Strangers and Sojourners

Strangers and Sojourners
Title Strangers and Sojourners PDF eBook
Author Michael D. O'Brien
Publisher Ignatius Press
Total Pages 580
Release 2009-09-03
Genre Fiction
ISBN 168149454X

Download Strangers and Sojourners Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

An epic novel set in the rugged interior of British Columbia, the first volume of a trilogy which traces the lives of four generations of a family of exiles. Beginning in 1900, and concluding with the climactic events leading up to the Millennium, the series follows Anne and Stephen Delaney and their descendants as they live through the tumultuous events of this century. Anne is a highly educated Englishwoman who arrives in British Columbia at the end of the First World War. Raised in a family of spiritualists and Fabian socialists, she has fled civilization in search of adventure. She meets and eventually marries a trapper-homesteader, an Irish immigrant who is fleeing the "troubles" in his own violent past. This is a story about the gradual movement of souls from despair and unbelief to faith, hope, and love, about the psychology of perception, and about the ultimate questions of life, death and the mystery of being. Interwoven with scenes from Ireland, England, Poland, Russia, and Belgium during the War, Strangers and Sojourners is a tale of the extraordinary hidden within the ordinary. It is about courage and fear, and the triumph of the human spirit.

Sojourners and Strangers

Sojourners and Strangers
Title Sojourners and Strangers PDF eBook
Author Gregg R. Allison
Publisher Crossway
Total Pages 498
Release 2012-11-30
Genre Religion
ISBN 143353603X

Download Sojourners and Strangers Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

What is a church? This can be a difficult question to answer and Christians have offered a variety of perspectives. Gregg Allison thus explores and synthesizes all that Scripture affirms about the new covenant people of God, capturing a full picture of the biblical church. He covers the topics of the church's identity and characteristics; its growth through purity, unity, and discipline; its offices and leadership structures; its ordinances of baptism and the Lord's Supper; and its ministries. Here is a rich approach to ecclesiology consisting of sustained doctrinal reflection and wise, practical application. Part of the Foundations of Evangelical Theology series.

Strangers and Sojourners

Strangers and Sojourners
Title Strangers and Sojourners PDF eBook
Author Arthur W. Thurner
Publisher Wayne State University Press
Total Pages 414
Release 1994
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9780814323960

Download Strangers and Sojourners Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Arthur Thurner tells of the enormous struggle of the diverse immigrants who built and sustained energetic towns and communities, creating a lively civilization in what was essentially a forest wilderness. Their story is one of incredible economic success and grim tragedy in which mine workers daily risked their lives. By highlighting the roles women, African Americans, and Native Americans played in the growth of the Keweenaw community, Thurner details a neglected and ignored past. The history of Keweenaw Peninsula for the past one hundred and fifty years reflects contemporary American culture--a multicultural, pluralistic, democratic welfare state still undergoing evolution. Strangers and Sojourners, with its integration of social and economic history, for the first time tells the complete story of the people from the Keweenaw Peninsula's Baraga, Houghton, Keweenaw, and Ontonagon counties.

Strangers and Pilgrims, Travellers and Sojourners

Strangers and Pilgrims, Travellers and Sojourners
Title Strangers and Pilgrims, Travellers and Sojourners PDF eBook
Author Jeremy Dupertuis Bangs
Publisher
Total Pages 936
Release 2009
Genre Dissenters, Religious
ISBN

Download Strangers and Pilgrims, Travellers and Sojourners Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

"Controversies in politics and religion, customs of family life and society, obligations of labor and chances to play, questions of free will, democracy, the separation of church and state, religious toleration, treatment of Indians---these form the matter of this book." -- Publisher's description.

Plague Journal

Plague Journal
Title Plague Journal PDF eBook
Author Michael D. O'Brien
Publisher Ignatius Press
Total Pages 284
Release 2009-09-03
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1681493780

Download Plague Journal Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Plague Journal is Michael O'Brien's fourth novel in the Children of the Last Days series. The central character is Nathaniel Delaney, the editor of a small-town newspaper, who is about to face the greatest crisis of his life. As the novel begins, ominous events are taking place throughout North America, but little of it surfaces before the public eye. Set in the not-too-distant future, the story describes a nation that is quietly shifting from a democratic form of government to a form of totalitarianism. Delaney is one of the few voices left in the media who is willing to speak the whole truth about what is happening, and as a result the full force of the government is brought against him. Thus, seeking to protect his children and to salvage what remains of his life, he makes a choice that will alter the future of each member of his family and many other people. As the story progresses he keeps a journal of observations, recording the day-by-day escalation of events, and analyzing the motives of his political opponents with sometimes scathing frankness. More importantly, he begins to keep a "mental record" that develops into a painful process of self-examination. As his world falls apart, he is compelled to see in greater depth the significance of his own assumptions and compromises, his successes and failures. Plague Journal chronicles the struggle of a thoroughly modern man put to the ultimate spiritual and psychological test, a man who in losing himself finds himself.

Aliens and Sojourners

Aliens and Sojourners
Title Aliens and Sojourners PDF eBook
Author Benjamin H. Dunning
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages 194
Release 2012-02-25
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 0812201817

Download Aliens and Sojourners Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Early Christians spoke about themselves as resident aliens, strangers, and sojourners, asserting that otherness is a fundamental part of being Christian. But why did they do so and to what ends? How did Christians' claims to foreign status situate them with respect to each other and to the larger Roman world as the new movement grew and struggled to make sense of its own boundaries? Aliens and Sojourners argues that the claim to alien status is not a transparent one. Instead, Benjamin Dunning contends, it shaped a rich, pervasive, variegated discourse of identity in early Christianity. Resident aliens and foreigners had long occupied a conflicted space of both repulsion and desire in ancient thinking. Dunning demonstrates how Christians and others in antiquity capitalized on this tension, refiguring the resident alien as being of a compelling doubleness, simultaneously marginal and potent. Early Christians, he argues, used this refiguration to render Christian identity legible, distinct, and even desirable among the vast range of social and religious identities and practices that proliferated in the ancient Mediterranean. Through close readings of ancient Christian texts such as Hebrews, 1 Peter, the Shepherd of Hermas, and the Epistle to Diognetus, Dunning examines the markedly different ways that Christians used the language of their own marginality, articulating a range of options for what it means to be Christian in relation to the Roman social order. His conclusions have implications not only for the study of late antiquity but also for understanding the rhetorics of religious alienation more broadly, both in the ancient world and today.

The Sojourner

The Sojourner
Title The Sojourner PDF eBook
Author Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
Publisher DigiCat
Total Pages 348
Release 2022-08-16
Genre Fiction
ISBN

Download The Sojourner Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

DigiCat Publishing presents to you this special edition of "The Sojourner" by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. DigiCat Publishing considers every written word to be a legacy of humankind. Every DigiCat book has been carefully reproduced for republishing in a new modern format. The books are available in print, as well as ebooks. DigiCat hopes you will treat this work with the acknowledgment and passion it deserves as a classic of world literature.