Security. Good times. Laughter. Tears. One of the greatest blessings God gives us in life is family. In his first book, From Life and from the Heart, Tyler Myers shares about his family and some of his life experiences along the way. Find out what his big brothers, Jimmy and Kevin, were like growing up. What happened when he spent a week with his older sister, Tonya, and her family? Whats that special gift his oldest sister, Diana, has that keeps on giving? And find out what Tylers take is on parents. Nevertheless, as is often the case, its not all sunshine and roses in life. When Tyler was having a dismal day that showed no signs of getting better, find out what he did that really turned things around. When he was not having a good day at work, what happened that helped him to carry on? Has someone hurt you, and forgiveness seems impossible? Find out some things Tyler has doneand with Gods help, so can youto move forward in forgiveness. Have you ever wondered what life was like during the Great Depression? Get comfy and read on, as Tyler lets you in on the conversation he had with a dear, elderly friend. Find out all this and more as Tyler Myers shares From Life and from the Heart.
View our feature on Tyler Perry's Don't Make a Black Woman Take Off Her Earrings. In 2005, Tyler Perry took Hollywood by storm. The movie he wrote, produced, and starred in, Diary of a Mad Black Woman, opened number one at the box office and went on to gross more than $50 million. In its first week on sale, the DVD sold 2.4 million copies. At the same time, Perry was starring nightly across the country in a soldout stage show he'd also written, produced, and scored-Madea Goes to Jail-even as another one of his productions, Meet the Browns, was touring nationally. Every week in 2005, 35,000 people saw a Tyler Perry production. His second feature film, Madea's Family Reunion, opens in theaters in February 2006. Now, this triple-threat actor/playwright/director, has written his first book, and it features his most beloved, most irreverent creation: sixty-eight-year-old grandmother Madea Simmons. Madea is at the center of all of Tyler Perry's work, and she's always unfailingly outspoken, dead-on, and hilarious. But in Don't Make a Black Woman Take Off Her Earrings, Madea shares more than she ever has before- about herself, and about what she thinks of everyone around her. The topics inimitably covered by Madea (a term of endearment for "Mother Dear") include love and marriage, child-rearing, etiquette and neighborliness, beauty tips, health tips, financial tips, the Bible and the church, and, of course, gun care. She's brazen, feisty, and never at a loss for words, but at the heart of everything she says- and at the heart of all of Perry's work-is a resounding message of faith and forgiveness. Shockingly hilarious, surprisingly moving, and as rousing and inspiring as a great gospel show, Madea's words of wisdom, memories, and straight-up in-your-face advice will be cherished by Perry's numerous fans- and it all comes just in time for Mother's Day. Tyler Perry is about to take the publishing world by storm.
To activate my life path, I found I needed to be unrestricted to travel. To travel I needed to be unrestricted. To be unrestricted I had to let go of the past. To let go of the past I had to move on. To move on I had to face the emotions of love and hate, anger and rejection. I needed to love myself enough to stand up for others. This is a direct recount of this passion.
In this autobiography, Tyler Jernigan describes his journey from pastor's kid to 15-year-old preacher to 24-year-old church planter. Be inspired by stories of evangelism. Feel the joy of success as well as the sting of depression, and the loneliness than can accompany life in the public eye. If you're looking for a picture of glamour and perfection, this is not the book for you. But if you are one of the millions who need to hear that God uses people who fail, this book belongs in your library.
Security. Good times. Laughter. Tears. One of the greatest blessings God gives us in life is family. In his first book, From Life ... and from the Heart, Tyler Myers shares about his family and some of his life experiences along the way. Find out what his big brothers, Jimmy and Kevin, were like growing up. What happened when he spent a week with his older sister, Tonya, and her family? What's that special gift his oldest sister, Diana, has that keeps on giving? And find out what Tyler's take is on parents. Nevertheless, as is often the case, it's not all sunshine and roses in life. When Tyler was having a dismal day that showed no signs of getting better, find out what he did that really turned things around. When he was not having a good day at work, what happened that helped him to carry on? Has someone hurt you, and forgiveness seems impossible? Find out some things Tyler has done-and with God's help, so can you-to move forward in forgiveness. Have you ever wondered what life was like during the Great Depression? Get comfy and read on, as Tyler lets you in on the conversation he had with a dear, elderly friend. Find out all this and more as Tyler Myers shares From Life ... and from the Heart.
The Bible has a lot to say about love: God's love for the world and our love for each other. Jesus Himself gave some very specific instructions on the subject and it would behoove us to take serious heed to. Love is the attribute of God that means the most to humanity. If God did not love His creation, he would surely have disposed of us long ago. As I read through the Bible I come across many cases of mankind's failures (not to mention the ones I see when I look through the mirror of my own life, lest I forget). We often test the love of God but His love and patience keeps working with us. Jesus said that the world would know those who believed in him by a particular sign and it was not the sign of the cross or the fish emblem on your car. If you have love for one another, then everyone will know that you are my disciples. John 13:35 GNT
A Repertory Which Is Used By Every Homoeopath. Based On The Original Provings And Information Gathered Till That Time. Includes The Art Of Repertorizing.
