Kirjojen hintavertailu. Mukana 11 244 527 kirjaa ja 12 kauppaa.

Kirjahaku

Etsi kirjoja tekijän nimen, kirjan nimen tai ISBN:n perusteella.

1000 tulosta hakusanalla Timothy Lockyer

Timothy, Titus & Philemon: Letters to Leaders--A 10-Week Bible Study on Sound Doctrine and Godly Behavior
The team behind the bestselling The Bible Recap takes your study of God's Word to the next level. Continuing with the books of 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, and Philemon, The Bible Recap Knowing God Series dives deep into the transformative truths found in Scripture. Perfect for small groups or individual study, this comprehensive, 10-week Bible study explains and connects the story of Scripture in the books of 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, and Philemon. Through daily readings, passage-by-passage teaching, thought-provoking questions, weekly challenges, Scripture memorization, and personal study segments, you will - learn how to dig deep into God's Word - discover the character of God revealed through the early church - comprehend the transformational truths of godly humility and love - apply these truths to your life Unearthing the timeless wisdom woven into these letters, this study will help you more deeply understand God's message to church leaders about sound doctrine and godly behavior.
Timothy Matlack, Scribe of the Declaration of Independence
On July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was read aloud to a crowd gathered outside the Pennsylvania State House. It was engrossed on vellum later in the month, and delegates began signing the finely penned document in early August. The man who read the Declaration and later embossed it--the man with perhaps the most famous penmanship in American history--was Timothy Matlack, a Philadelphia beer bottler who strongly believed in the American cause. A disowned Quaker and the grandson of an indentured servant, he rose from obscurity to become a delegate to Congress. He led a militia battalion at Princeton during the Revolutionary War; his unflagging dedication earned him the admiration of men like Thomas Jefferson and Richard Henry Lee. Also in 1776 Matlack and his radical allies drafted the Pennsylvania Constitution, which has been described as the most democratic in America. This biography is a full account of an American patriot.
Timothy Findley and the Aesthetics of Fascism
Timothy Findley and the Aesthetics of Fascism: Intertextual Collaboration and Resistance investigates the troubling relationship between narrative meaning and representations of violence within Timothy Findley's novels, throughout which writing and reading literature are portrayed as dangerous and political acts. Findley's novels often expose the ideological underpinnings of the cultures in which they exist, compelling their readers to become politically active social critics. However, reading and writing can be dangerous acts not only because of their revolutionary potential; they can also be dangerous because of their conservatism. The conservative and often dangerous need for narrative unity and closure is nowhere more evident than in Findley's continued intertextual returns to the historical period of Modernism and Fascism. By re-presenting these historical moments and texts, Findley's novels simultaneously arouse and critique both the artist's and the reader's desire for aesthetic resolution and completion when confronted with various kinds of narrative ruptures.Although Findley clearly admires the modernist texts that appear in his own fiction, his novels also reveal how the modernist search for metaphoric unity and meaning in the face of real social and political fragmentation often reflects, and often enacts, an aesthetic akin to that of fascism. The disturbing and seductive power of this fascist aesthetic haunts Findley's novels, and even in those not focused on that historical period, justifies and energizes various social and literary structures of power which seek to impose metaphoric meanings upon disjunctive realities.
Timothy Brum

Timothy Brum

R.M. Mace

Crossbridge Books
2010
pokkari
The compelling story of a lost 9-year-old boy who runs away from a children's home in Birmingham, UK, and hitches a lift to London. Although he is in danger of experiencing horrendous possible outcomes, he is helped by a "tramp." In the meantime his parents have never given up hope that he is alive. This novella follows somewhat in the footsteps of Dickens' Oliver Twist, and is also reminiscent of Mary Higgins Clark. It is not suitable for under 14-year old children.