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A construction worker is helping tear down a dilapidated old house. He finds a box of old World War II documents inside the box. The discovery of those documents results in a string of horrific and gruesome murders. The community learns the hard way that words written on paper can cause blood to freely flow. Paper can cut a community. The sheriff and his investigators work tirelessly trying to unravel the mystery. Is there corruption within the defense industrial base? Are drug dealers infiltrating their community? Why are terrorists coming to their sleepy, safe community? The cops are in constant danger as they try and learn why those documents are causing so much death. No one is safe. There is a motive behind the murders. The cops are not superheroes and must learn the true motive. It’s a motive that is more common and much more sinister than most Americans realize.
Tom McGuire, a retired U.S. Army Military Police colonel and retired local sheriff, is enjoying having his four daughters home for Christmas. Tammy is a Coast Guard Investigative Service special agent; Kelly is a Navy Criminal Investigative Service special agent; Megan is an Army Criminal Investigation Command special agent; and Sarah is an Air Force Office of Special Investigations special agent.The Secretary of Defense has ordered Tom back to active duty to take command of a terrorism task force investigating a possible nuclear attack on America. Tom has his daughters assigned to the task force, and they learn that the terrorist threat was a hoax.While conducting the investigation, a river...
Each issue includes a classified section on the organization of the Dept.
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Pentecostals are known for an experiential spirituality that emphasizes immediate encounters with God through the Holy Spirit. But how should such experience be understood? Is it, in fact, quite so immediate? Neumann argues that Pentecostal experience of God is mediated by the Spirit's work through Scripture, the Christian tradition, and the broader cultural context. Using the work of three contemporary Pentecostal theologians--Frank D. Macchia, Simon K. H. Chan, and Amos Yong--the book demonstrates that a mediated view of experience of God is forging a more mature Pentecostal theology. As further evidence of this maturation, Neumann engages these Pentecostal theologians in ecumenical dialogue with leading representatives from Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Protestant traditions.