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During the spring semester of 1975, Wayne Woodward, a popular young
English teacher at La Plata Junior High School in Hereford, Texas,
was unceremoniously fired. His offense? Founding a local chapter of
the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Believing he had been
unjustly targeted, Woodward sued the school district. You Will
Never Be One of Us chronicles the circumstances surrounding
Woodward's dismissal and the ensuing legal battle. Revealing a
uniquely regional aspect of the cultural upheaval of the 1970s, the
case offers rare insight into the beginnings of the rural-urban,
local-national divide that continues to roil American politics. By
1975 Hereford, a quiet farming town in the Texas Panhandle, had
become "majority minority," and Woodward's students were mostly the
children of Mexican and Mexican American workers at local
agribusinesses. Most townspeople viewed the ACLU as they did
Woodward's long hair and politics: as threatening a radical liberal
takeover-and a reckoning for the town's white power structure.
Locals were presented with a choice: either support school
officials who sought to rid themselves of a liberal troublemaker,
or side with an idealistic young man whose constitutional rights
might have been violated. In Timothy Bowman's deft telling,
Woodward's story exposes the sources and depths of rural America's
political culture during the latter half of the twentieth century
and the lengths to which small-town conservatives would go to
defend it. In defining a distinctive rural, middle-American
"Panhandle conservatism," You Will Never Be One of Us extends the
study of the conservative movement beyond the suburbs of the
Sunbelt and expands our understanding of a continuing, perhaps
deepening, rift in American political culture.
"What good does it do to say that the words of the Bible] are
inspired by God if most people have absolutely no access to these
words, but only to more or less clumsy renderings of these words
into a language? . . . How does it help us to say that the Bible is
the inerrant word of God if in fact we don't have the words that
God inerrantly inspired? . . . We have only error-ridden copies,
and the vast majority of these are centuries removed from the
originals." So contends Bart D. Ehrman in his bestselling
Misquoting Jesus. If altogether true, we have little reason to put
our confidence in Scripture. Add to this Ehrman's contention that
what we read in the New Testament represents the winners' version
of events, twisted to suit their own purposes and not at all a
faithful recounting of what really happened, and the case for
skepticism and unbelief gives every appearance of being on solid
footing. But are things really so bad off? Were the New Testament
documents widely distorted by copyists? Can we in fact have no idea
what was in the originals? Do we have no hope of knowing what
eyewitnesses said and thought? Are other documents left out of the
New Testament better sources for understanding early Christianity?
While readily conceding that Ehrman has many of his facts straight,
pastor and researcher Timothy Paul Jones argues that Ehrman is far
too quick to jump to false and unnecessary conclusions. In clear,
straightforward prose, Jones explores and explains the ins and outs
of copying the New Testament, why lost Christianities were lost,
and why the Christian message still rings true today.
Christian History Made Easy summarizes the most important events in
the history of the church, from the time of Jesus to modern day. It
explains early church history, the Church Councils, the Great
Schism, the Crusades, Francis of Assisi, John Wycliffe, Martin
Luther, the Protestant Reformation, and more. It presents key
church history events and great Christian leaders everyone should
know, along with full-color church history timelines, photos,
pictures, and maps. The study guide and worksheets in the back
makes this book an excellent Bible Study, adults Sunday school
topics, or homeschool curriculum. Author Timothy Paul Jones makes
Christian history refreshingly fun while at the same time informing
Christians about the history of the Christian faith.
Often played down in favour of the larger competition for empire
between England and France, the influence of the Spanish in English
Carolina and the English in Spanish Florida created a rivalry that
shaped the early history of colonial south-east America. This study
is the first to tell the full story of this rivalry.
Often played down in favour of the larger competition for empire
between England and France, the influence of the Spanish in English
Carolina and the English in Spanish Florida created a rivalry that
shaped the early history of colonial south-east America. This study
is the first to tell the full story of this rivalry.
So what does the Bible actually say about the end times that lead
to the return of Jesus Christ? The differing ideas that divide
believers into four major points-of-view are examined in the Four
Views of the End Times pamphlet. This bestseller tackles Pre- and
Post-millennialism, as well as Historic Premillennialism and
Amillennialism in12 panels of objective information. For each view,
the glossy full-color pamphlet includes a definition of the
position with supporting Scriptures, a time line of the view's
popularity, and a sampling of Christian leaders supporting that
view. Size: 8.5x 5.5 unfolds to 33 long. Fits inside most Bible
covers.
