Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Adventist Review, the official Seventh-day Adventist magazine, issued weekly and with nearly 30,000 paid subscribers. Adventist World , an international magazine with 1.2 million unpaid circulation. Ministry , for pastors, by the Ministerial Association of Seventh-day Adventists .
Name ISSN Abbreviations Publication Years Publisher City, State/Province Country Affiliation Abr-Nahrain 0065-0382 Abr-N 1960-1998 Semitic Studies, Melbourne and Sydney Uni Peeters Melbourne Leuven Australia Belgium Academic Adventist Review Orig The Present Truth 0161-1119 1849–present Review and Herald Hagerstown, Maryland United States Adventist Adventist Today 1079-5499 1993–present ...
The CQ Press Professional Division produces staff directories, sources for biographical and contact information on the people who work in federal, congressional, and judicial offices. Included among the directories published is the CQ Press Staff Directories series, consisting of the Congressional Staff Directory, the Federal Staff Directory ...
Ministry: International Journal for Pastors is an international monthly magazine for Christian ministers, with a circulation of approximately 78,000. It is published by the Ministerial Association ( website ), an official body of the worldwide Adventist church . [ 1 ]
The Church Quarterly Review (now abbreviated CQR) was an English journal published by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. It existed independently from 1875 until 1968; in that year it merged with the London Quarterly and Holborn Review , a Methodist journal and became known as The Church Quarterly , which was published until 1971.
This turned him away from spiritism and began his studies of Christ as an Adventist. Morneau claims there was the threat of a bounty on his head of $10,000 [9] (approximately $126,000 in 2012 dollars), should he join the Adventist Church. [10] He became a member of the Adventist Church in 1946 regardless.
Concordia Theological Quarterly is a peer-reviewed academic journal of theology published for the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod by the faculty of Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne, Indiana. It continues The Springfielder and is published in January, April, July, and October each year.
He edited the journal Shabbat Shalom from 1984 till 1992. In the early 90s, Goldstein interpreted the end of the Cold War as a new sign of the end of the world, with the end of the Soviet Union as the end of "the most implacable barrier to Adventist eschatology." [4] He was a popular apocalyptic writer in the church at this time. [5]