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Martin Luther King, Jr. was a man of destiny. Abraham Lincoln gave the blacks their freedom in America, King was to lead them to social justice. His association with white men as he matured changed from hatred to dislike to acceptance to friendship. This was his social preparation for his role; his studies in Theology and Philosophy were his intellectual and spiritual preparation. This book is a fascinating account of the inter-relationship of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the teachings and philosophies of the Church. While there are many books on, Dr. King, and while it would be impossible to write about him without studying these factors, the specific examination that Rev. Rahming covers lends a unique aspect not found in many books of much greater length. Perhaps one of the most significant aspects of this book is the way in which the author details how King saw the Church in regards to his civil rights mission and how his vision of the Church altered as his work progressed.This book makes fine supplementary reading material in Social Studies, Social Work, Political Science, Religion, Sociology, Black Studies and will serve pastors who deal with similar moral issues.
Many Pastors and Evangelicals avoid controversial topics. Pastors and Evangelicals are responsible to bring to light all issues in the Bible, not just the ones that make us feel good. Some Pastors and Evangelicals use difficult words and descriptions to describe Biblical concepts; this book doesn't. Many people claim to be Christians and are fooling themselves. This book will help them to become True Christians, and Inherit Everlasting Life.The whole idea of this book is to highlight the importance of being "Born Again" and receiving the "Holy Spirit", as mentioned in the New Covenant Jesus gave us. This book is written in the way a freshman in high school can understand it, and is in big letters so seniors can view it more easily as well. The author's chapter on Boasting hasn't been written about, to the author's knowledge in any other books.
He envisaged something ground-breaking to take place, something with a full-scale re¿nery for carbon at our new Gaz facility. Norway would once again be a lead country. But the Russians did not believe that our landing on the moon merely was about CO2, and immediately, the prime minister's New Year's address to his people got another focus: Russians' fear of a rocket base at the very North Pole.This book deals with life in the shade of the secret services in the seventies and the eighties and unfolds to a crime-espionage novel involving several superpowers well into the twentieth century. Part of the action refers to the author's own experiences, but quite a lot is mere ¿ction.The reader is taken to Dracula land in exotic Transylvania. Bribing, attempt to recruit the author- yes, love, broken promises, suicides, and murders, some quite brutal. There is plenty of everything. Excitement tops with the closure in Moscow, in Bymarka-Trondheim, and the long crushed-down radar station, Gråkallen.
Over time, everything changes. Politics, religion, and cultural institutions are founded, grow, and perish as humanity marches through the centuries as a perpetual work in progress. Can we deny a similar fate for all that we know and consider sacred today?Throughout the ages, the written works of Scripture have provided a rich history of ancient people. The events of times past as recorded in these texts reveal that in times that were incomparable to today, there lived people that are nevertheless all too familiar.Religious works are written and read through a prism of faith. How much of the truth navigates this ¿ltration is an open question. This combination of fact and faith creates the beliefs of people. The prevalent beliefs of society evolve with the ebb and ¿ ow of faith among its members. The facts of the matter may be immutable, but our understanding of the meaning of the known world yields to the less objective realm of belief. Those who take the lead in governing the beliefs of others are soon exempt from review by rational standards. In such times, anything that is believed can be conceived.This book takes us on a journey through time to a point in the future when all that exists today has süered from the exacting toll time takes on the works of mere mortals. Nothing humans create, believe, or otherwise conceive stands this test of time. Only human nature continues unabated, endlessly pitting the need of individuals for freedom against society's need for order.
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