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Are you unsure how to live as a Christian? Building Your Spiritual House: A Nine-Month Training Course offers a how-to instruction manual on living the Christian life. In today's world it can be a challenge to live your life according to God's standard. Dr. George Lowery dives into Scripture and provides a practical guide to everyday living as a Christian. The clear Bible references in Building Your Spiritual House will lead you to a new level of understanding of God's Word so you can transform into the likeness, nature, and character of Christ.
"I have known Dr. Kenneth Lowry as a friend and student for nearly 40 years. In all that time he has been steadfast in his love and study of the Word of God. He has been tireless in his desire for the power of that Word and the dynamic of the Holy Spirit to change the lives of people around the world. Missionary Ken Lowry has a message for the world. His story will join the ranks of the world's significant missionary biographies. I recommend this book and the life it depicts." Dr. Frank Longino - President, Liberty Theological Seminary International
Before there were bats like Shade, Marina or even Goth, there was a young chiropter—a small arboreal glider—named Dusk. . . . It is 65 million years ago, during a cataclysmic moment in the earth’s evolution, and Dusk, just months old, has no way of knowing he will play a pivotal role in creating a new world. What he does know is that he is different from the other newborn chiropters. Not content to use his large sails to glide down from the giant sequoia tree, Dusk discovers that if he flaps quickly enough, he can fly. But this strange gift that makes him feel like an outcast from the colony will also make him its saviour. After most of the colony is savagely massacred by the felids—...
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Austin’s thriving film culture, renowned for international events such as SXSW and the Austin Film Festival, extends back to the early 1970s when students in the Department of Radio-Television-Film at the University of Texas at Austin ran a film programming unit that screened movies for students and the public. Dubbed CinemaTexas, the program offered viewers a wide variety of films—old and new, mainstream, classic, and cult—at a time when finding and watching films after their first run was very difficult and prohibitively expensive. For each film, RTF graduate students wrote program notes that included production details, a sampling of critical reactions, and an original essay that pl...
The definitive history of solar power and technology Even as concern over climate change and energy security fuel a boom in solar technology, many still think of solar as a twentieth-century wonder. Few realize that the first photovoltaic array appeared on a New York City rooftop in 1884, or that brilliant engineers in France were using solar power in the 1860s to run steam engines, or that in 1901 an ostrich farmer in Southern California used a single solar engine to irrigate three hundred acres of citrus trees. Fewer still know that Leonardo da Vinci planned to make his fortune by building half-mile-long mirrors to heat water, or that the Bronze Age Chinese used hand-size solar-concentrati...