Burnt Offerings

Burnt Offerings
Author: Robert Marasco
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012-03-27
Genre: Fine books
ISBN: 9781933618845


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This is a reprint of a classic horror novel, Burnt Offerings by Robert Marasco with a new introduction and artwork.

Burnt Offerings

Burnt Offerings
Author: Laurell K. Hamilton
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 400
Release: 2002-09-24
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1101146400


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Anita Blake is a vampire hunter. But when someone else sets his sights on her prey, she must save them both from the inferno.

Burnt Offerings

Burnt Offerings
Author: Charles Newsome
Publisher: Washington House
Total Pages: 416
Release: 2004-08-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781932581348


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Burnt Offerings a novel of the Detroit Police Department This first novel gives vibrant voice to a street cop's extraordinary experiences on Detroit's steamy Latin southwest side. It examines the gritty world of big city police work in a new light, and with a unique voice. The story encompasses hope and fear, faith and betrayal, love and redemption. It explores municipal politics, racial attitudes, religious philosophy, and the precarious state of criminal justice in urban America. At its heart, though, it's simply about cops: normal people called upon to perform overwhelming tasks under unspeakable conditions-and the horrendous effect that has on them, and those around them.

Core Christianity

Core Christianity
Author: Michael Horton
Publisher: Zondervan
Total Pages: 193
Release: 2016-04-05
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0310525071


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What beliefs are core to the Christian faith? This book is here to help you understand the reason for your hope as a Christian so that you can see it with fresh sight and invite others into the conversation. A lot of Christians take their story—the narratives that give rise to their beliefs—for granted. They pray, go to church, perhaps even read their Bible. But they might be stuck if a stranger asked them to explain what they believe and why they believe it. Author, pastor, and theologian Mike Horton unpacks the essential and basic beliefs that all Christians share in a way that is easy to understand and applicable to our lives today. And in a way that will make you excited to be a Christian! Core Christianity covers topics like: Jesus as both fully God and fully man. The doctrine of the Trinity. The goodness of God despite a broken world. The ways God speaks. The meaning of salvation. What is the Christian calling? Includes discussion questions for individual or group use. This introduction to the basic doctrines of Christianity is perfect for those who are new to the faith, as well as those who have an interest in deepening their understanding of what it means to be a follower of Jesus Christ.

Burnt Offerings

Burnt Offerings
Author: Floyd Sours
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2010-06-14
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1450099297


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Christ as Seen in the Offerings

Christ as Seen in the Offerings
Author: Robert F. Kingscote
Publisher: Irving Risch
Total Pages: 67
Release: 2015-02-10
Genre: Religion
ISBN:


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Christ as seen in the OfferingsThe Burnt Offering. The Meat Offering. The Peace Offering. The Sin and Trespass Offerings. The Red Heifer.

Qorbanot

Qorbanot
Author: Alisha Kaplan
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 163
Release: 2021-04-01
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1438482914


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Winner of the 2022 Gerald Lampert Memorial Award presented by the League of Canadian Poets A collaboration between poet Alisha Kaplan and artist Tobi Aaron Kahn, Qorbanot—the Hebrew word for "sacrificial offerings"—explores the concept of sacrifice, offering a new vision of an ancient practice. A dynamic dialogue of text and image, the book is a poetic and visual exegesis on Leviticus, a visceral and psychological exploration of ritual offerings, and a conversation about how notions of sacrifice continue to resonate in the twenty-first century. Both from Holocaust survivor families, Kaplan and Kahn deal extensively with the Holocaust in their work. Here, the modes of poetry and art express the complexity of belief, the reverberations of trauma, and the significance of ritual. In the poems, the speaker, offspring of burnt offerings, searches for meaning in her grandparents' experiences and in the long tradition of Orthodox Judaism in which she was raised. Kahn's paintings on handmade paper, drawn from decades of his career as an artist, have not previously been exhibited or published. They reflect his quest to distill a legacy of trauma and loss into enduring memory. With a foreword by James E. Young and essays by Ezra Cappell, Lori Hope Lefkovitz, and Sasha Pimentel, the book presents new directions for thinking about what sacrifice means in religious, social, and personal contexts, and harkens back to foundational traditions, challenging them in reimagined and artistic ways.

