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God has always had a way He wants to be worshiped. He has outlined that way for us in His written revelation—the Bible. In it, He has commanded us to worship Him with our entire being, holding nothing back. According to Jesus, this is the first and greatest commandment. The reasons God has given us for obeying His commands to worship Him are: because of who He is, and because of what He does. Worship is the biblically declared reason for mankind’s existence. However, how and when we worship is just as important as the fact that we do worship. Also, what God means when He uses the biblical synonyms of the word “worship” is important to understand when we are trying to obtain a more complete picture of how God wants us to worship Him. Biblical Worship is a book for every Christian, regardless of their preferred worship style or worship traditions. The fresh, new insights contained within its pages about what type of worship God desires from us all have the potential to shock you at times. At the very least, this book will cause you to never view worship the same way again.
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The Distinction is written in response to Dean Inserra's The Unsaved Christian: Reaching Cultural Christianity with the Gospel. That book speaks of the most plentiful field of harvest for soul winners in the American Christian churches. That field is the vast congregation of unsaved "Christians." While Inserra's book is valuable, it does little to define the difference--the distinction, if you will--between authentic and purely cultural Christians. This book seeks to identify and detail that distinction.
A fascinating history of Floyd County, Georgia, from its beginnings in Spanish exploration to its modern day success. Floyd County, Georgia, located in the picturesque northwest Georgia mountains, has a long and fascinating written history that stretches back to 1540 and the Spanish explorers of that era. The Mississippian, Creek, and Cherokee Nations preceded the arrival of Europeans to the area. Soon after, industry and commercial agriculture began to flourish, and in 1845, riverboats began carrying products down the Coosa River from Floyd County to Mobile, Alabama.