Fans of J. R. Ward, Nalini Singh, Kresley Cole and Gena Showalter, meet the Alpha Pack. Once, they were Navy SEALS. Now, they are a top secret team of wolf shifters with Psy powers who take on the darkest dangers on Earth. Intensely passionate and utterly thrilling, J. D. Tyler's Alpha Pack are unforgettable. Ryon Hunter sees dead people - spirits that beg him for help in ways he can't understand. He'd do anything to end the torment, until a beautiful spirit appears to him with a plea he can't ignore: Help me...I'm alive. The woman is wildlife biologist Daria Bradford, mortally wounded after encountering a white wolf, calling to Ryon through a rare Psy gift. When Ryon locates Daria in the Shoshone National Park, it is almost too late, but nursing her back to health at the Alpha Pack compound brings a new complication - Daria is his destined mate, and Ryon is afraid of what will happen when she discovers what he is, and what he had to do to save her life. But the biggest threat of all is still loose in the forest, leaving a merciless trail of death behind it. The Alpha Pack goes on the hunt for the mysterious white wolf, determined to stop the murderous rogue...only to find that the most lethal creature of all is the one they can't see coming... Don't miss the other sexy and exciting Alpha Pack adventures in Primal Law, Savage Awakening, Black Moon and Cole's Redemption. And be sure not to miss J. D. Tyler's romantic suspense alter-ego Jo Davis, and her spectacular, sexy Sugarland Blue series.
There is something missing in the church today. Stuck in a rut of routines and rituals, the church is caught up in doing what it is “supposed to do” but is lacking the true essence of what it is supposed to provide: life. Real faith--and a real relationship with Jesus--is not about playing by the rules, attending services, and praying before meals. Real faith is more than religion. Believing there is a way to breathe life back into the church, Tyler Edwards adopts a contemporary and entertaining metaphor--zombies--to highlight and challenge the problematic attitude of today’s believers.
To what extent can non-Christian religious traditions utilize Plantinga’s epistemology? And, if there are believers from differing religious traditions that can rightfully utilize Plantinga’s religious epistemology, does this somehow prevent a Plantingian’s creedal-specific religious belief from being warranted? In order to answer these questions, Baldwin and McNabb first provide an introduction to Plantinga’s religious epistemology. Second, they explore the prospects and problems that members of non-Christian religions face when they attempt to utilize Plantingian religious epistemology. Finally, they sketch out possible approaches to holding that a Plantingian’s creedal-specific religious belief can be warranted, even given believers from other religious traditions who can also rightfully make full use of Plantinga’s religious epistemology.
Tyler Burge presents a substantial, original study of what it is for individuals to represent the physical world with the most primitive sort of objectivity. By reflecting on the science of perception and related psychological and biological sciences, he gives an account of constitutive conditions for perceiving the physical world, and thus aims to locate origins of representational mind. Origins of Objectivity illuminates several long-standing, central issues in philosophy, and provides a wide-ranging account of relations between human and animal psychologies.
A dinosaur detective in the land of unwanted ideas battles trauma, anxiety, and the first serial killer of imaginary friends. Most ideas fade away when we’re done with them. Some we love enough to become Real. But what about the ones we love, and walk away from? Tippy the triceratops was once a little girl’s imaginary friend, a dinosaur detective who could help her make sense of the world. But when her father died, Tippy fell into the Stillreal, the underbelly of the Imagination, where discarded ideas go when they’re too Real to disappear. Now, he passes time doing detective work for other unwanted ideas – until Tippy runs into The Man in the Coat, a nightmare monster who can do the impossible: kill an idea permanently. Now Tippy must overcome his own trauma and solve the case, before there’s nothing left but imaginary corpses. File Unders: Fantasy [ Fuzzy Fiends | Death to Imagination | Hardboiled but Sweet | Not Barney ]
Classic text by a distinguished physician summarizes, interprets, and systematizes the traditions of homeopathy; describes how to take a case history and study it; and explains how to interpret the many reactions to therapy and achieve a scientific understanding of a cure. Unabridged reprint of the classic 1900 edition.
Atkinson uses Qoheleth's work ethic to provide an analysis of Ecclesiastes, utilising the writings of St Bonaventure and Martin Luther. Reading Ecclesiastes within a penitential framework, Bonaventure offers a version of the contemptus mundi tradition that is rooted in his metaphysics. His commentary is ethically significant for the way he detects the vice of curiousity precipitating a perceptual rupture wherein vanity comes to signify sin and guilt. Luther, on the other hand, interprets Solomon as a wise economic-political administrator who preaches the good news of God's involvement in quotidian existence. This understanding enables Luther to read Ecclesiastes eschatologically, with labour being seen as a locus of divine activity. One may thus read Solomon's refrain as an invitation to labour with the expectation of receiving God's gifts in the present. Finally, Atkinson suggests that Ecclesiastes enhances current conversations regarding the theology and ethics of work by working the doctrinal foci of protology and eschatology through Christology. The presence of the Word, then, can be found now only in the preaching and sacraments of the church, but also in the labour of the worker.
Many Christian commentators have been taken aback by the seemingly unstoppable rise of the ‘mindfulness revolution’ that has occurred over the past decade. But there are many Christians who worry that mindfulness techniques constitute a covert import from Buddhism. How far are Christians adopting Buddhist techniques, ideas and ideologies? Do we risk squaring Buddhist ideology and approaches to fit the Christian circle? Beginning with an exploration of the practice of mindfulness in its Buddhist origins, Peter Tyler reflects on the practical use of mindfulness, its place within the Christian tradition of prayer, and its future within the Christian tradition. Tyler argues that far from a foreign import mindfulness is not only endemic but essential to the Christian understanding of how the human person relates to the divine. Each chapter concludes with practical exercises to help the reader in their understanding of mindfulness in the Christian context.
The Road Till Now is a book of poems I've written since I was a teenager. It doesn't have all of them, but it has many of my favorites. They're all about something, or someone, that affected my life in some way. They may not be specifically about something that happened, but they were all inspired by personal experiences. The poems are about things ranging from love to loss. I think that anyone who reads it will find something they can relate to in some way.
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.