The Bible Believer's Job Search Handbook


Book Description

This handy reference includes sound advice for each stage of your job search. Avoid common mistakes and have the essential information you need in one concise guide. Improve your job search and stay spiritually encouraged, every step of the way. The Bible Believers Job Search Handbook includes: Resume and cover letter samples Interview preparation Sample interview questions and answer advice Follow-up advice And much more! Trina Selstad has over a decade of experience in Human Resources. A graduate of the University of Washington, she has worked in the areas of recruitment and employment. She has written articles on employment related topics and has composed professional resumes for many occupations. She enjoys assisting and encouraging job seekers of all ages and experience levels. Mrs. Selstad resides in Colorado with her husband Pierre and son Malik.




The Bible Handbook


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New Christian's Handbook


Book Description

Well-respected pastor Anders helps ground new Christians in the faith. Thirty-six, easy-to-follow chapters deepen one's understanding of biblical doctrines, while helping the reader apply them to everyday life.




Believer’s Handbook, The (5 in 1 Anthology)


Book Description

Who is God? Are angels and demons real? Does God care how you live your life? Are the promises of the Bible really true? Lester Sumrall, a world-renowned pastor and evangelist, offers straightforward answers to these burning questions of life. The spiritual realm is all around us, and more things count on spiritual battles than we realize. Sumrall will give you examples of his encounters with angels, demons, and the living God that will convince you that there's more to this world than what you can experience through your senses. God is also concerned with earthly matters-how you live your day-to-day life. Sumrall will show you God's concern and perfect plan for many aspects of your life. Are you ready for God to be revealed to you?







The Bible Believer's Handbook


Book Description

When Larry Vaughn wrote the Bible Believer's Handbook, he was thinking of his children. He wanted them to learn what Jesus taught and to see God's promises fulfilled in their lives. He tells everyone who reads it, "This is what I've learned in my first sixty years of life and I'm passing it on to you. Take it and apply it to your life. I can hardly wait to see what you're going to do with it."The Bible Believer's Handbook is a book with a mission, to help fulfill the Great Commission. It contains more than eleven hundred quotations from the Bible and a brief explanation of each one. These scriptures reveal the heart and mind of God, what he says on a hundred and eighty topics and how he wants us to live. The Bible Believer's Handbook is a buffet of spiritual food for everyone who hungers and thirsts for the knowledge of God.




Work


Book Description

Most Christians spend most of their waking hours working, yet many regard work as at best a necessary evil just one more unfortunate by-product of humanity s fall from grace. Not so, says Ben Witherington III, and in Work: A Kingdom Perspective on Labor, he considers work as neither the curse nor the cure of human life but, rather, as something good that God has given us to do. In this brief primer on the biblical theology and ethics of work, Witherington carefully unpacks the concept of work, considering its relationship to rest, play, worship, the normal cycle of human life, and the coming Kingdom of God. Work as calling, work as ministry, work as a way to make a living, and the notably unbiblical notion of retirement Witherington s Work engages these subjects and more, combining scholarly acumen with good humor, common sense, cultural awareness, and biblically based insights from Genesis to Revelation. Ben Witherington has given the whole people of God something desperately needed to make sense of Monday to Friday a theology of work that breaks down the heretical sacred-secular distinction. . . . Offers a work-view and life-view that, if embraced, would revitalize the mission of God s people in the world. It s that good. R. Paul Stevens author of The Other Six Days and Taking Your Soul to Work Conducting a critical dialogue with the theological voices of our day, drawing upon the wisdom of the Christian tradition, and offering a sensitive reading of New Testament parables, Witherington delivers sound counsel on the Kingdom meaning of work and its implications for our lives today. Lee Hardy author of The Fabric of This World




The Theology Handbook


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Hidden Treasures in the Book of Job (Reasons to Believe)


Book Description

Arguably the oldest book in the Bible, the book of Job has a surprising amount to say about some of the newest scientific discoveries and controversies. Far from a book that is just about suffering, Job is filled with rich insight into both ancient and modern questions about the formation of the world the difference between animals and humans cosmology dinosaurs and the fossil record how to care for creation and more With careful consideration and exegesis, internationally known astrophysicist and Christian apologist Hugh Ross adds yet another compelling argument to the case for the veracity of the biblical commentary on the history of the universe, Earth, life, and humanity. Hidden Treasures in the Book of Job shows that the Bible is an accurate predictor of scientific discoveries and a trustworthy source of scientific information, and that both the book of Scripture and the book of nature are consistent both internally and externally.




The Book of Job


Book Description

The life and times of this iconic and enduring biblical book The book of Job raises stark questions about the meaning of innocent suffering and the relationship of the human to the divine, yet it is also one of the Bible's most obscure and paradoxical books. Mark Larrimore provides a panoramic history of this remarkable book, traversing centuries and traditions to examine how Job's trials and his challenge to God have been used and understood in diverse contexts, from commentary and liturgy to philosophy and art. Larrimore traces Job's reception by figures such as Gregory the Great, William Blake, and Elie Wiesel, and reveals how Job has come to be viewed as the Bible's answer to the problem of evil and the perennial question of why a God who supposedly loves justice permits bad things to happen to good people.