Where Can You Turn When Your World Turns Upside Down


Book Description

What do we do when we are faced with the death of a loved one the loss of a job the life-threatening illness the break-up of a marriage; or tornadoes or other catastrophes? The writers respond to the questions: If God is absolutely good then why is there evil? How can we trust God when we are living through unbearable circumstances? What do we do when trouble comes? Why does God allow Christians to suffer? How can we overcome our fears and anxiety? How can we have peace in the midst of turmoil? This book gives practical steps to take in response to the difficult times in our lives.




A World Turned Upside Down


Book Description

Through letters and journal entries rich in detail, this text follows the trials of the 19th-century Palmer family who dominated the southern banks of South Carolina's Santee River. The volume offers insights into plantation life; education; religion; and slave/master relations.







The Great Crash Ahead


Book Description

Examines current economic trends in conjunction with general demographic trends in order to predict the continued failure of federal stimulus plans and a near-future deflationary crisis.




The World Turned Upside Down


Book Description

In what we tell ourselves is an age of reason, we are behaving increasingly irrationally. An astonishing number of people subscribe to celebrity endorsed cults, Mayan armageddon prophecies, scientism, and other varieties of new age, anti-enlightenment philosophies. Millions more advance popular conspiracy theories: AIDS was created in a CIA laboratory, Princess Diana was assassinated, and the 9/11 attacks were an inside job. In The World Turned Upside Down, Melanie Phillips explains that the basic cause of this explosion of irrationality is the slow but steady marginalization of religion. We tell ourselves that faith and reason are incompatible, but the opposite is the case. It was Christianity and the Hebrew Bible, Phillips asserts, that gave us our concepts of reason, progress, and an orderly world on which science and modernity are based. Without its religious traditions, the West has drifted into mass derangement where truth and lies, right and wrong, victim and aggressor are all turned upside down. Scientists skeptical of global warming are hounded from their posts, Israel is demonized, and the US is vilified over the war on terror—all on the basis of blatant falsehoods and obscene propaganda. Worst of all, asserts Phillips, this abandonment of rationality leaves the West vulnerable to its legitimate threats. Faced with the very real challenges of spiraling demographics and violent, confrontational Islamism, the West is no longer willing or able to defend the modernity and rationalism that it once brought into being.




The World Turned Upside Down


Book Description

What could the supernatural world of Stranger Things have in common with the Bible? The paranormal television series Stranger Things taps into the mysterious elements that have fueled spiritual questions for millennia. The otherworldly manifestations in Hawkins, Indiana offer compelling portrayals of important spiritual truths--and many of these truths are echoed in the supernatural worldview of the Bible. For Michael Heiser, Stranger Things is the perfect marriage of his interest in popular culture and the paranormal. In The Unseen Realm, he opened the eyes of thousands, helping readers understand the supernatural worldview of the Bible. Now he turns his attention to the worldwide television phenomenon, exploring how Stranger Things relates to Christian theology and the Christian life. In The World Turned Upside Down, Heiser draws on this supernatural worldview to help us think about the story of Jesus and discover glimpses of the gospel in the Upside Down. He argues that this celebrated series helps us understand the gospel in unique and overlooked ways. The spiritual questions and crises raised by Stranger Things are addressed the same way they are in the gospel, with mystery and transcendent power.




Courting the Countess


Book Description

Professor of Archeology Henrietta “Harry” Knight becomes Countess of Axedale upon her father’s death and takes a sabbatical from Cambridge University to begin refurbishing the long-neglected and run-down Axedale Hall. The child of a loveless marriage, witness to her father’s infidelities and her mother’s pain, Harry has no intention of ever falling in love. Annie Brannigan is a survivor, remaining positive through hardships. As an agency housekeeper, she moves from post to post with her daughter Riley, taking care of people who have everything she will never have. Annie’s greatest wish is to find her happy ever after. Can love restore the countess’s heart and the crumbling Axedale Hall, or will the first foundations of love turn to dust?




Reinventing American Jurisprudence


Book Description

In Reinventing American Jurisprudence: Law through the Lens of Value, George David Miller and Laura Brown unfurl an original approach to value and an imaginative landscape in philosophy of law. Value essentialism identifies value formations such as a sacred cow and scapegoat tandem and the intensification of “oughtness” as it approaches sacred zenith values. Readers learn how Occam’s razor has been responsible for the death of many ideas; how the celebrated Other gains nuance as near and remote; and where a spectral assessment of probability and necessity leads. Analyses of Supreme Court cases grow out in different and exciting directions. Buck was not about eugenics, but another iteration of the value of efficiency and Yo Wick was decided less on law and more on a justice’s finding humanity in Chinese laundry mat proprietors. Lochner involved not an ideological binary but three distinct value schemes. “Separate but equal” was refined as parallelism and exploitative tangents. In Brown, the Fourteenth Amendment took a significant subjective turn. In Heller, the communitarian position of stopping violence before it began could be contrasted with the individualistic position of waiting until you see the whites of their eyes in your bedroom. Citizens United was distilled into the question: was the First Amendment designed to maximize participation or maximize democracy?




To Kill a Bear


Book Description

Grabbing Debbys head in his two hands, he turned her so she could see the opening and he motioned for her to go in. she looked first at David and then at the new hiding place. Knowing what he was going to do, she shook her head and wrapping her arms around his waist she mouthed the word no over and over. Never before in his life, had he been rough with Debby. And after today it would never happen again, but right now he had no time to argue. Roughly pulling her arms from around his waist, holding her by her arms, he thrust her from him, then wagging his finger in front of her eyes much the same way she did when reprimanding Wolf, then pointing to the new hiding place, he mouthed the word, go! The frown he wore on his face was all the emphasis he needed to get her to move. She turned and scurried between the two rocks. His first intention had been to make a break for the sled and his rifle, but now looking everything over he could see he was trapped. The only way out, was the way they came in and the bear was in the way. Wolf was giving the bear a bad time and David knew it was only a matter of time before one of those giant paws put an end to the dog. He turned around to see if Debby was safe and when he did the flare gun bumped a rock. The noise it made attracted the attention of the bear and he seeing David, took a swipe at him with a huge paw. He couldnt reach him but the momentum of that swing carried him into the smaller of those two rocks behind which David was trying to hide. This was one mad bear now and having been pestered by Wolf for so long; he wanted to vent his anger somewhere and here was a candidate he could almost reach. David took the cord to the flare gun from around his neck and backing up against the rock that hid Debby he cocked it and holding it in his hand, waited for the inevitable.




Single Season Sitcoms of the 1980s


Book Description

As the cable TV industry exploded in the 1980s, offering viewers dozens of channels, an unprecedented number of series were produced. For every successful sitcom--The Golden Girls, Family Ties, Newhart--there were flops such as Take Five with George Segal, Annie McGuire with Mary Tyler Moore, One Big Family with Danny Thomas and Life with Lucy starring Lucille Ball, proving that a big name does not a hit show make. Other short-lived series were springboards for future stars, like Day by Day (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), The Duck Factory (Jim Carrey), Raising Miranda (Bryan Cranston) and Square Pegs (Sarah Jessica Parker). This book unearths many single-season sitcoms of the '80s, providing behind-the-scenes stories from cast members, guest stars, writers, producers and directors.