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Whatever emotions these tales evoke from you, The Edmonton Writers' Group hopes you enjoy your travels with our authors.
A collection of four children's stories by Lisa Kennett Rudkin. Includes 14 full page, full color illustrations.
Through out this book you will find amusing tales; two young brothers visiting their grandparents and catching a magical talking fish, a family of practical joking bears, a story of a young man's dream of being invisible all the practical jokes he plays on his friends, a tale about a creepy witch on a spooky old street and how the community comes together to help its seniors and stops the rumors.Lisa tries to teach children with her stories that are fun, interactive and imaginative. She also likes to have a moral at the end of each taleThe stories are usually acted out, and children really enjoy that.
What should have been a peaceful search for an elusive trumpeter swan, takes a dark turn. A sudden trauma catapults Izzy into shock and triggers a determined quest for answers. While combating the inner pain of loss and fear, she is propelled by a passion for figure skating. She bravely pushes through the physical pain of competitive training. A special relationship with her grandpa and family dynamics impact her journey. A surprise turn of events reveals a new supernatural awareness and charts a direction where unexpected joy is just a beginning! The book has 27 breathtaking illustrations and is for ages 7 and up.
In this book, Howard W. Boldt investigates scripture deemed to support the teachings of the charismatic movement. Different than most other works unfavorable to charismatic doctrine, this book exposes major translation and contextual errors that have severely handicapped the believer's ability to make a credible case against charismatic dogma.Numerous overlooked historical and cultural features of the Pentecost narrative disqualify the notion that this was a supernatural exhibition of speaking or hearing unlearned languages. Actual Greek definitions of the various gifts' of the Spirit help to explain with biblical examples why Corinthian believers had no supernatural abilities, including speaking unlearned languages. Failure to distinguish unceasing natural ability 'gifts' of the Spirit from the ceased supernatural Apostolic 'signs and wonders' help to explain why many charismatics are not convinced by the cessationist teaching that believers' supernatural 'gifts' have ceased.Detailed exploration of these and related subjects provide ample reasons why Howard Boldt asserts that the charismatic movement never had a biblical basis and has from its beginning been imported into Christianity.
A new century dawns, and once again Rome's frontiers are heating up. Part three of the Eboracum Trilogy.
It is A.D. 78, and Briton and Roman alike must decide where true loyalties lie. Part two of the Eboracum Trilogy.
In the aftermath of WWII, Helen, a war bride from England, journeys with her infant son to an unfamiliar continent on the hope of a promise. A promise that is, at times, hard to hold on to.While Canadian citizens face their private battles at home, Helen determinedly perseveres as wife to a suffering veteran and mother to their son. Her resolve to fight for her family and make the vast, distant prairies her new homeland, reveal the strength and power of a war bride's heart.Eileen began writing Promise in the Void in the mid-1940s. Many aspects of the story parallel her own journey as an immigrant to Canada. In 1997, she passed the manuscript on to her granddaughter Rebekah, who published the novel in 2017.
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