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Girls of Grace is a compilation album produced by Contemporary Christian group Point of Grace.It was released in 2002 by Word Records.. The album includes several tracks recorded by other female artists of the Christian music scene, including Rachael Lampa, Jennifer Deibler (of FFH), Jaci Velasquez and Joy Williams, as well as three tracks by Point of Grace themselves.
As opposed to the treasury of grace from which believers can make withdrawals, in Lutheranism salvation becomes a declaration of spiritual bankruptcy, in which penitents acknowledge the inadequacy of their own resources and trust only in God to save them. Accepting Augustine's concern for legal justification as the base metaphor for salvation ...
Rarities & Remixes is the sixth album by contemporary Christian music group Point of Grace.It was released in 2000 by Word Records.. The album consists of eight remixes of songs from the group's first two albums, Point of Grace and The Whole Truth; "Forever On and On," taken from a compilation album, Streams; an acoustic performance of "Circle of Friends" from the group's third album, Life ...
Point of Grace is an all-female contemporary Christian music vocal group. The current trio consists of Shelley Breen, Denise Jones, and Leigh Cappillino. The group started out as a quartet in 1991, with original members Breen and Jones, as well as Terry Jones and Heather Payne.
24 is the first greatest hits album by contemporary Christian music group Point of Grace.It was released in 2003 by Word Records.The album title refers to the group's 24 consecutive #1 hits on the Billboard Contemporary Christian Songs chart.
How You Live is the twelfth album and seventh studio album from contemporary Christian music group Point of Grace.It was released on August 28, 2007 and has achieved critical and commercial success, peaking at #56 on the Billboard 200 and at #4 on the Billboard Christian & Gospel Album Charts.
This passage concerning the function of faith in relation to the covenant of God is often used as a definition of faith. Υποστασις (hy-po'sta-sis), translated "assurance" here, commonly appears in ancient papyrus business documents, conveying the idea that a covenant is an exchange of assurances which guarantees the future transfer of possessions described in the contract.
Notably, the renowned theologian John Owen used More's work as a major point of contention in his own 1648 treatise, "The Death of Death in the Death of Christ." According to theologian J. I. Packer, Owen selected More's book "as the fullest statement of the case for universal redemption that had yet appeared in English," and utilized it as a 'chopping-block' to dismantle the arguments in ...