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.







Bound for the Kingdom


Book Description




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




The Kingdom


Book Description

A sweeping fictional account of the early Christians, whose unlikely beliefs conquered the world Gripped by the tale of a Messiah whose blood we drink and body we eat, the genre-defying author Emmanuel Carrère revisits the story of the early Church in his latest work. With an idiosyncratic and at times iconoclastic take on the charms and foibles of the Church fathers, Carrère ferries readers through his “doors” into the biblical narrative. Once inside, he follows the ragtag group of early Christians through the tumultuous days of the faith’s founding. Shouldering biblical scholarship like a camcorder, Carrère re-creates the climate of the New Testament with the acumen of a seasoned storyteller, intertwining his own account of reckoning with the central tenets of the faith with the lives of the first Christians. Carrère puts himself in the shoes of Saint Paul and above all Saint Luke, charting Luke’s encounter with the marginal Jewish sect that eventually became Christianity, and retracing his investigation of its founder, an obscure religious freak who died under notorious circumstances. Boldly blending scholarship with speculation, memoir with journalistic muckraking, Carrère sets out on a headlong chase through the latter part of the Bible, drawing out protagonists who believed they were caught up in the most important events of their time. An expansive and clever meditation on belief, The Kingdom chronicles the advent of a religion, and the ongoing quest to find a place within it.










Four Kingdom Motifs before and beyond the Book of Daniel


Book Description

The four kingdoms motif enabled writers of various cultures, times, and places, to periodize history as the staged succession of empires barrelling towards an utopian age. The motif provided order to lived experiences under empire (the present), in view of ancestral traditions and cultural heritage (the past), and inspired outlooks assuring hope, deliverance, and restoration (the future). Four Kingdom Motifs before and beyond the Book of Daniel includes thirteen essays that explore the reach and redeployment of the motif in classical and ancient Near Eastern writings, Jewish and Christian scriptures, texts among the Dead Sea Scrolls, Apocrypha and pseudepigrapha, depictions in European architecture and cartography, as well as patristic, rabbinic, Islamic, and African writings from antiquity through the Mediaeval eras.




Bound for the Promised Land


Book Description

In this New Studies in Biblical Theology volume, Oren Martin demonstrates how, within the redemptive-historical framework of God's unfolding plan, the land promise to Israel advances the place of the kingdom that was lost in Eden, anticipating the even greater land, prepared for all of God's people, that will result from the person and work of Christ.