The events leading up to the return of Jesus Christ are
controversial, and many Christians identify with one of four
positions: Dispensational Premillennialism, Historic
Premillennialism, Amillennialism, or Postmillennialism. The Four
Views of the End Times pamphlet makes the viewpoints and their
biblical support easy to understand. Packed with information
regarding what Jesus and Paul taught about the end times, the
pamphlet also includes a list of important terms and their
definitions, such as: Church Eschatology Rapture The Great
Tribulation Preterism Four Views of the End Times pamphlet
addresses end-time eschatology, outlining the four major points of
view regarding events leading up to the second coming of Christ.
Below is the outline applied to each of the four views with a few
examples: What is emphasized by the view
Which Scriptures seem to support the position
The time period for the view's main popularity Dispensational
Premillennialism Gained acceptance in the 1800s and is still
widespread Historic PremillennialismThe earliest view following the
time of the apostles Amillennialism Emerged in the 5th century;
championed by St. Augustine Postmillennialism Became popular in the
1800s but decreased in 1900s as a result of the Great
Depression
A graphic timeline showing the order of events held by that
view
A sampling of Christian leaders sharing the viewpoint
Dispensational Premillennialism Dr. Charles Stanley Rev. Tim Lahaye
Hal Lindsay Historic Premillennialism Justin Martyr AD 100-165 John
Warwick Montgomery - current Amillennialism Martin Luther John
Calvin Postmillennialism Jonathan Edwards C. H. Spurgeon R.C.
Sproul
From Moses to Gutenberg, easily find out how we got the Bible we
have today and discover why we can trust it with this highly-visual
and easy-to-understand handbook on the history of Bible! Dive into
the fascinating stories of the people who risked their lives to
print and distribute the Word of God (Tyndale, Wycliffe, etc).
Perfect for personal or small group use. Have you ever wondered
where the Bible came from? Who wrote the books of the Bible and how
did they end up together? Perhaps you have been asked by a friend
or coworker about books that were cut out of the Bible. Through
seven dynamic chapters in How We Got the Bible, expert Dr. Timothy
Paul Jones will guide you through all the important questions about
the Holy Bible to show you why it can be trusted. Filled with
dramatic stories and highly-visual charts and illustrations, this
exciting Bible History handbook will take you from the earliest
clay tablets and papyrus copies to the first bound Bible and the
various Bible translations that we use today!
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In His Hands (Paperback)
Timothy Paul Neller
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R590
R501
Discovery Miles 5 010
Save R89 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In "Perspectives on a Child's Education," proponents of four very
different learning options present their faith-based positions on
how a parent should answer the question, "Where should I send my
child to school?" Troy Temple (International Center for Youth
Ministry) is convinced every Christian parent should consider
public schooling. G. Tyler Fischer (Veritas Academy) believes open
admission Christian schools are best for Christians and
non-Christians alike. Mark Eckel (Mahseh Center) favors covenantal
Christian schools that don't enroll non-Christians. Michael Wilder
(Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) advocates homeschooling.
For each contributor's chapter, a counterpoint chapter from the
other contributors follows with a goal of determining which view is
most in line with what the Bible teaches.
This book is about how big is the universe and how small are
quarks, and what are the sizes of dozens of things between these
two extremes. It describes the sizes of atoms and planets, quarks
and galaxies, cells and sequoias. It is a romp through forty-five
orders of magnitude from the smallest sub-nuclear particles we have
measured, to the edge of the observed universe. It also looks at
time, from the epic age of the cosmos to the fleeting lifetimes of
ethereal particles. It is a narrative that trips its way from
stellar magnitudes to the clocks on GPS satellites, from the nearly
logarithmic scales of a piano keyboard through a system of numbers
invented by Archimedes and on to the measurement of the size of an
atom. Why do some things happen at certain scales? Why are cells a
hundred thousandths of a meter across? Why are stars never smaller
than about 100 million meters in diameter? Why are trees limited to
about 120 meters in height? Why are planets spherical, but
asteroids not? Often the size of an object is determined by
something simple but quite unexpected. The size of a cell and a
star depend in part on the ratio of surface area to volume. The
divide between the size of a spherical planet and an irregular
asteroid is the balance point between the gravitational forces and
the chemical forces in nature. Most importantly, with a very few
basic principles, it all makes sense. The world really is a most
reasonable place.
