This cute journal is the perfect gift for Yonah Size: 6 x 9 inch Pages: 120 High-quality pages High-quality cover with a soft matte professional finish Best gift For your friends
MADE IN THE UNITED STATES. CONVENIENT SIZE: Our 6x9 notebook is great for note-taking and scheduling on the go! MAKE IT PERSONAL: A notebook with the name gives your gift that extra special touch . Take as your own or give as a gift to someone you like. This is an adorable gift for your loved ones 殺殺殺. Suitable as a gift for: Birthday Christmas Gifts. New Job Gift. Colleague/ Co-worker/ Boss Gifts. Journals & Planners. Doodle Diaries. Homeschool Planners for Kids. Creative Writing Notebooks. Gifts for Mom, Dad, Grandma, Grandpa, Cousins, Brother, Sister, and friends as well. Retirement Gifts. School Notebooks. Student Graduation Gifts. Teacher Thank You Gifts. Mom Daughter Journal. Journaling For Kids. Book Lover Souvenir. Novelty Blank Scrapbook. Monthly Project Tracker. Practical Plan Checklist. and More...
Is running away from life a constructive game of solitaire? Joseph' Jonah' Allmann, a merchant seaman, plays a passive game, letting ships take him away from his home and himself. Call him Jonah. He hated this seafarer curse his shipmates had given him, Call him drunk, angry, and afraid. An apologist might say one condition causes the others, and wise minds might argue that one is part of the other two. He would shrug his shoulders and change the subject if you asked him. Call him a merchant seaman, an avocation rather than a vocation. It fit his wanderlust perfectly. He sailed across oceans, matching his inner turmoil with the chaotic rhythm of the sea. Few cared to recognize the torment inside of him. One exception, a dockworker in Hong Kong who had once told him, as he was staring at water below the gangway lapping between the hull and pier, "If you want to see your true reflection, water must be still. Be still ."
A Kingdom Divided Cannot Stand explains the importance of Christians breaking through traditions and uniting as the body of Christ. It does not matter which church a Christian chooses to attend, because ultimately they are all members of the body of Christ (Christ's church). Manmade traditions can and will hinder the promises of God in a person’s life. As the end of the age quickly approaches, it is becoming more important for Christ’s church to unite. Find out how current events line up with biblical prophecy and how close we are to the end of the age. A Kingdom Divided Cannot Stand will answer common questions such as: What will happen next? Why did Christ allude to the days of Lot and Noah when describing the end of the age? Is the Old Law still in effect today? Are Christians accountable to the Old Law or the New Law? What did Christ do when He fulfilled the Old Law? A Kingdom Divided Cannot Stand also includes a “medically updated” version of the body of Christ.
By the Master of Horror, in James Herbert's The Jonah, detective Jim Kelso is sent to a small coastal town to investigate drug smuggling and stumbles on a dangerous organization. Suddenly more than just his life is at stake. It’s his past, his future, his sanity. Through torture and drugs he discovers the terrifying secret of The Jonah. And learns, in the most horrifying way that it can destroy him as well as others . . .
"Noah Keller has a pretty normal life until one wild afternoon when his parents pick him up from school and head straight for the airport, telling him on the ride that his name isn't really Noah and he didn't really just turn eleven in March ... As Noah, now 'Jonah Brown,' and his parents head behind the Iron Curtain into East Berlin, the rules and secrets begin to pile up so quickly that he can hardly keep track of the questions bubbling up inside him: who, exactly, is listening--and why?"
Draws from commentaries, personal experience, and contemporary culture to provide insight into the meaning of the Book of Jonah and what it reveals about human nature and man's relationship with God.
In this book, Jarod paints a vivid picture to help us see how we act and think like Jonah. I’ll give you a fair warning: it’s more often than we might want to admit. Jarod has the heart of a pastor, and he desires to help us see beyond the obvious to the not-so-known parts of the story. When we do that, we’ll see that Jonah’s story is one we can relate to at every level.