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38 matches in All Departments
More animated adventures on the streets of Friendlyville with
Finley and his friends Dex the dump truck, DJ the bulldozer, Gorby
the dustbin lorry, Isabelle the ice cream lorry, Jesse the tow
truck, Miguel the post van, and Scooty the school bus.
Jesus told his disciples to go to a town and to find someone who
would receive them as a guest. They were encouraged to eat within
the community, build friendships, make contacts and teach the
gospel. In this exciting book, Andrew Francis urges us to notice
the order. The disciples were to seek the welfare of others by
praying for and healing them - in other words, by meeting their
obvious needs. It was only then that teaching and telling about the
'reign of God' would begin. This was Jesus' strategy for mission.
Andrew Francis suggests that it should be ours today.
How you eat affects the planet - and everyone else on it. What you
eat might literally cost the earth. It also has implications for
your health, for the grower or producer, and for the way you think
about the world. What in God's Name Are You Eating? faces what many
of us choose to ignore in the Western world: we, as adults, have
allowed a childlike innocence to mask the real cost of the
environment in which we are cocooned, while thousands elsewhere
find themselves drought-stricken and starving. 'What in God's name
are they not eating?' 'Enough' is the simple answer and we are part
of the reason why. The price of 'life', as we know it, is high. To
those of us who have 'life', there is a moral imperative to enable
others to share it rather than suppress them. With its advocacy of
a globally responsibly discipleship, What in God's Name Are You
Eating? enables us to see how the world's peoples can have life and
a long future. While the reflection is rooted in radical Mennonite
Christianity, the challenge is to those of faith - and those of
none.
Following significant changes in the legal profession since the
1980s, how do new organizational forms and actors at the edge of
the law impact upon our understanding of the changing nature of the
core values of mainstream legal professionalism? This
methodological approach brings together a series of case studies
built on original empirical research and focuses on those operating
at the margins of legal professionalism in England and Wales. Also
including comparative material on the US and Canada, the issues
discussed are relevant for common law countries more generally and
the analysis reveals the ways in which an increasingly fluid,
fragmented and heterogeneous legal profession is responding to the
challenges it faces in the early twenty-first century.
Paganism has often looked to forest groves or mountain tops for
inspiration and spiritual transformation. Deep Blue plunges deep
into sacred waters through thirteen essays by leading writers in
the expanding academic field of nature religion. Amongst others,
the book will be of interest to nature religion academics,
environmental researchers and activists, as well as practitioners
and students of paganism and religion, faith and spirituality
studies and those involved in the intersection between religion and
ecology. From anthropologic and mythological understandings of
archetypal mind structure, through to sociological and
psychological levels of analysis, academic theory and inquiry are
blended with grounded accounts of experience and understanding from
writers spiritually connected with water. The book aims to explore
dimensions of the human spiritual relationship with river, sea and
pool with a view to developing further understandings of the
interrelationships between spiritual practice, academic nature
religion discourse and environmental concern. Ancestral cultures
invest watery places with spiritual power. With this deep
connection comes respect, understanding and sustainable
relationship. Deep Blue reconnects contemporary Western culture to
these roots, exposing the vital significance of salt and fresh
waters to humankind and making a call to arms for the development
of holistic, sustainable relationships with waterways.
Nature religions look to rivers, lakes and oceans for inspiration
and spiritual transformation. 'Deep Blue' brings together the work
of influential scholars in the field of nature religion, ranging
across anthropology, mythology, sociology and psychology. The
essays examine the interrelationship between spiritual practice,
critical thinking, and environmental concern. Tracing the ancient
history of humanity's close relationship with both salt and fresh
water, the book calls for a sustainable relationship with water in
contemporary western culture. 'Deep Blue' will be of interest to
students of paganism and religion, environmental researchers and
activists, and all those involved in the intersection between
religion and ecology.
Following significant changes in the legal profession since the
1980s, how do new organizational forms and actors at the edge of
the law impact upon our understanding of the changing nature of the
core values of mainstream legal professionalism? This
methodological approach brings together a series of case studies
built on original empirical research and focuses on those operating
at the margins of legal professionalism in England and Wales. Also
including comparative material on the US and Canada, the issues
discussed are relevant for common law countries more generally and
the analysis reveals the ways in which an increasingly fluid,
fragmented and heterogeneous legal profession is responding to the
challenges it faces in the early twenty-first century.
Holy Habits is an initiative to nurture Christian discipleship. It
explores Luke's model of church found in Acts 2:42-47, identifies
ten habits and encourages the development of a way of life formed
by them. The habits are: Biblical Teaching, Fellowship, Breaking
Bread, Sharing Resources, Serving, Eating Together, Gladness and
Generosity, Worship, Prayer and Making More Disciples. These Bible
reading notes have been developed to help churches and individuals
explore the Holy Habits through prayerful engagement with the Bible
and live them out in whole-life, missional discipleship.
Holy Habits is an initiative to nurture Christian discipleship. It
explores Luke's model of church found in Acts 2:42-47, identifies
ten habits and encourages the development of a way of life formed
by them. The habits are: Biblical Teaching, Fellowship, Breaking
Bread, Sharing Resources, Serving, Eating Together, Gladness and
Generosity, Worship, Prayer and Making More Disciples. This Bible
study group material has been developed to help churches and
individuals explore the Holy Habits through prayerful engagement
with the Bible and live them out in whole-life, missional
discipleship.
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Little Lost Key
Jordon Jackson; Edited by Jim Henry; Andrew Francis Pollard
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R355
Discovery Miles 3 550
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This popular work has established itself as an essential guide for
the practitioner requiring an understanding of the law of
restrictive covenants affecting freehold land. In this book a
complex topic is made intelligible by easily understood text,
complemented by flowcharts and checklists. This enables the adviser
to solve problems quickly and accurately. The author brings his
extensive experience of cases involving covenants to the work,
dealing with points that arise in practice both comprehensively and
with authority. The work considers all the key areas of law and
practice affecting restrictive covenants. This new edition has been
completely revised and updated with more detailed treatment of
major issues affecting restrictive covenants.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
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