Burnt Offerings

Burnt Offerings
Author: Michael Lister
Publisher:
Total Pages: 359
Release: 2012
Genre: Arson
ISBN: 9781888146905


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"The scratch of a single match--spark, heat, chemical reaction, fire being born--and an intense thriller begins. Terror reigns over the North Florida National Forest, the coastal town of Bayshore, and the barrier island of Pine Key; a fiery terror whose flame threatens to consume the whole world. An exacting and methodical killer whose weapon is fire is working on his masterpiece, and only a wounded and scarred FDLE agent and a retired ritual crimes expert hiding from the world in a cabin in the woods have any hope of stopping him."--From publisher's website.

The Cross and Its Shadow

The Cross and Its Shadow
Author: Stephen Nelson Haskell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 426
Release: 1914
Genre: Sanctuary doctrine (Seventh-Day Adventists)
ISBN:


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In "THE CROSS AND ITS SHADOW," the type and the antitype are placed side by side, with the hope that the reader may thus become better acquainted with the Saviour. It is not the intention of the author of this work to attack any error that may have been taught in regard to the service of the sanctuary, or to arouse any controversy, but simply to present the truth in its clearness. This is a reprint of an important early Advent book, which explains the sanctuary and its services. - SECTION I. THE SANCTUARY. SECTION II. FURNITURE OF THE SANCTUARY. SECTION III. THE PRIESTHOOD. SECTION IV. SPRINGTIME ANNUAL FEASTS. SECTION V. VARIOUS OFFERINGS. SECTION VI. SERVICES OF THE SANCTUARY. SECTION VII. THE AUTUMNAL ANNUAL FEASTS. SECTION VIII. LEVITICAL LAWS AND CEREMONIES. SECTION IX. THE TRIBES OF ISRAEL

The Peregrine's Odyssey

The Peregrine's Odyssey
Author: Michael Kleinfall
Publisher:
Total Pages: 424
Release: 2019-09-14
Genre:
ISBN: 9781691260515


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Christiani Esse Non Licit! It is not lawful to be a Christian. From the time of Nero in the mid-first century, four words hung over the heads of every Christian for the first three centuries of the nascent Church of the Christos, the God-man. In 116 AD during the reign of the Emperor Trajan, Ignatius, bishop of Antioch in Syria, heard those four words sentencing him to death in the Roman Colosseum. His condemnation and martyrdom were witnessed by his closest friend, Gaius Segusiavus, the "Peregrine." Through the eyes of Gaius, we travel back in time to October of 96 AD, to Antioch in the Roman province of Syria. On a stormy night in Antioch, Ignatius reveals the story of his mid-life conversion, prompted by a singular event witnessed by his father outside Jerusalem in 30 AD. Gaius, a prosperous merchant from Roman Gaul, a typical believer in the gods, is incredulous at Ignatius' strange tale and the peculiar history of the followers of Christos. Ignatius, novice Christian, asks a favor of Gaius, a request rooted in his new religion. Granting Ignatius' request leads the two friends to the island of Patmos, a Roman penal colony, and a meeting with the last of the twelve apostles, the "Ancient One", John, the beloved of Christ. Against the backdrop of Trajan's Roman Empire, Gaius is inexorably drawn into the Christian world as "The Way" spreads throughout the Empire and into Gaius' own family. We encounter the Christians of Rome, those in Asia and Bithynia; the emperor Trajan, successful in war, reshaping the face of Rome with his monumental building projects; the decorated centurion Maximus who befriends Gaius; the eloquent Roman senator, Pliny the Younger, through whose letters we live the lives of noble Romans; and a vengeful, banished son who will haunt the last days of the "Peregrine." Throughout the course of twenty years, from that night in Antioch to a death under the noonday sun in the Colosseum, the lives of Gaius and Ignatius are increasingly intertwined: Ignatius the martyr who becomes one of the most famous and iconic of the early Church Fathers; Gaius who seeks understanding of his closest friend's faith, while fearing the possibility of hearing those mortal four words. History and fiction meet in this story of the love of two "brothers" and the story of the Love that conquers both.