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945 tulosta hakusanalla Ellsworth Roger
I can't tell you how this saying came about, but I do recall a day when I saw someone crying over spilled milk. The someone wasn't a child. It was my dad. And the milk wasn't the small amount in a glass. It was a lot of milk. For years my parents tried to scratch a living out of a hardscrabble little farm near Mulberry Grove, Illinois. There wasn't much money to be made from farming in those days, at least not from farming on our scale. . .Enjoy these easy-to-read short devotions by Roger Ellsworth--and a good cup of coffee at the same time My Coffee Cup Meditations are short, easy-to-read, Bible-based devotions to help you consider God's greatness, the wonderful gospel of Jesus, and be better equipped for life here and hereafter.
Our two sons, their wives and their children were all present for the Christmas gathering. Turkey, ham, dressing, mashed potatoes, gravy, green beans, corn, sweet potatoes, and homemade bread were on the table. When the moment came that we had been eagerly anticipating, we took our seats. As soon as our youngest grandchild, Eramin, was comfortably situated in her high chair, she surveyed the table and asked: "Where are the donuts?"Enjoy these easy-to-read short devotions by Roger Ellsworth--and a good cup of coffee at the same time My Coffee Cup Meditations are short, easy-to-read, Bible-based devotions to help you consider God's greatness, the wonderful gospel of Jesus, and be better equipped for life here and hereafter.
We had to spend quite a bit time in the barn on the little family farm that I called home during my childhood years. The cows had to be milked each morning and evening. That barn was already old and rickety when my dad bought the farm. In wintertime the wind would whistle through the cracks in those barn walls and chill us to the bone. My dad's remedy for the problem was to nail cardboard over those cracks. That certainly didn't make the barn cozy and warm, but it helped Enjoy these easy-to-read short devotions by Roger Ellsworth--and a good cup of coffee at the same time
I used to marvel at Rover. Milking time would come, and Dad would say: "Rover, get the cows " But Rover wouldn't immediately dash off as one might expect. He would listen until he heard the bell that Dad had put around the neck of one of the cows. Then he would dash off, find the cows, and slowly herd them home. It was obvious that he relished doing his job. It was something that made him feel proud.Enjoy these easy-to-read short devotions by Roger Ellsworth--and a good cup of coffee at the same time
We have often heard these words: If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Heaven sounds too good to be true-a place where there is no sorrow, pain or death; a place of perfect peace and joy; a place where there is no crime, no corruption and no parting; a place where there will be no police officers and no morticians There will be no prisons, hospitals, nursing homes or cemeteries But, unlike so many things that sound too good to be true, all of these details about heaven are true. All who trust in Jesus Christ will most certainly enter into heaven's glory home before dark Before hell reaches it full and final form, Gods people will already be safe in heaven.Can you be sure you will go to heaven when your life on this earth is done? Read all about it in this wonderful little book
Because we realize that children are a gift from the Lord and parenting is not a burdensome duty but a wondrous privilege, we attempt to raise godly children who fear the Lord. However, in our deregulated times of moral laxity and confusion, this can become difficult and challenging.Roger Ellsworth shows us how God has not left us to our own imagination, but has given us His Word as our guide. In a straightforward and easy-to-read style, he considers real people and real situations, and he guides us with biblical principles and sound application.
When Jesus of Nazareth was nailed to a Roman cross, a very long journey came to an end. This journey began in eternity past as God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit set Their hearts on that cross and began working toward it. That work can be traced through the promises, prophecies, and types of the Old Testament. It finally brought the Son from the glories of heaven to this earth, where He steadily approached that cross and there secured eternal salvation for His people. In these days in which so many seem inoculated against amazement, Journey to the Cross urges us to ponder again the planning that led Jesus to the cross and what He accomplished there. The spiritual renewal we so urgently need will must begin with renewed interest in the cross of Christ.
Popular Culture
Stanley Aronowitz; Robert W. Connell; Philip Corrigan; Elizabeth Ellsworth; Henry A. Giroux; Lawrence Grossberg; Peter McLaren; Roger Simon; Paul Smith; Richard Smith; Mimi White; Paul Willis
Praeger Publishers Inc
1989
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Illuminating one of the most pervasive issues of our time, Popular Culture is the first book to link the importance and implications of popular culture with pedagogical practice. It shows how cultural forms such as Hollywood films, pop music, soap operas, and televangelism are organized by gender, age, class, race, and ethnicity, thus providing the contradictory text that both enables and disables emancipatory interest, so fundamental to the formation of self and society. What emerges is a redefinition of the very notion of popular culture.
The Policy Machine: The Department of State and American Foreign Policy
Robert Ellsworth Elder
Literary Licensing, LLC
2012
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