He is the one who fixes all the problems, and he is listened to by all of his family. His idea for the first boy is to be a preacher. And in the time of his growing up, this grandpa adopts two other children, and that gets him married again. His daughter marries his grandson. Before he dies of old age, he is told about his grandchild, and his great-grandchild as the same person. Hope you enjoy.
The American Dream is in serious danger, according to Robert Wuthnow--not because of economic conditions, but because its moral underpinnings have been forgotten. In the past this vision was not simply a formula for success, but a moral perspective that framed our thinking about work and money in terms of broader commitments to family, community, and humanitarian values. Nowadays, we are working harder than ever, and yet many of us feel that we are not realizing our higher aspirations as individuals or as a people. Here Wuthnow examines the struggles in which American families are now engaged as they try to balance work and family, confront the pressures of consumerism, and find meaning in their careers. He suggests that we can find economic instruction and inspiration in the nation's past--in such figures as Benjamin Franklin, for instance, who was at once the prudent Poor Richard, the engaged public person, and the enthusiastic lover of life. Drawing on first-hand accounts from scores of people in all walks of life and from a national survey, the book shows that work and money cannot be understood in terms of economic theories alone, but are inevitably rooted in our concepts of ourselves and in the symbolic rituals and taboos of everyday life. By examining these implicit cultural understandings of work and money, the book provides a foundation for bringing moral reasoning more fully to bear on economic decisions. It re-examines the moral arguments that were prominent earlier in our history, shows how these arguments were set aside with the development of economistic thinking, and suggests their continuing relevance in the lives of people who have effectively resisted the pressures of greater financial commitments. Demonstrating that most Americans do bring values implicitly to bear on their economic decisions, the book shows how some people are learning to do this more effectively and, in the process, gain greater control over their work and finances. At a time when policymakers are raising questions about the very survival of the American dream, Poor Richard's Principle offers an analysis of how moral restraint can once again play a more prominent role in guiding our thinking.