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Lessons from Everest
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 237

Lessons from Everest

After a devastating failed attempt to climb Mt. Everest in 2007 and a brief period of mourning, Dr. Tim Warren became focused on learning the lessons that had been revealed to him while hiking alone for three days down the Khumbu Valley of Nepal to heal his damaged lung tissue in the luxury of oxygen-rich lower altitude. He felt an overpowering desire to return to the mountain the next year and experienced a clear vision of himself at the summit and arriving safely back in base camp. After testing those lessons over the next year and a half, and within an inch of his life, he achieved this goal. Equally importantly, he realized that the lessons learned on the "Big E" were universal to people seeking to overcome difficulties in life or simply to edge a little closer to their full potential. Lessons From Everest describes seven lessons, each a stepping stone to greater understanding and awareness of the reader's inner journey to their own Everest with a healthy dose of seat-of-your-pants adventure.

THE LONG DROP
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 219

THE LONG DROP

During a cave expedition in the Jaintia Hills of Meghalaya, India, the body of the Doloi(Chief of the Nongkhlieh elaka), who had gone missing, was found brutally murdered, at the bottom of a deep shaft. Thrang Kharwan, the organizer of the Expedition, was caught up in the web and intrigues of the coal and limestone miners, who felt threatened by the cry of 'save the caves' raised by the cavers. Thrang had filed a Public Interest Litigation in the Apex Court of the country against the destruction of the environment, especially of the caves and its unique cave eco-systems, by the indiscriminate and unscientific quarrying. Thrang survived the attempts on his life, including a heinous attempt to toss him into the deep dark shaft where the Daloi's body was earlier found murdered; ironically, a cave that had become his dream and fantasy - to finally achieve his goal of cave conservation. In this murderous raging attrition of deceit and power and against all odds, he finally came out triumphant, to find the meaning of life and love.

The Nature of Crops
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 193

The Nature of Crops

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015-04-24
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  • Publisher: CABI

Have you ever wondered why we eat wheat, rice, potatoes and cassava? Why we routinely domesticate foodstuffs with the power to kill us, or why we chose almonds over acorns? Answering all these questions and more in a readable and friendly style, this book takes you on a journey through our history with crop plants. Arranged into recurrent themes in plant domestication, this book documents the history and biology of over 50 crops, including cereals, spices, legumes, fruits and cash crops such as chocolate, tobacco and rubber.

Lessons from Everest
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 80

Lessons from Everest

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2010
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  • Publisher: Tim Warren

" ... the lessons learned on the "Big E" were universal to people seeking to overcome difficulties in life or simply to edge a little closer to their human potential. Lessons From Everest describes seven lessons, each a stepping stone to greater understanding and awareness of the reader's inner journey to their own "Everest" with a healthy dose of seat-of-your-pants adventure."--Amazon website

Be Faithful (1 & 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon)
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 212

Be Faithful (1 & 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon)

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2009-01-01
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  • Publisher: David C Cook

In a fast-paced, technology-based era when drive-thrus, cell phones, laptops, and Internet banking are the norm, it's sometimes hard to fathom that God doesn't appreciate our frail attempts at spiritual shortcuts. Through the pastoral epistles, 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus, with insight from Paul's letter to Philemon as well, Dr. Warren W. Wiersbe illustrates that working for God's Kingdom requires tenacity, never-ceasing prayer, and protective battle gear that only God can provide. In this commentary, you'll grasp the imminent danger of false teachers and, thus, the overwhelming need for godly ministers—people who preach,practice, and progress in the Word. By explaining how a healthy body of believers should operate, Wiersbe uses Paul's words to encourage today's church to stay the course and be faithful!

Famine in the Land
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 130

Famine in the Land

Is your congregation starving? There's a spiritual famine in the land—a shortage of faithful preaching leaving those in the pews dangerously undernourished. We need people today who will preach like the prophets and apostles did, proclaiming the word of God with courage and conviction. Famine in the Land, a compilation and adaptation of four powerful journal articles by Steven Lawson, makes a biblically-grounded argument for the desperate importance of expository preaching. Whether you preach to 3,000 or 30 this book will embolden you to: revere the glorious, painful, historical call of preaching dig deep in your study of God's word speak and live with uncompromising conviction This is an indispensable resource for any church leader who wants to see lives changed through preaching.

Hope
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 344

Hope

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-02-19
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  • Publisher: WestBowPress

Family dynamics are explored through the themes of adoption, obsessive compulsive disorders, and salvation. Although many members of the family in The Game of Hearts, Suzannes first novel about adoption, are deceased, this sequel picks up where that book ended. Two families are blended together as they face issues of distrust and OCD. Salvation heals the hurts of the past and opens opportunities for the future. The book ends with a surprising revelation.

Child and Adolescent Mental Health in Social Work
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 329

Child and Adolescent Mental Health in Social Work

The aim of Child and Adolescent Mental Health in Social Work is to provide a comprehensive text, taking on assessment (biopsychosocial-cultural/spiritual risk and resilience; DSM; standardized assessment scales); goal-setting; and intervention, including medication, evidence-based interventions and the process of evidence-based practice with children and adolescents. The social work context is integrated throughout by: 1) considering the complexities of multiple system levels involved with the occurrence of mental disorders and youth adjustment and recovery; and 2) professional ethics and demeanor when working with impoverished, diverse, and vulnerable youth populations in inter-disciplinary settings.

The Birthing of Anne
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 178

The Birthing of Anne

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2008
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  • Publisher: iUniverse

This new novel opens with Anne, a lovely young woman celebrating her freedom from a difficult marriage and her success as a new author by preparing for a spring outing on Sebago Lake. On the lake she responds to a man's call for assistance by towing his boat to shore where the personable young man transforms into a vicious character with a gun. Held in a deserted shack where she suffers repeated assaults and beatings, Anne can't understand the motive behind her abduction. Parents John and Margaret hear of her disappearance when her empty boat is found drifting on the lake. They are soon joined by sons Jim and Brad, their wives Janet and Cassie, to wait at the family farm. The novel moves in suspense from the Jensen farm to the shack and back again as Anne's family lives with rage, fear, flashes of humor, family love, secrets and a strong faith. Anne's bravery, rescue, recovery, the discovery and capture of her assailants hold the reader's interest, as does a developing romantic interest.

Heideggerian Theologies
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 195

Heideggerian Theologies

In light of Martin Heidegger’s contextualized influence upon them, John Macquarrie, Rudolf Bultmann, Paul Tillich, and Karl Rahner engage in theologies that, in their respective tasks and scopes, venture into existential theology, following Heideggerian pathmarks toward the primordiality of being on the way to unconcealment, or “aletheia.” By way of each pathmark, each existential theologian assumes a specific theological stance that utilizes a decidedly existential lens. While the former certainly grounds them fundamentally in a kind of theology, the latter, by way of Heideggerian influences, allows them to venture beyond any traditional theological framework with the use of philosophical suppositions and propositions. In an effort at explaining the relationship between humanity’s “being” and God’s “Being,” each existential theologian examines what it means to be human, not strictly in terms of theology, but as it is tied inextricably to an understanding of the philosophy of existence: the concept of what being is.