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"In our complete series of resources for RCIA you have all you need to make your community's experience of the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults deeply transformative, not only for the catechumens and candidates, but for all in the community"--Publisher.
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Nestled where the San Joaquin Valley begins rolling into the Sierra Nevada foothills, Waterford is steeped in a rich history. From its scenic Tuolumne River corridor, early gold seekers and travelers in untamed central California forded the summer stream here or crossed swollen winter flows by ferry. Waterford was originally named Bakersville for founder William W. Baker, who arrived by covered wagon in the 1850s. The fertile soil provided good farming and prosperity for disillusioned gold seekers. When an ingenious gravity irrigation system was introduced in the 1890s, farms thrived, drawing families, businesses, and churches. Rowdy saloons briefly flourished before stalwart citizens drove them out. Waterford's brave first settlers, farmers, and businessmen made their marks here, and included such visionaries as the Rudi brothers, longtime meat purveyors whose Waterford offspring included Oakland A's baseball legend Joe Rudi.
Do You Believe? A Catholic Layman’s View By: Nicholas Fuerst Nicholas Fuerst has previously published two short books: Thy Kingdom Come – My Life in God’s Kingdom, and Thy Will Be Done – Three Principles for Godly Living. As a lifelong Catholic Christian, Dr. Fuerst has held firmly to his faith and diligently pursued a deepening degree of knowledge, understanding, and experiences of his religious convictions. Sharing the Christian faith with others now propels him through the later years of his life. Being born and raised in Rochester, New York, he obtained his higher education in Buffalo, NY. He then trained in Family Medicine in Washington, Pennsylvania, where he completed forty-fi...
The Laboratory of Progress: Switzerland in the 19th Century tells the improbable story of how a small, backward, mountainous agricultural country with almost no raw materials became an industrial powerhouse, a hub of innovation, a touristic mecca and a pioneer in transportation – all in the course of a single century. That a tiny landlocked country should become a dominant steamship builder for the rest of the world; that a country that had never seen a cotton plant should become the world’s second-largest textile producer; that a country with hardly any level terrain should come to boast the world’s most highly developed railway network; and that a country whose main export was impove...