This book in your hand is a must-read for every believer who has received a prophecy which is yet to come to pass. If you acknowledge the fact that you have such words over your life, then welcome on board to a journey that will help you discover how to activate those words.
Many a times we as believers have wondered why there are so many prophetic utterances and words over our head and yet little or none of them seem to be coming into fruition. This experience has made many to doubt the efficacy of the prophetic word. Others too have developed what we call "Contempt for the prophetic". While others hate to see any man of God who says thus saith the Lord" simply because in their spiritual diary, there are lots of prophetic promises which they have not experienced practically in life. This classic in your hands, "The Seven Laws Of Prophetic Promise" was designed and written to teach believers that every of God's promises must pass through a process, and that every scriptural possibility leaves a believer with a spiritual responsibility. "The labour of the foolish wearieth every one of them, because he knoweth not how to go to the city". Ecclesiastics 10:15 This book sets out to impact knowledge on what to do and how to connect God's promises to realities. It also tries to prove the fact that prophecy works and still has power to erase the leprosy of men; thereby preparing the man for a peculiar throne in life. This book in your hand is a must-read for every believer who has received a prophecy which is yet to come to pass. You, as an individual cannot pretend as if there is nothing which has been prophesied over your life which you have not seen. If you acknowledge the fact that you have such words over your life, then welcome on board to a journey that will help you discover how to activate those words and survive the process that leads you to the full realization of the prophetic promise over your life.
Covenant: A Vital Element of Reformed Theology provides a multi-disciplinary reflection on the theme of the covenant, from historical, biblical-theological and systematic-theological perspectives. The interaction between exegesis and dogmatics in the volume reveals the potential and relevance of this biblical motif. It proves to be vital in building bridges between God’s revelation in the past and the actual question of how to live with him today.
This is the first major study to focus solely on the victor sayings and should prove invaluable to scholars and students of Revelation and apocalyptic literature. It demonstrates that the motif of victory is Revelation's macrodynamic theme. Chiasmus is proposed as the book's macrostructure, based in part on the chiastic nature of the promises to the victors, with the later fulfillment of these promises in the book. The proposed forms for the seven letters--forms such as edicts, oracles, and epistles--are examined, and it is concluded that they are a mixtum compositum best called "prophetic letters." The sociological significance of victory is explored within the Greco-Roman world. The text of the promises and their co-texts (as reflected intertextually in traditions of biblical literature) receive thorough examination. The eschatological fulfillment of the victor sayings is surveyed in Revelation's later chapters, especially in chapters 21-22, where the new Jerusalem is depicted. The study concludes with an investigation of the ways that the promises were appropriated for the time and the text world of Revelation.
There are instructions set forth in the Word of God to teach men how to live a prosperous life. True prosperity is the ability to apply the power of God to meet any need spiritual, mental, and physical. In this book, Kenneth Copeland shares the revelation of spiritual laws that govern prosperity. The Laws of Prosperity is written to teach you...
This abridgment of Colin Brown’s original four volume work is arranged with its entries in Greek alphabet order, which makes it easy to find the discussion of a particular word. All Greek words are transliterated into English and linked with their Goodrick/Kohlenberger numbers. This book was formerly titled The NIV Theological Dictionary of New Testament Words. Now it has been reset in double columns and wider margins.