As the children of God hibernate through this sin-infested, morally decadent world, laden with all sorts of problems, nothing so lightens the weight of their suffering and lifts up their soul as the prospect of meeting and spending everlasting time with the Lord in the New Jerusalem. The true believers groan in their earthly tabernacles - their bodies - praying to be clothed with their heavenly tabernacles. Filling their hearts is the expectation of the rapture. If you truly desire to enjoy the presence of God eternally, if you yearn to reign with Christ in the Age to come, then this book is for you. It teaches you how to serve God acceptably. It very carefully and thoroughly explains that your descent, culture, nationality or language does not and cannot disqualify you from entry into the New Jerusalem. And most importantly, it teaches that the Heavenly Father recognises diversity and inclusiveness, and that these two concepts are richly celebrated in the Heavenly Jerusalem, the City of the Great King. Some of the issues discussed include: [ God of diversity and inclusiveness [ Righteousness of God [ Fullness of the Gentiles [ Spiritual Israelites [ Earthly and heavenly Jerusalems [ 'I will put my law in your inward part
This text presents for the first time the history of international business, using both a case and contextual approach. Case studies from around the world are analyzed in both their internal and external contexts. Divided into five geographical sections--Europe, North America, Central America/South America/the Caribbean, Africa, and Asia/the Western Pacific--the text features case studies of particular businesses of various periods, as well as essays on international business and economic integration in the particular regions. Introductions to each section define main themes and relate the case studies to those themes; commentaries introduce each case study and summarize key issues. This pioneering text is suitable for upper-division courses in international business history. It can also serve as a supplementary text in courses in international economic history, international economic relations, economic development, and comparative management
In rural western Pennsylvania in 1857, the pressing matters of the day—slavery, abolition, states’ rights and bleeding Kansas—can seem faraway and irrelevant. In fact, the issue of most concern to a few of the doctors in Hartsgrove is the illegality of the use of human cadavers for medical dissection, an inconvenience which forces them to their own, criminal devices—the digging up, or “resurrection,” of a specimen on their own. In the nearby Negro settlement of Little Brier, meanwhile, current concerns have taken on a more immediate aspect, as several of the free Blacks there have become involved in the Underground Railroad. When the most active among them, a bootmaker by the name of Fudge Van Pelt, dies under mysterious circumstances and his body just happens to be the one resurrected by the doctors, the lives of the two communities begin to merge in strange and dangerous ways. When a young, white school mistress is found hanged, and a little girl’s body is missing from her grave, the mysteries only deepen."--
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.