|
|
Showing 1 - 25 of
41 matches in All Departments
Election 2000 and September 11th. This is a chronicle of the
life-changing events that covered the period October 2000 through
October 2001. A time when a foreign army of religious fanatics
declared war against our economy, our military, our sovereignty,
and our culture. A war, as President Bush has said, between the
forces of good and evil! And it marked the moment America came of
age, and truly changed forever!
President Ronald Reagan was, and continues to be, a shining example
of what public service and political leadership are all about:
Duty, Honor, Country. His life's work for America is something
worth remembering and honoring, and we can do that by being the
voices through which new generations of Americans re-discover the
wonderful and good philosophy of our beloved 40th President of
these United States. Within this work is the philosophy and body of
evidence -- the blueprint, if you will -- to recapture and sustain
America's march to greatness. It embodies the life and legacy of
President Reagan. It is a priceless collection of his words. Judge
Hal Moroz, from the Introduction. "But I never thought it was my
style or the words I used that made a difference: it was the
content. I wasn't a great communicator, but I communicated great
things, and they didn't spring full bloom from my brow, they came
from the heart of a great nation--from our experience, our wisdom,
and our belief in the principles that have guided us for two
centuries. They called it the Reagan Revolution. Well, I'll accept
that, but for me it always seemed more like The Great Re-Discovery,
a re-discovery of our values and our common sense." President
Ronald Reagan.
"Average Americans" by Theodore "Ted" Roosevelt III, now with a
special Introduction by Hal Moroz. This is the defining book on
America's involvement in World War I, by the eldest son of
President Theodore Roosevelt. Riveting and prophetic, this book has
many lessons for modern-day America. It is a MUST READ for any
American interested in the lessons of the past for building a
better future "Average Americans" are anything but "Average." They
are exceptional They "are endowed by their Creator with certain
inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness." The Founding Fathers knew that, and so did
the legions of their progeny, among which are included the author
of this book and those who stood -- and continue to stand -- watch
on the very edge of freedom's domain. This is their story Or should
I say, it is our story "Average Americans" is a documentary about
fellow-Americans at war, and the Spirit it takes to win the peace.
It is, in the final analysis, a lesson for us all, and an
understanding that it will take the sacrifice and concerted efforts
of "Average Americans," like you and me, to preserve, protect, and
defend this "last best hope of man on earth " We can do that "And,
after all," as President Reagan said in his first inaugural
address, "why shouldn't we believe that? We are Americans " Hal
Moroz, U.S. Army Retired, from the Introduction
"Resurrecting Jesus: Separating the Fiction of the Pundits from the
Truth of the Gospels" by Hal Moroz. It is the goal of this book
that you, the reader, resurrect Jesus In your life and community,
have Him live in and through you And it begins by resurrecting the
name of Jesus during the Christmas season, and at Easter time, and
throughout the year. Resurrecting Jesus means believing the Gospel
and turning from the direction the pundits would have you go, and
seeking the Kingdom of God. And if and when you find it -- and I
pray you will find it -- share it The simple truth is that in Mark
1:15, Jesus Christ commands, "believe the Gospel." However, the sad
truth is that few actually believe the Gospel. Case in point is the
chief critic of the Gospel, a pompous cable TV personality and
author who has effectively rewritten the gospel, proclaiming,
amongst other things, that the gospels are in error. That is to
say, Jesus, his mother, and Joseph did not travel from Bethlehem to
Egypt to escape Herod's plot following His birth, Jesus was killed
because He interfered with Judeo-Roman commerce, Jesus did not
speak from the cross because he was suffocating at the time and was
unable to speak, and the cross was not actually a cross, but a "T."
Literally anything is said to undermine our traditional
understanding of Jesus and our belief in the inerrancy of the Holy
Bible, and the list of these outrageous claims by the so-called
"experts" goes on and on. This media pundit, and others like him,
have rewritten the gospels, and in so doing, attempt to project
their assertions as fact and undermine Holy Scripture. Such efforts
of men to proclaim themselves as wise as God -- or wiser -- are
nothing new in the history of mankind. We read about them time and
again. From the Garden of Eden through the building of the Tower of
Babel, and from the Pharisees who plotted to kill Jesus to the
biblical rewriters of the modern era, the folly of such men is
exposed as foolishness, with grave consequences. These men are
wrong ... and this book tells you why Also by the bestselling
author: "Living a Godly Life" by Hal Moroz
This is a powerful account of the Fourth Crusade, which defined a
pivotal time in the history of the world. A time when Christian
soldiers - Crusaders - set forth from the comfort and safety of
their homelands to defend the rights of Christian pilgrims and free
the ancient Holy Lands from the tyranny of their muslim oppressors.
This book is to be read as one would read a personal journal or
diary, entry by entry. There are no chapters here, just a step by
step trek to recapture hallowed ground. It is a powerful and
captivating chronicle, written by Geoffry de Villehardouin
(1160-1212 AD), an actual participant in the Fourth Crusade.
Geoffry was a soldier, a Christian Knight, and one of the special
envoys sent to facilitate transport of the expedition. This is his
story of the Fourth Crusade, a story of Christendom at the end of
the Dark Ages. A true classic of great historic significance,
providing rare insight to the courage and faith of these mighty
Christian knights. Many have debated the successes and failures of
the Fourth Crusade, and the ramifications of the conquering of
Constantinople in 1204, but none can deny the miraculous
achievements of these Christian Knights. The First Crusade gave
birth to a new morning in the Holy Land and the Kingdom of
Jerusalem on July 15, 1099, when a victorious Christian army raised
the Cross of Christ once again in the City of David. And the
Crusades that followed served notice on tyrants everywhere that
their campaigns of mayhem and oppression would not go unchallenged.
These Crusades achieved that goal, and ushered in the end to the
Dark Ages, and made possible the founding of a bright shining city
on a hill. Judge Hal Moroz, from the Introduction
The story of King Arthur and his knights is the story of
Christendom at the birth of the Dark Ages, when the light of Rome
was extinguished and a mere remnant of Christianity flickered like
a lone candle light amidst a dark and desolate world. But the story
of King Arthur and his knights is more than legend. It is the story
of hope, and inspiration, and the noble things of life. It is a
picture reminiscent of the life and times of King David. Stories of
biblical proportion on causes worth fighting and dying for, and it
all begins in the wake of the fall of the Roman Empire, the
greatest power on the face of the earth that went from persecuting
Christians to becoming the one and only Christian nation on the
planet. "The Legends of King Arthur and His Knights" by Sir James
Knowles is an entertaining and thought-provoking portrait of
Medieval life, where a lone remnant champions the godly virtues and
guiding principles of Christendom, and sows the seeds of a Great
Crusade that would give birth to a new morning in the Holy Land and
the Kingdom of Jerusalem by the Crusaders on July 15, 1099. This
culminating event ushered in the end of the Dark Ages, and the
founding of a great city on a hill. Judge Hal Moroz, from the
Introduction
|
|