The media's bias toward stories of conflict, violence, and division is bad for your health. In this book, Hal Urban shows how to find the positive and uplifting all around us. The news media thrives on bad news. In recent years, the political climate has become vitriolic and divisive, our country seems more polarized than ever, and news feels inescapable because technology has significantly increased its reach. People who like to stay informed need a lift. Most people are aware that what they eat greatly impacts their physical health: junk food is bad, vegetables are good. Hal Urban argues that we can nourish our minds by choosing how we consume news, and that when we surrender all that choice to media and external forces, we give up our growth, freedom, and mental health. Countless signs of progress and acts of kindness exist all around the world if you know where to look. And there are positive aspects in our own lives—family, friends, simple beauties, and everyday generosities—that we take for granted. This book helps readers understand that, as the late Zig Ziglar said, "You are what you are because of what goes into your mind."
Good news, Rabbit and Mouse are going on a picnic. Bad news, it is starting to rain. Good news, Rabbit has an umbrella. Bad news, the stormy winds blow the umbrella (and Mouse!) into a tree. So begins this clever story about two friends with very different dispositions. Using just four words, Jeff Mack has created a text with remarkable flair that is both funny and touching, and pairs perfectly with his energetic, and hilarious, illustrations. Good news, this is a book kids will clamor to read again and again!
The Gospel means good news, but what makes it news? If the message has been around for 2,000 years, what could possibly be newsworthy about it? And what makes it good? Surely not the stories we hear of damnation, violence, and an angry God. Tom Wright believes many Christians have lost sight of what the ‘good news’ of the gospel really is. In Simply Good News, he shows how a first-century audience would have received the gospel message, what the ‘good news’ means for us today and how it can transform our lives.
In a world that may seem dark, Good News Network shines a spotlight on the extraordinary and everyday heroes, the solutions and innovations that can give us hope. This collection celebrates GNN's 20th anniversary of publishing positive news from around the world at GNN.org. Founded in 1997 by former TV news editor Geri Weis-Corbley, these are among her favorite stories from two decades.
A talented teacher unpacks the riches of traditional Christian spirituality for Christians burdened by the guilt and anxiety of introspective, in-my-heart spiritual techniques. Phillip Cary explains that knowing God is a gradual, long-term process that comes through the gospel experienced in Christian community. The first edition has sold over 17,000 copies. The expanded edition includes a new afterword that offers further insights since the first edition was published over ten years ago.
What is Block Sentence Diagram -------------------------------- Block Sentence Diagram is Visual Diagram of Phrasal unit for streams of thought of the sentence to increase learning(Speaking, Writing, Reading Comprehension, and Translation) power employing RIP Sentence Diagram Method. RIP (Repetition, Image, and Pattern) becomes well known to be the best way of learning process from inputs, processing, outputs of learning outcomes. Integrated English Learning Program with Visual Simple Diagram Method makes students clear, and the class interesting. Proven Sentence Diagramming Method has been utilized to give clear understanding to every student. In English, the Verb is the most important word and make sentences balancing, scientific, expandable, simple, straightforward, and beautiful in Visual Colored Sentence Diagrams.Unique, easy, and proven learning method to understand, memorize, and retrieve what is in memory. With a little Efforts to Maximize you. Seven Advantages of Block Sentence Diagram. -------------------------------------------- In order to learn English with relatively easy and simple training method on Block Sentence Diagram, authors has transformed Version of Sentence Diagram. Because Sentence Diagram is very easy to diagram with the minimum knowledge of Grammar however too complicated to learn. That is why Block Sentence Diagram method has been developed to increase English Sentence. Second BSD is more efficient and effective English Learning ways than conventional methods by text, image, audio or video. Third, Diagramming just like water flowing way to follow the stream of thought of the sentence. Fourth, it is easy for the students to memorize the complete sentence only by remembering the Structure of BSD. Fifth, Diagramming by BSD gives the best opportunity to learn Grammar, Conversation, Writing, and Reading. Sixth, Learners can predict easily the structure and the streams of the thought of writer, and get more vivid actions of verbs. Finally, Keeping ever field of English Learning Simple and Straightforward. In which case, Who can use BSD Pattern English? For Elegant Speaking For Advance Writing For Simultaneous Interpretation For Fast Reading and Comprehension For Painless English Grammar Learning The most powerful address by Martin Luther King “We have a Dream.” Why? The most frequently quoted Sentence by J Kennedy. Why? The are the most persuasive sentence and rhetoric of sentences. Standard Seven Course of Training ----------------------------------- Step 1: Paragraph Reading Step 2: Each Sentence Reading (W/ or W/O Colored Verb) Step 3: Block Sentence Reading Step 4: Block Sentence with BSD Signal Step 5: BSD with Verb Only Step 6: BSD Recollect Step 7: BSD Recollect and Fill in Blank
Help them or tell them? Be like Jesus or talk about Jesus? Social action or gospel proclamation? It seems the two are often pitted against each other, as if they are mutually exclusive. But the New Testament paints a different picture where both aspects are valued. In this plea for a renewed understanding of the Christian calling, Chester argues that faithfulness to the gospel necessitates a commitment to evangelism and social involvement. To that end, he structures the book around three basic theses: 1.) evangelism and social action are distinct activities, 2.) proclamation is central, and 3.) evangelism and social action are inseparable. Responding to Christians in both camps, Chester helps people to talk the talk and walk the walk.
Recent scholarship on the historical Jesus has rightly focused upon how Jesus understood his own mission. But no scholarly effort to understand the mission of Jesus can rest content without exploring the historical possibility that Jesus envisioned his own death. In this careful and far-reaching study, Scot McKnight contends that Jesus did in fact anticipate his own death, that Jesus understood his death as an atoning sacrifice, and that his death as an atoning sacrifice stood at the heart of Jesus' own mission to protect his own followers from the judgment of God.
With Playing God, Andy Crouch opens the subject of power, elucidating its subtle activity in our relationships and institutions. He gives us much more than a warning against abuse, though. Turning the notion of "playing God" on its head, Crouch celebrates power as the gift by which we join in God's creative, redeeming work in the world.