Classic Festival Solos, Volume 2 continues to afford the advancing student the opportunity to find performance materials graded from easy to more challenging, including exposure to a variety of musical styles. Many of these works appear on state contest lists. Titles: * Andantino (Sor, arr. Dishinger) * Aria (Bach, arr. Fitzgerald) * Chorale Melody, No. 19 (Bach, arr. Smith) * Dedication (Pelz) * The Easy Winners (Joplin, arr. Herriot/Cable) * El Verano (Knipfel/Leonard) * Happy Go Lucky (Smith) * Introduction and Fantasy (Fitzgerald) * La Casa (Knipfel/Leonard) * Road Runner (Smith) * Scarlatti Suite (Scarlatti, arr. Fitzgerald) * Valse "Au Printemps" (Smith)
Classic Festival Solos offers the advancing instrumentalist an array of materials graded from easy to more challenging. There are different titles for each instrument, and an assortment of musical styles has been included in each book for variety. Many of the solos appear on state contest lists. Titles: * Allegro (Saint-Saens, arr. Dishinger) * Aurora (Ostling) * Bordogni Medley (arr. Bowles) * Bourree (Handel, arr. Swanson) * Dance of the Slovaks (Bartok, arr. Dishinger) * The Elephant Dance (Weber) * Gallant Captain (arr. Ostling) * Largetto and Allegro (Handel, arr. Little) * Legend (Stoutamire) * Military March (arr. Little) * Minuet (Eccles, arr. Dishinger) * Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child (Spiritual, arr. Barnes) * Where'er You Walk (Handel, arr. Swanson) * Work Song (Barnes)
Classic Festival Solos, Volume 2 continues to afford the advancing student the opportunity to find performance materials graded from easy to more challenging, including exposure to a variety of musical styles. Many of these works appear on state contest lists. Titles: * Aria from La Clemenza di Tito (Mozart, arr. Little) * Campus Queen (Weber) * Flow Gently Sweet Afton (Traditional, arr. Little) * Folksong Melodies (Traditional, arr. Ostling/Weber) * Neutron Stars (Belden, arr. Little) * On Wings of Song (Mendelssohn, arr. Ostling/Weber) * Rocked In the Cradle of the Deep (Knight, arr. Ostling/Weber) * Romance and Scherzo (Cohen) * Song from Timon of Athens (Purcell, arr. Little) * Sunday (Brahms, arr. Little) * Texas Horizons (Quate/Little) * The Tubateer Polka (Bell)
The title for my novel is taken from a scripture verse out of the book of Revelation. The connection is made by relating that verse to Jeffery Lucas, the main character in The Pretender Lamb. Prior to meeting Jessica Thompson, Jeffery spends most of his early life only pretending to be what others expected of him While he was on a Fall vacation in the Smokey Mountains of Tennessee, Jeffery meets and falls in love with Jessica, a school teacher from Madison, Wisconsin. A misunderstanding during the single night they stayed on the summit of Mt. Le Conte leads them into a journey of slopes and grades over the following years of their lives. The hopes and dreams of both Jeffery and Jessica are laid bare as they allow themselves to be completely open with another person for the first time in their lives. Jeffery tells of how he was raised in a small Iowa town and learned at an early age to fend for himself. Jessica tells of how fate had found her still single at thirty, but with a satisfied mind. The Pretender Lamb is a love story bursting at the seams with twists and turns. Its pages are splashed with equal amounts of humor, sadness, faith and hope. Those on both sides of the morality issue will get a chuckle from this story although they may need a good supply of tissues to dab at their tears as well. The Pretender Lamb takes a pass at explaining the experience of dejavu from a Christian point of view. Although the explanation is no more than an opinion, it should provoke some deeper thought on the subject. Anyone who has had heart problems, or known someone that has, will feel a strong tugging at their emotions as they get lost in the lives of Jeffery and Jessica. The Pretender Lamb is a story of failing health and healing, and of broken spirits and those lifted up again.
A riveting tale of two childhood friends now doctors caught on opposite sides inside a Nazi concentration camp. What occurs to both men is an example of how God uses adversity in men's lives to turn ordinary men into great leaders.
Oft Perchance to Dream' is a science fiction novel referencing various cosmologies of physics -- Newtonian, Einsteinian Relativity, Quantum Mechanics and String Theory -- to further a storyline couched within a fantasy world set within lucid dreams. The novel recounts the adventures and conflicts of Malcolm MacPherson, a professor and researcher of Dream Studies who is an adept at lucid dreaming. Unpredictably during one of his nightly lucid dreams a 3500 year old Olmec shamanic sorcerer unexpectedly attacks the professor -- an adept persisting in the dream-space, outside Newtonian Time, able to employ shapeshifting and sorcery to achieve his nefarious end of killing Malcolm. Then not long after, the professor learns that a shapeshifting shaman has also attacked two of his dream studies students while dream-walking: one of whom remains locked in the dream, while the other manages to escape back to waking reality. So the professor must find a way to rescue the comatose student from the dream world and the shamanic sorcerer holding her enthralled.As the bizarre mystery gradually unfolds within his lucid dreams, the Malcolm MacPherson begins to understand the overwhelming mystical forces arrayed against him. Assisted by his graduate students, also proficient at waking consciously in the dream-space; the academic fellowship must utilize lucid dreaming and dream-walking to locate Malcolm's dead dream teacher; lost on the astral plane 25 years past after the silver-thread connecting her astral body to her corporeal body was severed by her death due to an overdose of sleeping pills. It soon becomes imperative for the professor and his graduate students to delve ever deeper into lucid dreams and dream-walking, so that Malcolm can come to terms with his 'true nature' and survive by employing an array of sortileges and thaumaturgies to defeat his aboriginal adversaries. And in the end, he must learn to use the power of his 'true nature' to defeat the shamanic sorcerers hunting him and his students, so that he might free his deceased dream teacher from the astral plane.
