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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian religious experience
The God of All Comfort is an inspiring manual of faith by Hannah
Whitall Smith, who was one of the leading authors of Christian
advice in the late nineteenth century. Smith, having lived and
witnessed a life of supreme faith to God, writes her account of the
principles of the Lord and Jesus Christ. Her aim is to inspire
Christians who may be doubting their faith, as well as those who
need guidance through crises or struggles in life. With a close
reading of the Bible, Whitall Smith is able to demonstrate the
sublime comfort and serenity which the Lord God can dispense
through His love. Blessed with a gift for words and eloquent turns
of phrase, Hannah Whitall Smith places both her faith and her
affinity for language front and center in this book. For many years
this book has been consulted as a sublime manual of true Christian
advice, notable for the greathearted way in which lessons on how to
live and take joy as a follower of God are dispensed.
When Jesus turned and saw them following, he said to them, 'What
are you looking for?' They said to him, 'Rabbi . . . where are you
staying?' He said to them, 'Come and see.' John 1.38 39 'Come and
see.' That is Jesus' invitation: courteous and confident, welcoming
but not overpowering, full of grace and truth. It is the gospel in
three words. The two disciples - Andrew was one of them - came and
saw. They stayed with Jesus for a day and they liked what they saw.
Andrew then went searching for his brother, Simon, and told him,
'We have found the Messiah.' Andrew took Simon to Jesus who (says
John) 'looked at him'. . . This dynamic of seeing Jesus and being
seen by him was transformative . . . They were never the same
again. They became Jesus' disciples, people who spent time with
him, getting to know him better and learning to see the world
differently, as Jesus sees it. Those are three dimensions of seeing
that will run through . . . this book: seeing Jesus, being seen by
him and seeing things the way Jesus sees them.' From Chapter 1:
What do you see?
The roots of African American spirituality arise from the African
origins of the enslaved who were brought to the West in chains.
Flora Wilson Bridges explores these "African retentions" from their
manifestations in Africa, through their presence in the slave
communities of the American South and in Black churches today. The
unique spirituality that arose from these retentions influenced
many prominent black leaders including Howard Thurman, Martin
Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X. In a fascinating chapter, Bridges
also shows how these African roots inform Black film, literature,
and art.
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Thriveology
(Hardcover)
Heekap Lee; Foreword by Rhoda C Sommers
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R991
R844
Discovery Miles 8 440
Save R147 (15%)
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