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Friendship is one of the best things ever created. It is unparalleled as a building block of society, a universal theme in great literature and film, and has a huge impact on our mental health, wellbeing and happiness. But many of us are lonely or feel suffocated by the pressures of life and quantity of relationships we have to maintain. Now, more than ever, we need better, deeper friendships. We need the best of friends. Full of practical advice, humour and wisdom, Phil Knox shows us how to choose our friends wisely and maintain lasting and meaningful relationships.
Most people find faith because they know another Christian, see the difference Jesus makes, and hear their story. Yet most of us are reluctant faith sharers. This book inspires every Christian to see themselves as a story bearer. Four distinct stories collide in great evangelism: God’s story, our story, the story of our friends and the story of our culture. The book expounds them all, encouraging us to learn and tell well the first two and listen and react well to the others. Phil Knox punctuates his book with engaging accounts of success and failure. Story bearing has the potential to change the world of those around you.
The generation known as ‘millennials’ are now emerging into adulthood. They face opportunities and challenges no generation has previously faced. For the church they are the ‘missing generation’. Ruth Perrin’s landmark study of emerging adults who as teenagers described themselves as Christians, reveals what has happened to this apparently “lost generation” – those who have lost faith altogether, those with a faith but who have withdrawn from the church and those with an ongoing active faith which is nonetheless now broader and deeper than previously. Considering the factors which help shape millennial belief, Changing Shape reflects on the challenges and opportunities that ‘missing generation’ bring to the Church, and considers what lessons the Church can learn from the Millennial mindset.
The Archbishop of Canterbury's Lent Book 2021 explores the idea of evangelism as a way of sharing God's love with people.
In this Dystopian Thriller, the world was changed with the invention of a biometric chip. The Chip being invented by VitaCorp Integral Technologies, a heavily connected tech company with ties to many politicians and oligarchical families. Once forced upon society, the Chip allowed a small number of people to control how most civilians live their lives through a Social Credit System tied to who they associate with, what they eat, what they watch, through the Chip's data collection. But some in society do not bend to the will of the Government, VitaCorp, or the numerous entities and institutions they control. These people are referred to as "Scabbers", as they are often covered with scars from removing their Chips. Many Scabbers try to live a free a life as possible, but once arrested for even the most minor of infractions they are Rechipped. And if they are not already assigned one, they will be tied to an Agent of The Bureau of Safety and Prevention. These Agents are part Guidance Counselor, part Parole Officer. This all occured because people always said it could never happen here. But it already did.
This title provides a new account of the literary history of fourteenth-century England, arguing that many of this period's most distinctive literary experiments emerge through a productive dialogue with the 'Romance of the Rose', a jointly-authored medieval French poem.