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Jerry Bauer and James Stevens are two people with different past and secrets that cross paths in a sick and twisted way. Jerry Bauer, a Criminal Psychiatrist and adolescent mentor and James Stevens, a troubled orphan with no hope. They're both the same person. Or are they? After months of helping the FBI look for a serial killer, Dr. Jerry Bauer makes the hunt for the killer seem elusive. He also discusses with James raged outlashes he has let come to surface. An FBI agent, Luther Manchester comes to Bauer with some evidence on the killer, to which the killer is murdering his victims in a biblical sense. By accident, James discovers a shocking yet interesting twist in the story. Murders begin to come up even more weird than before. Revealed, rookie agent, Sherry Dixon comes up with the first lead in the case; she finds out all of the victims were psych patients which end up being ex-Manson Family memebers. Meanwhile, James takes a beating at the orphanage he's in which he begins to develope multiple personalities. Manchester and Dixon, on the trail of the killer, which is getting close to pulling off his biggest murder. James is being accepted into his foster family, he's beaten and raped by his foster sister and foster father. James is threaten if he told anyone what happen to him. Everything comes to a head, the serial killer kills Dixon and Manchester. Agent, Alberto Rodriguez, is tipped to bring the serial killer down. The story includes more characters and subplots which twist the story into a mind teaser, such as when a Ex Forensic agent turned detective, is assigned to the reopening to the case and he finds out the killer is still alive. There's more details as the story grows...
"Tuesday Morning Meditations" is an important book for those seeking a deeper understanding of God, spirituality, and ultimate meaning in a world that often seems distant, uncaring, and indifferent. In these 23 sermonic reflections, author Dwayne Meadows, speaking in language born of a deep engagement with the Biblical text, and with the poetic nuance of the great bards of the sermonic arts, encourages, edifies, and challenges with such sermons as * "This is Love" * "What If" * "Lord make me to know mine end" * "Strange Fruit" "Tuesday Morning Meditations" is a book for everyone, regardless of denomination or faith tradition, who wrestles with the essential enigma of divine relationality, and is not afraid to question traditional understandings of Humankind's religious strivings.
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