Inspirational
Showing 3351–3352 of 3352 results
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Holiness And High Country
$25.99Add to cart15 Chapters
Additional Info
Bodies diseased by malnutrition are a pitiable sight. Minds dwarfed for lack of the opportunity or will to improve them are cause for deep regret. But stunted souls, surrounded by spiritual abundance, are the occasion for greatest lament.The essentials for growing great souls are enlightenment of the understanding, quickening of the conscience, and nourishment for those who hunger and thirst after righteousness. All of these are amply supplied in God’s Word. But most Christians need help to lay hold on its vast resources.
In Holiness And High Country, Dr. Albert F. Harper has made available to all who will spend 10 minutes a day the product of his search and discovery of the hidden treasure of God’s Word.
Anyone who will read this book with willingness to examine himself, and receive the light and walk in it, will find that spiritual reinforcement that will push him out in deeper dedication and stricter disipline of his life. The end result will be a Christian character vital, energetic, and radiant. If one out of every 10 church members will prayerfully read this book, the entire church will witness revival in holy living.
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Christ Of The Indian Road
$16.99Add to cartContents:
Messenger And The Message
Motive And End Of Christian Missions
Growing Moral And Spiritual Supremacy Of Jesus
Jesus Comes Through Irregular Channels
Mahatma Gandhi’s Part
Through The Regular Channels
Some Evangelistic Series
Great Hindrance
Question Hour
Jesus Through Experience
What Or Whom
Christ And The Other Faiths
Concrete Christ
Indian Interpretation Of Jesus
Christ Of The Indian RoadAdditional Info
Christ of the Indian Road” is a first-person account of E. Stanley Jones’ experiences as a Christian missionary in India almost 100 years ago. He describes the journey that he undertook from a presumptuous young missionary hoping to bring meaning into the lives of lost pagans (my wording) to a seasoned veteran proclaimer of the joy found through following Christ, ultimately trying to contextualize Christ within a rich, religious Indian culture. Jones clearly communicates his disdain for the common mistake that many Christians make to assume that our cultural framework is the “Christian” one, trying to superimpose our culture on top of the culture of those to whom we bring Christ. As an alternative approach, Jones admonishes us to learn from other cultures, to respect the truth that can be found in them, and to allow Christ to enter into that culture on His terms and on their terms, not on our terms.