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The FBI, A Vocation to Serve is about an FBI agent who saw his job as a vocation, not a job. Robert Casper takes you on a journey through his life as an FBI agent serving to protect the people of America. Throughout the book he describes how many agents were priests or in the seminary to become priests. You may be wondering how one goes from a priest to an FBI agent and the answer is simple. Most criminals are violent people and priests' vocation is to tend to their souls, while FBI agent's vocation is to get them off the street to protect those that can't defend themselves. The entire mission of the FBI is to protect the weaker and the integrity of the United States. They aim to use their God-given talents to protect and make society a safe and livable environment. As Robert's children were growing up and beginning to join the workforce, he always reinforced to his children to service others. His motto is, if you have a hard time going to the office every day, maybe you are in the wrong field of work. Robert has fulfilled life and a vocation to serve. It was grand.
Terrifying ghosts, human bandits, terrorists, dangerous geothermal phenomena, all threatening, but pirate treasures and great wealth may be in the offering, trudge on or get the hell out? A group of adventurous people are led to a terrifying island by the writings on a medallion recovered in an ancient pirate treasure, chronicled in the novel TROVE. The island, identified on nautical charts as, "Dangerous area, keep well clear, La Isla de la Muerte, Island of Death." Locals give this mountainous, God forsaken island, a wide birth, as people who venture there, to find old pirate treasures, according to myth, never come back. Could this novel have a happy ending? Bet your bottom doubloon!
In or about the seventeen hundreds the crew of a pirate ship,who had recently plundered two merchant ships,raided a remote primitive village on an island for women and liquor. They were intent on retreating to their lair, a deserted and extinct volcanic island where they could get drunk and enjoy the carnal pleasures. Several of the captives were slaughtered and were damned to spend eternity in different locations. About two hundred years later a modern day couple sailing the Caribbean become unintentionally and reluctantly involved in a paranormal contact with one spirit, that of a victim of that ancient pirate violence. They became morally and emotionally obliged to assist in the release of the damned spirit, damned to eternity at the bottom of the sea. This led them to contact the occupants of the Caribbean Island; the same island used by the pirates and now called The Island of Death. The author takes us on a journey so enjoy the fantasy of a fictional trip into the spiritual dimensions.
This 190-page book discusses both theology and eschatology issues approaching the end-time. Many topics that have been debated for centuries are discussed in this book. Topics such as whether to worship on Saturday or Sunday, the Godhead, what is true Christianity, and Salvation to mention a few.
People need lawyers for many things, including tax and immigration advice, drafting contracts, preparing wills, buying and selling houses, forming and dissolving companies, and representation and advice during divorce, probate, personal injury and criminal charges. But many people do not trust lawyers. With good reason, they fear that lawyers will neglect or overcharge them, betray them out of self-interest or on behalf of others, or obstruct the pursuit of justice out of overzealousness. Although the legal profession drafts ethical rules, law schools teach those rules, the bar exam tests lawyers' knowledge, and disciplinary bodies enforce them, we know that violations by lawyers are all too...
This book focuses on the steps necessary to receive salvation. Becoming born again is not a church down the street, it is a requirement for salvation. It compares the different teachings about salvation in the main Christian denominations. This narrative is very insightful and brings into clarity the reasons for becoming born-again, baptism, the law of sin and death, the importance of our attitude, and why we should pray for mercy every day.
Montvale is a small borough of approximately 4.5 square miles in the picturesque Pascack Valley in northeastern Bergen County, New Jersey. How the borough grew from a small farming community to a population of nearly 9,000 in 2019 is told through the use of vintage photographs. Pictures of 18th-century Dutch Colonial sandstone houses, a 19th-century octagon house, a cider mill that made "Jersey applejack," horses and buggies, and antique cars all have stories to tell, as do advertisements and posters. In one for an 1896 social and basket picnic, folks were invited to "bring your team, wife and children," but there would be "no swearing or fighting.'' Turn-of-the-century postcards tell of the hundreds of summer visitors escaping the city heat. After Montvale became the last stop in New Jersey on the Garden State Parkway, the western section of the borough changed from farmland to the headquarters of some of the most prestigious national and international corporations, including Benjamin Moore, KPMG, Sharp Electronics, and Western Union, as well as home to the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.