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Our world needs men—not just any men, but the kind who understand and
embrace the unique calling God has given them as men, husbands,
fathers, and leaders.
Scripture provides a code of godly manhood that emboldens you to become
all God designed you to be. In The Man Code, pastor Mark Henry distills
the essentials of biblical masculinity into 12 key action points,
helping you apply the Bible's transformative teaching to every aspect
of your life. In this practical guide, you will be.
• Encouraged toward a greater love for Christ and commitment to living
out God’s priorities
• Empowered to build your livelihood on the foundation of God's Word
• Enabled to experience the real and lasting fulfillment that comes
from living as a godly man
• Equipped to share a clear, biblical ethic of masculinity with the
next generation
Packed with useful insights, authentic stories, and engaging study
questions, The Man Code will inspire you to embrace your true calling
and serve God with courage, conviction, and hope.
If you follow the headlines, you could be forgiven for thinking
that things in Ireland are worse than ever. In fact, we live longer
than ever before, we have never been healthier or better educated,
we earn five times more than our grandparents did, our personal
freedoms exceed those of any previous generation, and the lives of
women and children have been transformed for the better. At a time
when some good news is welcome, this uplifting book tells our
national story through facts and stats, placing Ireland under the
microscope to chart 100 undeniable achievements of the past 100
years. When the State was formed, Ireland was one of the most
poverty-stricken nations in Europe. Now it has the second-highest
quality of life in the world. While there is still more to be done,
In Fact illustrates that Ireland, for all its imperfections, is in
a much better state than you might think.
What others find in CAST YOUR NETS It is said that a good sermon is
delivered with the Bible in one hand and the daily newspaper in the
other. Mark Miller adds a fishing rod to the mix, salting his wise
reflections on ministry, faith, and life with insights that can
only come while patiently waiting for the elusive yet exciting tug
of the Spirit or a sockeye. John Thomas, General Minister and
President, United Church of Christ Mark Henry Miller notices little
things that the rest of us often miss: the person in the corner who
doesn't go along with what others see as a consensus, the
surprising kind act by the contentious opponent, the fish swimming
upstream. And he thinks about what he has noticed and shares what
he has learned. He shows us how to reflect in the midst of
practice, which is essential to effective ministry. William
McKinney--President, Pacific School of Religion, Berkeley, CA Mark
writes with wit, humor, and grace. His insights will stay with you
long after the reading is done. --Jim Thayer, novelist and
professor Short, pithy, inspirational stories for everyday
ministry--a good source for daily devotional material, provocative
meeting openers or sermon illustrations. Each epistle has an easily
grasped point that touches a deep spiritual issue or practice of
both ministry and everyday life lived with intentional
faithfulness. Paul Forman, United Church of Christ Minister Mark
Henry Miller's always insightful, sometimes whimsical pastoral
epistles are a delight and a challenge to read - challenging our
everyday way of seeing things and letting us glimpse a bit of what
might be if we only have eyes to see and ears to hear and hearts to
love. Joanne Carlson Brown, MethodistMinister
"Write Through Chicago" offers both teachers and students a unique
opportunity to connect with Chicago and its remarkable history.
Young writers will mourn at Lincoln's Chicago Funeral, marvel at
the Columbian Exposition, gather with the crowd at the Haymarket
Riot, drive to Riverview Amusement Park, chomp down on the first
McDonald's Burger, and celebrate at Grant Park as Barack Obama
delivers his presidential acceptance speech. They'll craft a wide
range of written forms, from stories and poems to polemics,
monologues, diaries, letters and more. All "Write Through Chicago"
writing activities align to NCTE & Common Core State Standards
for English Language Arts and are supported by a website that
provides students with ready access to specifically selected
research materials. This unique design leaves teachers free to
concentrate on helping students truly "learn about a city by
writing about a city."
"KIRKUS REVIEWS"
www.kirkusreviews.com
...Larson ("The Creative Writing Handbook," 1992) and Boone
("Forest High," 2011) collaborate to produce a guide primarily for
students, although it'd be useful for anyone "curious about Chicago
and anxious to write." Their guide covers nearly a dozen of the
nationwide Common Core State Standards for writing, including
orienting students to the rhetorical forms of argument, exposition
and narrative, and to disciplines like planning, revising and
rewriting. The authors approach their task by presenting students
with a series of archived headlines from different pivotal points
in Chicago history, from the days of fur trader Jean-Baptiste
Pointe DuSable in 1790 to the passage through town of President
Lincoln's funeral train in 1865 to the Great Fire of Chicago in
1871, as well as the Chicago World's Fair of 1893, the World Series
of 1906 and newly elected Barack Obama's victory speech from 2008.
