You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
As Joseph Stowell steps down after eighteen years of noteworthy service as president of Moody Bible Institute, it is appropriate that Moody Publishers commemorate his time at MBI with his reflections on loving, serving, proclaiming, and becoming more like Jesus. Arranged in sections named after Stowell's favorite hymns, the beautifully bound, keepsake book will be a treasure for years to come. The book includes tributes from Christian leaders such as Billy Graham, John Maxwell, Max Lucado, Nancy Leigh DeMoss, Tony Evans, John Piper, Chuck Swindoll and John MacArthur.
Packed with fascinating facts and using original source material about the ship, this is a perfect introduction to the Cutty Sark. Constructed on the Clyde in 1869 for the Jock Willis Shipping Line, Cutty Sark was one of the last tea clippers to be built and one of the fastest. Cutty Sark spent just a few years on the tea routes before the opening of the Suez Canal and the increasing use of steamships made clippers unprofitable on shorter routes. It was turned to the trade in wool from Australia, where for ten years she held the record time for a journey to Britain. After finishing her time in service as cargo ship, and then a training and cadet ship, it was transferred to permanent dry dock at Greenwich, London, for public display. This handy and illuminating pocket manual collates original documents to tell the fascinating story of how the legendary Cutty Sark was commissioned, her design and building, life on board and her notable journeys.
None
"Janet has brought together the heart of one passionate for truth, the skill of an able student of the Word, and the keen eye and hand of an artist. After a thorough search and study of each of the passages in the Bible that deal with the future City of God, Janet has collated those Scriptures into a systematic theology of what Scripture itself says about the future city."--Back cover.
Revealing previously unreleased information from the Rod Blagojevich investigation, this narrative—written by two Chicago Tribune reporters who spent years sifting through evidence, compiling documents, and conducting more than 100 interviews with those who have known the former governor—is the most complete telling of the Blagojevich story. Beginning on the streets of Chicago and wending its way into the highest reaches of government, the Blagojevich tale brushes up against some of the nation's most powerful politicians. Detailing the mechanics of the corruption that brought him down and profiling a fascinating and frustrating character who embodies many of the problems found in modern politics, this account dispenses with the sensationalism that surrounded the case to present the facts about one of the nation's most notorious politicians. Sentenced to 14 years in prison in December 2011, this is the final word on who the governor was, how he was elected, how he got himself into trouble, and how the feds took him down.
None