With the same passionate scholarship and analytical audacity he brought to the character of God, Jack Miles now approaches the literary and theological enigma of Jesus. In so doing, he tells the story of a broken promise–God’s ancient covenant with Israel–and of its strange, unlooked-for fulfillment. For, having abandoned his chosen people to an impending holocaust at the hands of their Roman conquerors. God, in the person of Jesus, chooses to die with them, in what is effectively an act of divine suicide. On the basis of this shocking argument, Miles compels us to reassess Christ’s entire life and teaching: His proclivity for the powerless and disgraced. His refusal to discriminate between friends and enemies. His transformation of defeat into a victory that redeems not just Israel but the entire world. Combining a close reading of the Gospels with a range of reference that includes Donne, Nietzche, and Elie Wiesel, Christ: A Crisis in the Life of God is a work of magnificent eloquence and imagination.
This devotional paraphrase brings the thoughts expressed in the Bible into clear focus.The result is that you find not only more understanding in reading the Bible, but more joy. Perfect for devotional reading, this edition features an easier-to-use format.
First published in 1996, this work covers all the major sectors of policing in the United States. Political events such as the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, have created new policing needs while affecting public opinion about law enforcement. This third edition of the "Encyclopedia" examines the theoretical and practical aspects of law enforcement, discussing past and present practices.
This groundbreaking study focuses on the reconfiguring of the character of the Prodigal Son and his family as they appear in drama, novels, and poetry in English from the fifteenth to the twenty-first centuries.
Evolution has provided a new understanding of reality, with revolutionary consequences for Christianity. In an evolutionary perspective the incarnation involved God entering the evolving human species to help it imitate the trinitarian altruism in whose image it was created and counter its tendency to self-absorption. Primarily, however, the evolutionary achievement of Jesus was to confront and overcome death in an act of cosmic significance, ushering humanity into the culminating stage of its evolutionary destiny, the full sharing of God’s inner life. Previously such doctrines as original sin, the fall, sacrifice, and atonement stemmed from viewing death as the penalty for sin and are shown not only to have serious difficulties in themselves, but also to emerge from a Jewish culture preoccupied with sin and sacrifice that could not otherwise account for death. The death of Jesus on the cross is now seen as saving humanity, not from sin, but from individual extinction and meaninglessness. Death is now seen as a normal process that affect all living things and the religious doctrines connected with explaining it in humans are no longer required or justified. Similar evolutionary implications are explored affecting other subjects of Christian belief, including the Church, the Eucharist, priesthood, and moral behavior.
When no hope is left, to whom should we turn? Through the words of Jesus as He was dying on the Cross, Jack Hayford unfolds the secret of triumphing over the ultimate season of suffering. Establishing a framework for dealing with hardship, Hope for a Hopeless Day challenges readers to examine the way they handle trials and encourages them to focus on the power that frees - the cross. Here are real - life stories of individuals who triumphed over their ''hopeless days.'' Readers will be heartened by their stories of bravery and integrity - even while facing the anguish of marital infidelity or financial collapse. Although facing what seems like insurmountable odds, ''we are called to hope just as surely as we are called to the Cross, for the Savior who speaks there is teaching us the way to live as surely as He is dying to give us life.'' Hope for a Hopeless Day does more than encourage you to endure; it inspires you to overcome.
Coverage of recent world events has focused on violence associated with Islam. In this courageous and controversial book, Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer claims that this narrow view ignores the broader and unfortunate relationship between human violence and the sacred texts of Jews, Christians, and Muslims. Both the Bible and the Quran, he believes, are riddled with violent images of God and with passages that can be reasonably interpreted to justify violence against enemies in service to God's will. According to Nelson-Pallmeyer, many wondered how Muslims could in God's name kill innocent civilians by flying airplanes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Few, however, questioned U.S. leaders and citizens invoking God's name, or assuming God's favor, to fight the responsive "war against terrorism." And in the Middle East, the roots of the continuing and seemingly unsolvable conflict and violence are to be found in both the Torah and the Quran. Nelson-Pallmeyer challenges the understanding of power that lies at the heart of the sacred texts of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. He argues that nonviolence is powerful and necessary and that a viable future for human beings and the planet depends on challenging the ways in which sacred texts reinforce visions of power that are largely abusive. A viable future, he says, depends on re-visioning God's power. Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer is Assistant Professor of Justice and Peace Studies at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. For more than twenty years he has studied and written about the relationship of religion, violence, and peace, and his books include Jesus Against Christianity: Reclaiming the Missing Jesus (Trinity Press International) and School of Assassins: Guns, Greed, and Globalization.
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.