Book Description
Understand that the Father loves all his sons and daughters and wants each of us to share in His home now.
Author : John Sheasby
Publisher : Worthy Inspired
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 32,39 MB
Release : 2016-04-19
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9781617957208
Understand that the Father loves all his sons and daughters and wants each of us to share in His home now.
Author : Matthew Harrison
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 17,20 MB
Release : 2019-07-11
Category :
ISBN : 9780758667236
This book contains never before translated essays and sermons by German-speaking presidents of the LCMS, with historical notes and context provided by Matthew C. Harrison. Its unique insight into evangelical Lutheran theology and practice of the early LCMS leaders still applies for today's needs and situations.
Author : Anne Graham Lotz
Publisher : Thomas Nelson
Page : 161 pages
File Size : 22,53 MB
Release : 2014-07-08
Category : Religion
ISBN : 0718021509
Now with 250K copies in print! Revised and Updated Edition. Anne affirms that Heaven truly is the home of your dreams: a home of lasting value that's fully paid for and filled with family, where you will be wanted and welcomed. Best of all, Heaven is a home you are invited to claim as your own. With over 40 percent new and revised content, Anne Graham Lotz has updated her classic book on Heaven for a whole new generation of readers, and also for herself. With her father, mother, and husband now gone, Lotz beautifully adds her own vulnerability and stories to the journey contained in Heaven: My Father's House. Jesus promised us, "In My Father's house are many rooms...I am going there to prepare a place for you." Amid the turbulence of today's world, we cling to the hope of a heavenly home where we will be welcomed into eternal peace and safety. Anne affirms that Heaven truly is the home of your dreams: a home of lasting value that's fully paid for and filled with family, where you will be wanted and welcomed. Best of all, Heaven is a home you are invited to claim as your own.
Author : C. B. Christiansen
Publisher : Puffin
Page : 36 pages
File Size : 44,94 MB
Release : 1990
Category : Juvenile Fiction
ISBN :
CHILDREN'S BOOKS/AGES 4-8
Author : Patrick Joyce
Publisher : Verso Books
Page : 369 pages
File Size : 49,89 MB
Release : 2021-07-27
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 1839763248
A historian's personal journey into the complex questions of immigration, home and nation From Ireland to London in the 1950s, Derry in the Troubles to contemporary, de-industrialised Manchester, Joyce finds the ties of place, family and the past are difficult to break. Why do certain places continue to haunt us? What does it mean to be British after the suffering of Empire and of war? How do we make our home in a hypermobile world without remembering our pasts? Patrick Joyce's parents moved from Ireland in the 1930s and made their home in west London. But they never really left the homeland. And so as he grew up among the streets of Paddington and Notting Hill and when he visited his family in Ireland he felt a tension between the notions of home, nation and belonging. Going to My Father's House charts the historian's attempt to make sense of these ties and to see how they manifest in a globalised world. He explores the places - the house, the street, the walls and the graves - that formed his own identity. He ask what place the ideas of history, heritage and nostalgia have in creating a sense of our selves. He concludes with a plea for a history that holds the past to account but also allows for dynamic, inclusive change.
Author : Orville Vernon Burton
Publisher : Univ of North Carolina Press
Page : 503 pages
File Size : 10,78 MB
Release : 2000-11-09
Category : History
ISBN : 0807864161
Burton traces the evolution of Edgefield County from the antebellum period through Reconstruction and beyond. From amassed information on every household in this large rural community, he tests the many generalizations about southern black and white families of this period and finds that they were strikingly similar. Wealth, rather than race or class, was the main factor that influenced family structure, and the matriarchal family was but a myth.
Author : Bethany Dawson
Publisher : Liberties Press
Page : 196 pages
File Size : 30,38 MB
Release : 2013-04-01
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 1909718017
It had not been a conscious decision to cling to the better memories of his childhood. It had just happened when Hannah came along and the possibility of a brighter future dragged his scowling face away from the details of his past. Now, standing in the middle of the poorly part-mowed field, in front of the house that was hiding all the reasons he had run away, he wondered if it would be possible to hold the past and present in tension.' Robbie Hanright has a normal, settled life in Dublin. With a wife and baby, an undemanding job and a nice home, everything is just as he wants it. However, after an enduring estrangement from the rural landscape of his youth, Robbie receives a phone call from his sister asking him to come home. Left with little choice, Robbie returns once more to County Down, and to Larkscroft Farm, to confront the father who tormented his childhood and face up to a history he wants only to forget. Set against the backdrop of a decaying farmhouse and fragile family connections, My Father's House is a powerful, lyrical story of loss and regret, through which Bethany Dawson reveals an affecting compassion for the profound, and often painful, complexities of family life.
Author : Ann Rinaldi
Publisher : Point
Page : 323 pages
File Size : 36,25 MB
Release : 1993
Category : Juvenile Fiction
ISBN : 9780590447317
For two sisters growing up surrounded by the Civil War, there is conflict both outside and inside their house.
Author : Bodie Thoene
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 39,29 MB
Release : 2006
Category : Arkansas
ISBN : 9781414301204
From the bestselling author of THE ZION COVENANT and THE ZION CHRONICLES series!.
Author : Kwame Anthony Appiah
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 254 pages
File Size : 45,65 MB
Release : 1993-05-27
Category : History
ISBN : 0199879257
The beating of Rodney King and the resulting riots in South Central Los Angeles. The violent clash between Hasidim and African-Americans in Crown Heights. The boats of Haitian refugees being turned away from the Land of Opportunity. These are among the many racially-charged images that have burst across our television screens in the last year alone, images that show that for all our complacent beliefs in a melting-pot society, race is as much of a problem as ever in America. In this vastly important, widely-acclaimed volume, Kwame Anthony Appiah, a Ghanaian philosopher who now teaches at Harvard, explores, in his words, "the possibilities and pitfalls of an African identity in the late twentieth century." In the process he sheds new light on what it means to be an African-American, on the many preconceptions that have muddled discussions of race, Africa, and Afrocentrism since the end of the nineteenth century, and, in the end, to move beyond the idea of race. In My Father's House is especially wide-ranging, covering everything from Pan Africanism, to the works of early African-American intellectuals such as Alexander Crummell and W.E.B. Du Bois, to the ways in which African identity influences African literature. In his discussion of the latter subject, Appiah demonstrates how attempts to construct a uniquely African literature have ignored not only the inescapable influences that centuries of contact with the West have imposed, but also the multicultural nature of Africa itself. Emphasizing this last point is Appiah's eloquent title essay which offers a fitting finale to the volume. In a moving first-person account of his father's death and funeral in Ghana, Appiah offers a brilliant metaphor for the tension between Africa's aspirations to modernity and its desire to draw on its ancient cultural roots. During the Los Angeles riots, Rodney King appeared on television to make his now famous plea: "People, can we all get along?" In this beautiful, elegantly written volume, Appiah steers us along a path toward answering a question of the utmost importance to us all.