We should spend our entire Christian life searching the Scriptures to learn about God and His will for our lives. Throughout our lifetime we may study a book of the Bible many times. We will also hear messages and read commentaries or other books that help us better understand God's word. Most of us take the insights we receive on various occasions, make a quick note, and promptly lose them.
Your journal provides a permanent place to keep a record of what you learn when you study the book of Luke. Add to your journal over the years, each time you return to this gospel, hear another message...
We should spend our entire Christian life searching the Scriptures to learn about God and His will for our lives. Throughout our lifetime we may study...
We should spend our entire Christian life searching the Scriptures to learn about God and His will for our lives. Throughout our lifetime we may study a book of the Bible many times. We will also hear messages and read commentaries or other books that help us better understand God's word. Most of us take the insights we receive on various occasions, make a quick note, and promptly lose them.
Your journal provides a permanent place to keep a record of what you learn when you study the book of Luke. Add to your journal over the years, each time you return to this gospel, hear another message...
We should spend our entire Christian life searching the Scriptures to learn about God and His will for our lives. Throughout our lifetime we may study...
This book makes connections between selfhood, reading practice and moral judgment which propose fresh insights into Austen’s narrative style and offer new ways of reading her work. Itgrounds her writing in the Enlightenment philosophy of selfhood, exploring how Austen takes five major components of selfhood theory—memory, imagination, probability, sympathy and reflection—and investigates their relation to self-formation and moral judgement. At the same time, Austen’s narrative style breaks new ground in the representation of consciousness and engages directly with contemporary...
This book makes connections between selfhood, reading practice and moral judgment which propose fresh insights into Austen’s narrative style and off...