Kingdom Bound


Book Description

This work is a great addition to Christian literature as it reveals to those who engage its pages the quest of ultimate security. It is reassuring to know that in a world of people who feel as if they are without hope that there is a means to determine how to enter into a relationship with God and to live a meaningful life and expect a heavenly future. Mark L. Bailey, President, Dallas Theological Seminary




TC Publication


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Bound for the Kingdom


Book Description

Arranged by Joseph Linn, Bound for the Kingdom is a collection of 50 favorite gospel songs, a sequel to the best-selling book "Moving Up to Gloryland." Flexible 4-part arrangements provide an extensive resource for choirs, ensembles, soloists, congregations, and small groups. Forty-one songs are arranged in 20 thematic medleys, which may be sung as written, with intros, interludes, and medley endings that are provided, or performed individually. Song titles include: I'm Bound for the Kingdom; Peace in the Valley; Champion of Love; The Lighthouse; My God Is Real; This Ol' House; All the Glory Belongs to Jesus; I Know Who Holds Tomorrow; His Hand in Mine. Ring-bound.










Trade Agreement Digests ...


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A Kingdom Not of this World


Book Description

Stuart Robinson was a prominent Presbyterian newspaper editor who took upon himself the dangerous task of distinguishing between the spiritual world and within a border state "city of conflict" during the Civil War. Presently, historians tend to depict religion during the American Civil War as domesticated under sectional nationalism -- where theologizing was directed at justifying the war in order to forge either a northern or southern Zion. Graham argues that such one-sided depictions do not sufficiently account for either the existence of a border state phenomenon during the civil war or the kind of theologizing that was being propagated from out of the border states against the domestication of religion to sectional politics. In A Kingdom Not of This World: Stuart Robinson's Struggle to Distinguish the Sacred from the Secular During the Civil War Preston D. Graham, Jr. presents a case study of a rather sizeable movement among border state Presbyterians, with special attention given to their most celebrated and influential leader, the Dr. Rev. Stuart Robinson of Louisville, Kentucky. Given the significance of Robinson's theologizing relative to the American doctrine of the separation of church and state, several primary resources are included in a reader portion of the appendix.




What Does the Minimum Wage Do?


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Belman and Wolfson perform a meta-analysis on scores of published studies on the effects of the minimum wage to determine its impacts on employment, wages, poverty, and more.




Certain Bovine Leather


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