The Plan We Need for Security, Peace, and Justice: Problems the Patriarch Job Had, Advice Job Needed, Solutions the Apostle Paul Had, the Plan We NeedAuthorHouse, 12 de jun. de 2008 - 196 páginas Our search for security, peace, and justice continues to be an individual and a collective challenge. The Old Testament experiences of the patriarch Job and the New Testament experiences of the apostle Paul provide a framework for understanding the hope that enriches our lives under Gods care. The plan we need recognizes that we have choices to make. We have decisions that influence the direction of our lives. To find security, peace, and justice, we need a plan to form and keep a right relationship with God. When we lose control over the decisions that set security, peace, and justice in our lives, we can feel like a pile of broken pieces. To have security, peace, and justice, we need to live in fellowship with God. When our purpose and direction in life meet Gods requirements, we please God. With Jesus Christ as our Savior and the Holy Spirit as our Helper, God provides the support we need to find rest and renewal. The foundation of our happiness now and our hope for the future is our salvation and the joy of sharing our beliefs with others. When our thoughts and actions are in keeping Gods will for us, we can access the possibilities and power that God makes available to us as mature members in Gods family. This book is for anyone who feels disconnected from God. For people dealing with loneliness, fear, despair, and anger, The Plan We Need for Security, Peace, and Justice describes a systematic way to become a functioning part of the body of Christ and to complete the connection with God. |
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... trouble! You're nothing but show-offs. You travel over land and sea to win one follower. And when you have done so, you make that person twice as fit for hell as you are. (CEV) • New International Version—”Woe to you, teachers of the ...
... troubles and came to console him.xvi When they saw Job, they were deeply sorry for him.xvii without speaking, because they saw how much Job was suffering.xviii They sat with Job for seven days and nights Job's First Comments (Job 3) ...
... troubles.iv He asks why he's alive when he has no hope for the future.v He feels that his situation is hopeless.vi ⇒ See Also, Job and Eliphaz (Job 4, 5, 6, 7, 15, 16, 22, 23, and 24 ) ⇒ See Also, Job and Bildad (Job 8, 9, 18, 19, 25 ...
... trouble don't just happen.v Eliphaz encourages Job to bring his problems to God, who can and does do great things for good people and against wicked people.vi Eliphaz praises the benefits of being corrected and protected by God.vii ...
... troubles, Job expresses belief in seeing God after his earthly body is destroyed. Job gives a warning about beingjudgmental.xv Bildad's Third Response (Job 25) Bildad questions any man's right to claim innocence in the presence of all ...
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The Plan We Need for Security, Peace, and Justice: Problems the Patriarch ... George Skoglund Visualização parcial - 2008 |
The Plan We Need for Security, Peace, and Justice: Problems the Patriarch ... George Skoglund Prévia não disponível - 2008 |