James Dille realizes that we can never completely understand the omnipotence and omnipresence of God. Therefore, we are asked to utilize faith when understanding fails. Through logic, experience, and mostly faith, he believes that God not only exists, but also exists within us. In a compilation of spiritual writings and reflections, Dille explores the Bibles many truths and demonstrates how its timeless words can be applied to contemporary life. By sharing real-life examples of strong characters alongside relevant scriptures, personal opinions, and thought-provoking questions, Dille inspires others to seek God in all they do, to reflect on their actions and choices, and ultimately make their faith stronger and more productive. Through spiritual advice intended to stimulate deep reflection, Dilles prayer is that others will benefit in their spiritual walk by connecting to and learning to live a life of love for and through Christ. Answers: To Prayers and Questions Asked Along the Way to the Grave shares a compilation of spiritual writings and introspective questions that encourage thoughtful discussion, a faithful look inward, and a happy Christian life.
This is a group of essays concerning author James Francis Dilles views of our spiritual connections. He has chosen to tell personal experiences of God answering prayers and showing love and support to him a sinner. He has discovered that God talks to all of us if we pay attention. His prayer is that others may benefit from these essays, supported by Bible verses, and grow in their spiritual walk.
James Dille realizes that we can never completely understand the omnipotence and omnipresence of God. Therefore, we are asked to utilize faith when understanding fails. Through logic, experience, and mostly faith, he believes that God not only exists, but also exists within us. In a compilation of spiritual writings and reflections, Dille explores the Bibles many truths and demonstrates how its timeless words can be applied to contemporary life. By sharing real-life examples of strong characters alongside relevant scriptures, personal opinions, and thought-provoking questions, Dille inspires others to seek God in all they do, to reflect on their actions and choices, and ultimately make their faith stronger and more productive. Through spiritual advice intended to stimulate deep reflection, Dilles prayer is that others will benefit in their spiritual walk by connecting to and learning to live a life of love for and through Christ. Answers: To Prayers and Questions Asked Along the Way to the Grave shares a compilation of spiritual writings and introspective questions that encourage thoughtful discussion, a faithful look inward, and a happy Christian life.
The 1900 edition of Polk's Seattle City Directory listed four apartment buildings. By 1939, that number had grown to almost 1,400. This study explores the circumstances that prompted the explosive growth of this previously unknown form of housing in Seattle and takes an in-depth look at a large number of different apartment buildings, from the small and simple to the large and grand. Illustrated with numerous contemporary and vintage photographs and sketches, this volume preserves an intimate record of these under-studied and under-appreciated buildings and will inspire an appreciation for their history and architectural variety, and for their preservation as an integral part of Seattle's urban landscape.
Today when most Americans think of the Great Depression, they imagine desperate hoboes riding the rails in search of work, unemployed men selling pencils to indifferent crowds, bootleggers hustling illegal booze to secrecy-shrouded speakeasies, FDR smiling, or Judy Garland skipping along the yellow brick road. Hard times have become an abstraction. But there was a time when economic suffering was real, when hunger stalked the land, and Americans tried to forget their troubles in movie theaters or in front of a radio. From the stock market crash of October 1929 to Germany's invasion of Norway, France, and the Low Countries in 1940, the Great Depression blanketed the world economy. Its impact was particularly deep and direct in the United States. This was the era when the federal government became a major player in the national economy and Americans bestowed the responsibility for maintaining full employment and stable prices on Congress and the White House, making the Depression years a major watershed in U.S. history. In more than 500 essays, this book provides a ready reference to those hard times, covering the diplomacy, popular culture, intellectual life, economic problems, public policy issues, and prominent individuals of the era.
The First European Colony in the United States Juan Ponce de León, the discoverer and first governor of La Florida, established the first European colony in the United States on the west coast of Florida in 1521. Although its location has never been determined, historians have theorized that it likely occurred somewhere in the Charlotte Harbor area. The settlement is believed to have lasted only three to four months. It was abandoned when conflict with the local Indians resulted in Juan Ponce being mortally wounded. The survivors took him to Cuba where he died of his wounds. In 1528, seven years after the Ponce de León settlement had been abandoned, Pánfilo de Narváez landed just north of the entrance to Tampa Bay with an expedition of 400 men and 10 women. On one of their first inland expeditions they encountered the Tocobaga Indians at their main village in today’s Safety Harbor, where they found many cargo boxes and European artifacts that may have been remnants of the Ponce de León settlement. The inland exploration by Narváez and three hundred of his men, seeking a non-existent large bay to their north, resulted in the deaths of all but four, who became the first to explore inland North America, finally reaching the Pacific eight years later. Rare and seldom-seen Spanish maps produced by the royal mapmakers in Seville in 1527 show the location and latitude for the Bay of Juan Ponce. MacDougald produces compelling evidence that Narváez was seeking the Bay of Juan Ponce, and that the first European colony established in the United States occurred in Tampa Bay, likely in the area known today as Safety Harbor in Old Tampa Bay, the site of the Tocobaga village visited by Narváez.
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