During the spring semester of 1975, Wayne Woodward, a popular young
English teacher at La Plata Junior High School in Hereford, Texas,
was unceremoniously fired. His offense? Founding a local chapter of
the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Believing he had been
unjustly targeted, Woodward sued the school district. You Will
Never Be One of Us chronicles the circumstances surrounding
Woodward’s dismissal and the ensuing legal battle. Revealing a
uniquely regional aspect of the cultural upheaval of the 1970s, the
case offers rare insight into the beginnings of the rural-urban,
local-national divide that continues to roil American politics. By
1975 Hereford, a quiet farming town in the Texas Panhandle, had
become “majority minority,” and Woodward’s students were
mostly the children of Mexican and Mexican American workers at
local agribusinesses. Most townspeople viewed the ACLU as they did
Woodward’s long hair and politics: as threatening a radical
liberal takeover—and a reckoning for the town’s white power
structure. Locals were presented with a choice: either support
school officials who sought to rid themselves of a liberal
troublemaker, or side with an idealistic young man whose
constitutional rights might have been violated. In Timothy
Bowman’s deft telling, Woodward’s story exposes the sources and
depths of rural America's political culture during the latter half
of the twentieth century and the lengths to which small-town
conservatives would go to defend it. In defining a distinctive
rural, middle-American “Panhandle conservatism,” You Will Never
Be One of Us extends the study of the conservative movement beyond
the suburbs of the Sunbelt and expands our understanding of a
continuing, perhaps deepening, rift in American political culture.
Heaven is multiethnic. Are you ready for that? The Bible tells us
that the congregation gathered around God's heavenly throne will be
"a vast multitude from every nation, tribe, people, and language,"
all singing the praises of the Lamb. God's intention has always
been to delight for all eternity in a redeemed community of ethnic
diversity. But this diverse community shouldn't have to wait until
eternity to begin! It can be a reality in our own local churches
here and now. Patterned after a worship service, In Church as It Is
in Heaven gives biblical warrant for such a community and shows how
multiethnic churches provide a unique apologetic for the gospel.
Along the way, the authors tell the story of their own church—a
majority-white congregation which is being transformed into a
family that reflects the diversity of heaven. The multiethnic
kingdom is not just a nice idea, or an abstract theory. It's a
reality—one we can enter into today.
The Bible is a cobbled-together selection of ancient writings that
have been changed so many times by so many people over hundreds of
years that surely the text can no longer be trusted - right?
Certainly, there are plenty of people who take this view. Timothy
Paul Jones here addresses the fact that the Bible is a difficult
book to believe. It is full of incidents that seem highly
improbable, if not impossible. Written for people who are sceptical
of its accuracy, and of its authority, this book takes a reasonable
look at the claims made about the Bible.
No one has ever seen a quark. Yet physicists seem to know quite
a lot about the properties and behavior of these ubiquitous
elementary particles. Here a top researcher introduces us to a
fascinating but invisible realm that is part of our everyday life.
Timothy Smith tells us what we know about quarks--and how we know
it.
Though the quarks that make science headlines are typically
laboratory creations generated under extreme conditions, most
quarks occur naturally. They reside in the protons and neutrons
that make up almost all of the universe's known matter, from human
DNA to distant nebulae, from books and tables to neutron stars.
Smith explains what these quarks are, how they act, and why
physicists believe in them sight unseen. How do quarks arrange
themselves? What other combinations can nature make? How do quarks
hold nuclei together? What else is happening in their hidden
worlds? It turns out that these questions can be answered using a
few simple principles, such as the old standby: opposites attract.
With these few principles, Smith shows how quarks dance around each
other and explains what physicists mean when they refer to "up" and
"down" quarks and talk about a quark's color, flavor, and spin.
Smith also explains how we know what we know about these oddly
aloof particles, which are eternally confined inside larger
particles. He explains how quark experiments are mounted and how
massive accelerators, targets, and detectors work together to
collect the data that scientists use to infer what quarks are up
to.
A nonmathematical tour of the quark world, this book is written
for students, educators, and all who enjoy scientific
exploration--whether they seek a taste of subnuclear physics or
just wonder about nature on the smallest of scales.
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