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These essential documents, formulated over the course of twenty
years, the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of
Confederation, the Constitution, the Federalist Papers, and
President Washington's Farewell Address, encapsulate a period of
crucial significance to the United States and the world. They are
the embodied results of centuries of thought, debate, and
experimentation - finally espoused in a practical fashion. The
foundations for the experiment of liberty and law that is the
United States of America, they are the fundamental guide for
securing the blessings of liberty.
Do not pick up this book unless you want to be changed What good is
it to "know" God if that knowledge does not influence your
attitudes and behavior. For hundreds of years, The Imitation of
Christ and The Practice of the Presence of God have served as
remedies to this dilemma. Going beyond dead formalities and vainly
exalting doctrine over the needs of people's souls, both of these
works demonstrate what the Christian life should look like by
example. With Jesus Christ as the ultimate point of reference,
these two works display the Christian life filled with awe,
reverence, love, mercy, and compassion - a faith that is not alone.
This modern rendering of these devotional classics will stir your
conscience, move your soul, and change your life.
Published in 1861, Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management has
been a benchmark guide for all aspects of running the middle class
Victorian household. Written in the midst of the Industrial
Revolution, Mrs. Beeton addressed a variety of issues relating to
this historically transitional period. This included advice about
cooking, child rearing, hygiene, servant's pay, and much more.
While certainly not a modern book on these topics, this guide
provides great insights into the daily tasks of the 19th century.
From the preface, "I must frankly own, that if I had known,
beforehand, that this book would have cost me the labor that it
has, I should never have been courageous enough to commence it.
What moved me, in the first instance, to attempt a work like this,
was the discomfort and suffering which I had seen brought upon men
and women by household mismanagement. I have always thought that
there is no more fruitful source of family discontent than a
housewife's badly cooked dinners and untidy ways. Men are now so
well served out of doors, -at their clubs, well-ordered taverns,
and dining-houses, that in order to compete with the attractions of
these places, a mistress must be thoroughly acquainted with the
theory and practice of cookery, as well as be perfectly conversant
with all the other arts of making and keeping a comfortable home."
Why study creeds? Isn't the Bible enough? The Bible is everything
we need for salvation and living, yet it is a large work of great
complexity. Developing an accurate understanding of Biblical
concepts is essential to a thriving Christian. Even so, not
everyone has the time or inclination to "reinvent the wheel" - so
to speak. This is where tools such as creeds, confessions, and
catechisms can help. These tools can serve as guides that can
develop systematic ideas for biblical beliefs with specific focus.
Believers seeking to plume, with accuracy and cohesion, the depths
of Scripture, while bringing together a consensus of understanding
and interpretation, developed these statements of faith. Even when
examining a variety of creeds, confessions, and catechisms, what is
striking is not the disagreements in details. Rather, the vast
areas of agreement across the millennia demonstrate that the
consistency of biblical truth is timeless. Why study creeds?
Confessions? Catechisms? They can help you to maximize you Bible
study focus, in a systematic way, to know the Word of God better
and more effectively.
Elizabeth Prentiss was a remarkable woman who authored a number of
notable works in the 19th century. A writing prodigy, she used her
sharp abilities to author stories poems, and even hymns despite
much tragedy in her life. As she later stated, her purpose in
writing, "Much of my experience of life has cost me a great price
and I wish to use it for strengthening and comforting other souls."
This treasury contains her two most important and influential
works, Stepping Heavenward and The Life and Letters of Elizabeth
Prentiss
Summarizing the American experience up to the 1830's Democracy in
America explores why the republican government of the United States
was succeeding when similar undertakings had failed elsewhere.
Based on first hand observations, and balancing the positive and
negative attributes of American culture, Alexis de Tocqueville
provides a seminal analysis of the economic, political, cultural,
and religious components that led to the resounding success of the
young United States of America.
Born over a century apart, one into poverty and the other into
slavery, Benjamin Franklin and Frederick Douglass embody the
American ideals of success through hard work, vision, and freedom.
At the end of their lives, both men were renowned statesmen,
admired all over the world. Each is a vivid example of the endless
possibilities available to free people.
The American War of Independence was one of the first political
upheavals in history based primarily on ideology. Subsequent
history has demonstrated the importance of philosophical
justification for the instigation of any radical political action
of comparable ambition to the Revolution of 1776. However, in
recent years the true nature of the ideas that helped fortify the
American revolutionaries has come into question, with much of this
controversy centering on the true origin of the concepts contained
in the Declaration of Independence. Calvinism and the Declaration
of Independence seeks to investigate whether the political
traditions of the United States were entirely products of the
Enlightenment or of the wider Calvinistic-Reformed-Puritan
traditions of England and her American colonies. While the Reformed
tradition of the Anglo-American culture may not take exclusive
credit for the ideological traditions that influenced the
Revolution in the colonies, its influence was great.