In all these cases and many more, the authors encourage writing
students to extrapolate from the headline and quick bullet points
of the event, with pointed motivations to consider as many angles
as possible, such as the president's Secret Service detail or the
engineers on Lincoln's train. It's also recommended for students to
go online for further research and to imagine how they would have
reacted at the time. Finally, students are encouraged to envision a
new scenario spun off from the headline's setting but involving
them personally. In all cases, students are carefully guided
through the use of educator Benjamin Bloom's Taxonomy of Learning
Objectives, first using so-called lower-level thinking (knowledge,
comprehension and application) and then higher-level thinking
(analysis, synthesis and evaluation). The headlines are well-chosen
to represent a wide range of interests-everything from the social
reforms of Jane Addams and Hull House to the poetry of Carl
Sandburg and the prose of Studs Terkel-and the concept of making
writing exercises come alive through local history is an inspired
one.
A stimulating, well-presented approach to getting students
interested in writing.
"Write Through Chicago" is the best present an English teacher
could receive. This book brings to the forefront a logical yet
creative way of addressing what is truly important: engaging
students to think creatively and insightfully about the world
around them. By allowing students to write themselves into Chicago
history, Larson and Boone have seamlessly brought together the best
parts of teaching and writing. This is the kind of book that makes
teachers want to teach.
"-Deborah Will, former President, Illinois Association of Teachers
of English"
Randall Foster prefers to preach sermons, teach classes, raise
funds, recruit members and make sure he visits church members
before their surgery. Wants to be known for that, if anything a
caring minister you can trust. Dreamer. Alas, if anything can go
wrong...it does. Not a short list of the wrong going...sexual
misconduct charges...divorce...congregational meeting to throw him
out...double-homicide indictment when a church member is found
slumped dead in church's front sanctuary pew. Didn't help the
woman, four months pregnant, is his misconduct accuser and a noosed
rope around her neck is from his pulpit robe. He has to reach up to
touch bottom. Then the surprises begin. Not everyone is against
him. Some figure shadows are evidence of light somewhere. He is
sinking...fast. But not all is lost. An irascible secretary...a
don't let them get you church member...a new fishing guide...and a
salmon-stalking sea lion make for the most unpredictable sliver of
hope. He'll take it. Sinking? Yep. Drown? Not sure.
Easy Street, USA. Tricia Gleason figures it originated in Frisco,
Colorado. No fuss, no sweat, no worry: the combination for a smooth
summer. All set to be a summer intern minister following her first
seminary year, she would not be challenged as she was to read
Sunday worship scripture, teach church youth to fly-cast and visit
hospitals when asked. That changed with one sentence, "Tricia,
forgot to tell you, but my wife and I are leaving Frisco for the
summer; you're in charge." She could only stare. You can't be
serious. The minister was. Before she could think or count to ten
Tricia is THE SUMMER MINISTER IN FRISCO, COLORADO...to preach each
Sunday, to coordinate all church activities and handle any
"surprise events." She wonders if she and her fly rod will ever
have a relationship. The surprises are like fire-crackers
exploding. Happens fast...a church college student is arrested for
armed robbery of a 7/11, is harassed at his university and then
disappears. A couple in the church are found, deader than dead
according to the county sheriff. Figures it is murder/suicide.
Church members rant Tricia only works three hours a week on Sunday
mornings-can never find her during the week. The minister comes
back earlier than he said, but not to take over. Comes back to
defend sexual misconduct charges. And, as Tricia learns, that isn't
even a glimpse into other "ways of ministry." The county sheriff
and detective ask her help. They know she has solved murders
before. She'd rather put on a fishing hat but it doesn't happen
enough. Soon discovers no suicide but a double-murder. Tricia has
hunches but they are a cul-de-sac, leading in circles. When the who
murdered this couple is learned, down deep Tricia isn't sure. And
then, the one arrested states, "Do you think I did this by myself?
Well, folks, guess again." Tricia thought it was musing about
another. She was wrong. So wrong. And, in it all she never finds
Easy Street in Frisco, Colorado.
For the last year Tricia Gleason shifted back and forth from
fishing guide on Tillamook Bay to homicide detective. In the latter
role she "fished" for clues to solve two murders. To celebrate the
new day Tricia makes the decision to leave her fishing and
detective roles. And, to the voice of her heart, sets the goal to
become a minister. Puts her detective hat and her fishing waders in
the closet. Closes the door. Hope? To attend classes at Ocean
Divinity School in Berkeley, California and learn about the Bible.
Hope? To be a good seminary Field Work student at a Palo Alto
Community Congregational Church. Hope? To be effective in leading a
college church group of Stanford students. But then. Her first
night a troubled Stanford student wants to share personal problems.
Tricia glances at her watch, the student reads her dismissing body
language and leaves. Tricia doesn't see her again...until she is in
the morgue. When the casket closes on this coed Tricia's closet
door opens. At first she doesn't know the murderer is in her midst,
closer than bad breath. On goes the detective hat. Tricia learns
she is dealing with more than two women, only distinguished by
reddish-orange hair and neon-blue hair. Tricia surmises there is a
third person, a primary identity. And then she knew: the murderer
actually is someone whose public persona is rational and
impressive. This person wears a mask of sanity, hiding the blue and
red haired impersonations. As Tricia moves in there is only one
problem...she has the wrong sane person in her sights. Would the
mask of sanity ever be ripped off?
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