How many years have you been struggling with the addiction to porn and masturbation?Relapses after relapses, failure after failure, frustration, shame, guilt, self-blame, self-hatred, how long have you been under the heavy burden of those feelings?If you have tried every methods and techniques available to you and still you are strongly attached to watching porn videos and masturbating to them, If you are looking for a real way out of it and not just running after little superficial gains that will fade away on the first relapse, then this book is for you.It is a guide designed to take you into an inner trip of self-discovery with the aim of helping understand why you are addicted to porn and masturbation and discover for yourself how to get out of it, for good!Get this book and join hundred of brothers, just like you, on the path of total and undeniable freedom.
Another mad-cap adventure awaits Detan and his ne’er do well companions in this delightful steampunk mash-up with all the trappings of a heist caper As the city that produces the most selium—that precious gas that elevates airships and powers strange magic—Hond Steading is a jewel worth stealing. To shore up the city’s defenses, Detan promises his aunt that he’ll recover Nouli, the infamous engineer who built the century gates that protect the imperial capital of Valathea. But Nouli is imprisoned on the Remnant Isles, an impervious island prison run by the empire, and it’s Detan’s fault. Detan doesn’t dare approach Nouli himself, so his companions volunteer to get themselves locked up to make contact with Nouli and convince him to help. Now Detan has to break them all out of prison, and he’s going to need the help of a half-mad doppel to do it.
"We thought we'd break those chains at last," sang the slaves, hoping such spirituals would sustain them until the Confederacy surrendered and slavery was gone forever. During the Civil War, blacks served in the Union army and navy (although some fought for the South) and in Union-controlled camps, which harbored fleeing slaves. Not all slaves escaped, but even those who remained with their masters began to imagine a new life. After the war, amendments to the Constitution abolished slavery, granted citizenship to freed people, and gave African-American men the right to vote. Freedom, blacks hoped, would also mean political equality and economic well-being. Some moved from rural areas to cities in the South or North; others looked to the West, where many African-American men became farmers or found work as cattle-drive cooks and cowboys. But many whites viewed freedom for African Americans as a threat, and they responded by establishing white supremacy organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan. Organized violence against blacks, along with poor agricultural conditions, discrimination, and worsening economic times, guaranteed poverty for most Southern blacks. Although the tightly knit slave communities on the larger plantations began to disperse, a sense of having shared interests and goals actually widened freed people's vision of the meaning of community. Despite fierce white opposition, African Americans established their own churches, schools, and other associations and began to participate actively in government. Break Those Chains at Last tells the story of these turbulent and complicated years, as African Americans created the communities and organizations that survive to this day.
The Spirit of God within you has power and authority over all the works of the devil!Deliverance ministry should be a normal part of your everyday Christian life! Deliverance was a key part of Jesus’ ministry and we need it today more than ever. Even in our modern day, demons work to influence and oppress. But it takes the compassion...
Frustrated and angry that their children are not getting the solid education their tax dollars should provide, parents everywhere have lost faith in the public school system. A testimony to this frustration, low-income parents in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, seized their district's school choice initiative and used it to renounce public education, demanding the right to send their children to successful schools where learning counts. "A story that must be told. . . . Wonderfully told." -- Ben J. Wattenberg, author of "Values Matter Most "Break These Chains is a street-level account of Milwaukee's school-choice program, the first such publicly funded program in the United States. Daniel McGroarty details the battle of these inner-city parents fighting to free their children from a failing public education system. The reader goes inside the classrooms and courtrooms, down the hallways of bureaucracies, and right into the middle of political and personal power struggles. "Break These Chains is the story of individuals who, despite relentless opposition from teachers' unions, school boards, and local politicians, demanded the right to send their children to good schools and won. In detailed, heart-wrenching accounts, McGroarty illustrates what can happen when low-income parents fight institutionalized poverty. This book shows how school choice can work effectively, offering parents an alternative to the public schools assigned to them and hope for those trapped in a stagnant system. "Break These Chains demonstrates how school choice is a revolution for education in America.
If you've decided to read this book, I am going to take a wild guess and say that you are either a Christian struggling with one of the three sexual sins that are mentioned in the title of this book. Maybe you have struggled with them in the past, or you know someone who could be, or is, currently struggling. The good thing about you "struggling" with this sin is that a struggle with something denotes that you have not given in and that you are aware that it is wrong. You are still fighting! Stick in there my brother or sister, we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us. This book is near and dear to my heart because in life I have struggled with homosexuality, masturbation and fornication. None of these struggles disqualified me from being used as a vessel for the Living God. God has not counted you out, so don't you count yourself out either. The sins that you cannot see pass were nailed to the cross 2,000 years ago. Jesus died for you, rose for you, ascended to Heaven for you, sent The Holy Spirit to Earth for you and Jesus is now seated at the right hand of The Father making intercessions for YOU! You have made the right choice in deciding to read this book. I've noticed a lot of confusion when it comes to this topic of sexual immorality. So, can you do me a favor? When you are finished with this book can you pass it on to your brother or sister in the Lord, or it recommend it to them? I would greatly appreciate it. Oftentimes, we never know what people are struggling with and this book could potentially save someone's life, soul and mind. So please, pass the message on about this book and its content. I hope that this is new read become a learning experience for you! Enjoy this enlightening journey through "Loosed: Breaking The Chains of Bondage from Masturbation, Fornication and Homosexuality", as I delve into scripture to help you, my brothers and sisters in Christ, be all who God has predestinated, called, justified and glorified you to be (Romans 8:29-30)!
To find freedom, you must leave behind everything you've ever known. It is 1825. You and Ma have survived on the streets of London ever since the soldiers took Da away and you fled Ireland. Now, with Ma gone too, you find yourself facing life-and-death choices at every turn. Can you carry a secret treasure across the ocean and finally be reunited with Da? You'll be asked to betray your friends, survive storms at sea and attacks by bushrangers, and trust thieves. At every turn, the choice is yours. How far will you go for freedom?
"This book is a must read for everyone who wants to break the chains, improve your credit, increase your credit score and live a life of financial freedom."--Page [4] of cover.
Raised in a Catholic family in the Pacific Northwest, author Robert Willis learned to obey two judges: his father, a county superior court judge, and God. He joined the Jesuits, hoping to please both. The 1960s revolution tested his unthinking obedience to authorities-paternal, religious, and political-as the immorality of the Vietnam War troubled his conscience and the Second Vatican Council challenged his position in the modern world. When his efforts to stop the war led him to Vietnam, he knew he had to break the chains that bound him to the past. Willis's path took him to the nascent human potential movement in California. Experiencing its healing power, he joined Carl Rogers and colleagues at the Center for Studies of the Person in La Jolla while simultaneously pursuing a doctorate in psychology at San Diego's United States International University. In his teaching and practice of psychotherapy, Willis emphasized the crucial importance of the healing relationship. In its depths, he felt the presence of the Spirit of God. In his personal life, together with a woman who touches his soul, he meets the God of love. The chains, at last, lie broken.