Conspiracy Rhetoric seeks to evaluate of the growing persuasive
appeal of conspiracy theories within mainstream American society.
The examination of this phenomenon as a contemporary social
narrative proceeds through a content analysis of its public
literature in order to determine what common links connect the
various expressions of this cultural genre, and how its existence
reflects on the larger culture. Through a literature review,
reflecting pertinent contemporary studies and a methodology and
case study of rhetorical analysis based on classical paradigms
Conspiracy Rhetoric endeavors to foment a larger dialogue
pertaining to communication forms in contemporary culture.
The fruit of a lifetime of study and practical reflection, Calvin's
Institutes of the Christian Religion was a milestone of Protestant
thought in its time, and has continued to be very influential for
over 450 years. Deploying a synthesis of Biblical, theological, and
classical thought, the Institutes argue forcefully for the
scriptural basis of the Reformation, as well as establishing
practical guidelines for developing a biblical worldview touching
all aspects of life. In doing so, Calvin developed a vast
introduction to the Bible that, in many respects, transcends time
and place. Many of the issues Calvin addressed were timeless and
universal, and this is the reason for the work's longevity. This
new edition of Calvin's Institutes, adapted from Beveridge's
seminal translation, employs contemporary language and updated
Biblical references - making it accessible to students, scholars,
and anyone interested in Biblical studies or historic theology.
Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion is an essential
addition to any library of Biblical studies.
Freedom can lead to liberty, or it can descend into chaos.
Rousseau's The Social Contract, Paine's Common Sense, and Burke's
Reflections on the Revolution in France encompass the ideas,
progress, and results of reform and revolutionary change. Rousseau
reasoned that people are born free and act as a collective
sovereign - owing both freedom and duty under the auspices of the
general will, embodied in government. Paine wrote Common Sense in
the seminal year of 1775. Using a reasoned and accessible style, he
brought forth numerous arguments to demonstrate the logic of
launching an American Revolution. Burke's Reflections, while
specifically aimed at the French Revolution, demonstrate the
superiority of practical solutions over abstract concepts. Each of
these works prominently displays the importance of changes leading
to freedom. These works demarcate a firm delineation between
constructive and destructive change and how it affects human
freedom.
Written in 1689, Locke's Two Treatises of Government disputes the
logic of the "divine right of kings," and proceeds to develop a
theory of society base on the ideas of natural rights and the
social contract. Locke acknowledged the necessity of the state, but
saw it primarily as a tool to promote the protection of people and
property, as well as for the restraint of violence. Based on the
consent of the governed, Locke's conception of government
highlights the importance of accountability between government and
citizen. This special edition also includes the text of the Magna
Charta - one of the foundations of English law, Locke's Letter
Concerning Toleration, and The Reasonableness of Christianity.
This original text of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is
interspersed with pieces of modern art, creating a fun reading
event for the entire family.
The result of over twenty years of research The Spirit of the Laws
encompasses a vast array of topics and issues. This groundbreaking
work provides a comprehensive examination of some of the most
important topics relating to liberty. These include
constitutionalism, the separation of powers, the primacy of civil
liberty and the rule of law, and the power of the local community
in establishing political institut
The ideas in Lex Rex predate modern concepts of nationalism and
politics. They are older than the United States Constitution, as
well as the American Revolution - where many modern ideas of
liberty originated. Lex Rex is even older than the Enlightenment
that receives so much credit for concepts such as popular
sovereignty, limited government, separation of powers, and
individual liberty. Nevertheless, Samuel Rutherford's Lex Rex -
written at a time that viewed kings as vessels of divine power -
raised a Scriptural standard arguing for the dignity of the people
and the accountability of earthly governments. Although some would
seek to pigeonhole the book as merely a tract on civil resistance,
Lex Rex contains a comprehensive examination of a Christian view of
civil government. In doing so, Lex Rex actually formulates a
blueprint for freedom applicable for any time and any place.
Rutherford hoped to demonstrate the need for government based on
law instead of the arbitrary decisions of fallible humanity.
Throughout this process, the Bible is the final authority and basis
for law. This Scriptural base was a primary reason for both the
great support and opposition that met Lex Rex.
The Wealth of Nations was the world's introduction to capitalism
and economics in the modern sense. Smith developed the ideas of
free trade and enlightened self interest as in ultimately bringing
prosperity and forming a more just society. Freedom, labor, and
responsibility form a foundation for the development and
accumulation of wealth.
The Law of Nations focuses on the rights and obligations of what we
now term international relations. Outlining ideas that nations
should develop reciprocal respect, this work was influential during
the founding era of the United States.
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