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Presented here are two volumes of apocryphal writings reflecting the life and time of the Old and New Testaments. Stories told by contemporary fiction writers of historical Bible times in fascinating and beautiful style.
What's your favorite Los Angeles landmark? Does it still stand, or is it just a memory? From famous icons to hidden gems, Los Angeles has amazing architecture as diverse as the city itself. But L.A.'s long tradition of reinvention has left beloved landmarks in its wake. This book highlights just a few of the many great buildings that fell to the wrecking ball, as well as some that narrowly escaped. The landmarks we almost lost might surprise you, and their survival offers hope for a future that celebrates our past.
To question the idea of hell as a default destination is to question the entire fundamentalist evangelical worldview. This book does just that. Fundamentalist evangelicalism holds that the Bible is an infallible authority and that all are born in sin. Sinners go to hell, but Jesus, taking their place, died to save them from hell. How did this belief come to be? What were the effects on people brought up with a belief in the reality of hell? What has been the process of people leaving the fundamentalist evangelical movement? In Bad Girls and Boys Go To Hell (or not), Gloria Neufeld Redekop takes us on her own personal journey as she engages a movement in which she was raised, conducting a careful study of the history of fundamentalist evangelicalism, the attachment to a literal-factual interpretation of the Bible, and an analysis of the experience of those who have left the movement.
In a nation rampant with political confusion, economic upheaval, societal splintering, a breakdown in simple civility, and the reality of fractured families, its difficult to even imagine what todays young people may face in fifty to sixty years. The future of our children, our grandchildren, and our great-grandchildren rests squarely upon our shoulders. In Somebody Forgot to Tell the Kids, author Jeanne S. Silvers examines the state of the world from the churchs perspective. Through this discussion, she addresses a conundrum: Is the church in America largely ineffective today because of the depraved state of our society, or is our society in that corrupt state because the church is largely ineffective? Silvers uses personal anecdotes and stories from Scripture to present her ideas about leaving a legacy of Christian values for modern youth. Somebody Forgot to Tell the Kids examines how our world has become what it has and provides solutions for turning it around and beginning to minister the grace and compassion of Jesus to a broken nation. Silvers shows how it took only one man on Mount Carmel to set a nation on a new pathone faith-filled man who was willing to step out from the crowd and obey the Lord. Will there be one of these for America?
New York Times bestselling author Joseph Prince invites you to experience the grace revolution that is sweeping across the earth. The grace revolution is all about bringing Jesus back to the forefront. When Jesus is preached and lifted high, lives are touched and transformed. It's a revolution of relationship and it's a revolution of restoration. The grace revolution begins in the innermost sanctum of your heart when you meet the person of Jesus. It is not an outward revolution but something that begins from the inside out. Today, you can experience deep, personal, and lasting transformation that is anchored on the unshakable, rock-solid foundation of Christ and His finished work.
"For three days in January, 1873, a severe snowstorm struck the Dakota Territory, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota. People awoke on January 7 to an unusually warm winter's day with temperatures above freezing. Farmers and their families took advantage of the warmer temperatures, not knowing a severe storm was approaching. They brought grain to the mills, cut firewood in nearby forests, tended to their cattle, visited family or tended to other duties. The blizzard took the lives of hundreds of people in several states, including seventy in Minnesota. Twelve people died in Kandiyohi County. This book takes a detailed look at these 12 victims of the blizzard: who they were; where they lived; their journeys and deaths in the storm; and the families who mourned. All victims were immigrants and early pioneers to Minnesota"--Back cover.
Scholarly investigation of English Puritanism has included descriptions of Puritan theology and preaching. The relationship between the two, however, has not been thoroughly investigated. This study focuses upon the relationship between the theology held by the puritan preacher and the content and delivery of his sermons.