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`Author: Josh McDowell
Josh McDowell thought Christians must be 'out of their minds.' He put them down. He argued against their faith. But eventually he saw that his arguments wouldn't stand up. Jesus Christ really was God in human flesh. Josh became a speaker on college and university campuses, challenging those who were just as skeptical as he had been. In More Than a Carpenter Josh focuses
upon the person who changed his life -- Jesus Christ. It is a hardheaded
book for people who are skeptical about Jesus' deity, his resurrection,
his claims on their lives.
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Author: Max Lucado
In this compelling quest for the Messiah, bestselling author Lucado invites readers to meet the blue-collar Jew whose claim altered a world and whose promise has never been equaled. |
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The Case for Easter: A Journalist Investigates the Evidence
for the Resurrection
Resource# B772 Author: Lee Strobel Did Jesus of Nazareth really rise from the dead? Of the many world religions, only one claims that its founder returned from the grave. The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the very cornerstone of Christianity. |
| The Third Day: The Reality of the
Resurrection
Author: Hank Hanegraaff Human History - and Your Future
- is Forever Changed by What Happened on The Third Day.
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As Joni Eareckson Tada said, "Hands
down, slam-dunk, the resurrection is the bottom line for the believer.
Hank leaves no stone unturned, thoroughly portraying the resurrection as
our grand hope, the glorious springboard from which we will dive into eternity."
For more info click
here
About Author: Hank Hanegraaff serves as president and chairman of the board of the California-based Christian Research Institute International (CRI). He also hosts CRI's Bible Answer Man radio program, which is broadcast daily across the United States, Canada, and around the world on www.equip.org. |
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The Weeping Chamber Author: Sigmund Brouwer The Weeping Chamber, contrasts the last week in the life of The Teacher with the life of another visitor in Jerusalem during those turbulent days. He was called The Teacher. Some
said he could restore maimed limbs with a simple touch, that he had even
raised the dead. Others called him a fraud, a magician. He was maniac.
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Or Messiah. Hated. Adulated.
A man of infinite mystery. One who might lead a rebellion against a world
empire. Or destroy hundreds of generations of established religion. Or
both. He was a man with one week to live.
Another man would arrive in Jerusalem that same Passover. Unknown. Unheralded. A man of infinite desperation. One who might never see his wife and daughter again. Who had only himself to blame. He was a man with one week to find a miracle. |