|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
There s a sound being released that s like no other. It is a cry of a generation with a heart longing for God. This sound transcends race, age and denomination. Grammy Award nominated singer/ songwriter Pastor William McDowell along with friends captured this sound during an unforgettable night of worship in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Thousands gathered for the birthing of new songs that spiritually ushered all that were there into Deep Places. Full of new songs for the church: The Cry is the sound that is rising from earth and heaven is responding. It is a new anthem, birthed at Deeper Fellowship Church as a result of more than 300 miracles that have been experienced within the ministry lead by McDowell. Nothing Like Your Presence featuring Travis Greene and Nathaniel Bassey and How Great You Are featuring Yolanda Adams are two powerful songs of declarations and the song Deep Places reveals that God desires more of us. We can t be satisfied when we know there s more. We know the spirit of God wants to reveal himself in deeper ways , says McDowell. Don't Want to Leave" featuring Grammy Award winning Producer Aaron Lindsey seals the night with a moment of personal surrender for all who attended. The Cry also features: Tasha Cobbs-Leonard, David and Nicole Binion and Trinity Anderson.
Revival is not a thing of the past. It’s happening now! Since May of 2016 Deeper Fellowship Church in Orlando, Florida, has experienced a move of God with numerous healings and supernatural encounters. This outpouring of the Spirit bears many hallmarks of historic revivals that have taken place in the past four hundred years. Pastor William McDowell challenges you to believe that if revival is happening anywhere, it can happen everywhere. Physical, emotional, and spiritual healings are taking place today. The people of God are passionately pursuing Him, and He is responding.
Interwoven with stories of God working in miraculous ways, It’s Happening captures biblical truths about experiencing revival and God’s presence. Position yourself to join in the move of God that is already happening, and be a catalyst in spreading it. Stop waiting for revival and start seizing it.
Prayer is more than important--it's vital. We have to do more than
just want God to move in our lives, our families, our nation, and
the world. We must actively seek him in prayer! When we call out to
God, he hears us, is with us, and helps us. Prayer is never an
interruption but always an invitation. God invites us to go deeper
in the place of prayer. Using practical teaching and moving
testimonies, these Deeper Fellowship Church pastors will help you
· hunger to partner with God and discover greater intimacy with
Christ · boost your strength to pray till you see results
· position yourself to be part of the greatest outpouring of the
Spirit the world has ever seen · agree with heaven to see the
plans and purposes of God become reality on the earth God doesn't
want you to drown in unanswered prayer, but to walk in authority
and to experience his best. You can connect with God right now and
experience the life-changing power of his presence with you through
prayer.
Includes The Books The Bearing, The Striving, And The Finding.
Global change threatens ecosystems worldwide, and tropical systems
with their high diversity and rapid development are of special
concern. We can mitigate the impacts of change if we understand how
tropical ecosystems respond to disturbance. For tropical forests
and streams in Puerto Rico this book describes the impacts of, and
recovery from, hurricanes, landslides, floods, droughts, and human
disturbances in the Luquillo Mountains of Puerto Rico. These
ecosystems recover quickly after natural disturbances, having been
shaped over thousands of years by such events. Human disturbance,
however, has longer-lasting impacts. Chapters are by authors with
many years of experience in Puerto Rico and other tropical areas
and cover the history of research in these mountains, a framework
for understanding disturbance and response, the environmental
setting, the disturbance regime, response to disturbance, biotic
mechanisms of response, management implications, and future
directions. The text provides a strong perspective on tropical
ecosystem dynamics over multiple scales of time and space.
William McDowell's life makes the kind of colourful story that
simply doesn't happen in the modern world. Packed with adventure,
excitement, thrills, spills, and incongruous humour, it tells of
his life in India, the country of his birth, from the motor
industry to the Diplomatic Service by way of police and army
service. McDowell's brushes with death began early in life. The son
of a soldier, while still in his teens he was kidnapped by a group
of tribesmen and kept prisoner for several days in a case of
mistaken identity. Twice he was nearly killed when his vehicle
plunged over an embankment, once because he had passed out with the
heat, the second time when his lorry's brakes failed. On a canoe
voyage down a swollen river he was flung from his canoe and dragged
out of the water more dead than alive. He also narrowly survived a
plane crash. The sectarian turmoil McDowell witnessed during the
partition of India involved many harrowing experiences. He saw a
close friend decapitated by an angry mob of Muslim fanatics and had
to deal with the aftermath of slaughters by extremist Muslims which
left scores of innocent people dead or horribly mutilated. He also
witnessed the death of a beater on a shoot from a cobra bite and
found the body of a man who had been hanged from his own ceiling in
retribution for a debt. On a less tragic note, there was the time
McDowell unwittingly threw the president of the Punjabi National
Congress out of a train after a dispute about the occupancy of a
compartment, an event which nearly cost him his career. He was also
once offered the freedom of the harem by his friend the Maharaja of
Patiala. Life did start to calm down a little after McDowell
managed to shoot his own foot off on a pigeon-shooting trip, but
the adventures were not over. When he was sent to the high passes
of the Himalayas to find out where Russian refugees from the
revolution were getting through, he was snowed in for three months.
He survived only by killing and eating a hibernating black bear
which was sharing his cave. Somehow, McDowell found time in between
all this to serve more peacefully in Ceylon and Cyprus and raise a
family.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
Gloria
Sam Smith
CD
R407
Discovery Miles 4 070
|