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This book was not written in effort to bash the Bible or the KJV. This book exposes the problems with the belief of translation inspiration and proves that all translations, including the King James Version, contain errors. After reading this book you will understand how the KJV Only belief came to be and why it is not true, who King James was and why he had the Bible translated, who were the translators and more. This book exposes the errors and corruption inside the KJV as well as the reasoning behind those who hold the KJV Only belief. Inside the pages of this book you will learn questions to ask those who believe the KJV is inerrant or inspired and how to respond to questions those individuals typically ask of those who do not share their belief. This book shows how charts are made to look like modern translations are guilty of many things of which the KJV is also guilty. There is so much information packed into this book you won't want to put it down.
The face of AIDS at the end of the twentieth century is just as likely to belong to the homeless, the drug users, the poor and forgotten members of society as it is to gay men. Invisible to much of society and without the resources (political, emotional, and financial) to get help, these are the patients who end their days at the Spellman Center at St. Clare's Hospital in New York's Hell's Kitchen. But even in this carkest circumstance, in Spellman's chaotic and filthy hallways, redemption happens, life is reborn. Daniel Baxter, who cared for the marginalized patients in conditions symbolic of their station in life, provides readers with an unprecedented profile of AIDS. Offering gritty details from his three-and-a-half years at Spellman, Baxter also passes along his memories of the hope that rises from AIDS's ashes -- the loving gesture where there was only hate, the lucidity where there was only confusion, the emotional connection where there was only alienation. Baxter tells the stories of patients living each day with grace in a place where people find a reason to care.
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