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In Touch with Dr. Charles Stanley is a television series sponsored by In Touch Ministries in Atlanta, ... The show has been translated in 50 languages. [2]
Stanley was born on September 25, 1932 in Dry Fork, Pittsylvania County, Virginia, in the midst of the Great Depression. [5] His parents were Charles Frazier "Charlie" Stanley, Sr. (April 27, 1904 – June 18, 1933) and Rebecca Susan Hall (nee Hardy, formerly Stanley; October 10, 1908 – November 29, 1992).
Unity views God as spiritual energy that is present everywhere and is available to all people. According to Unity co-founder Charles Fillmore: “God is not a person who has set creation in motion and gone away and left it to run down like a clock. God is Spirit, infinite Mind, the immanent force and intelligence everywhere manifest in nature.
God's Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in Verse is a 1927 book of poems by James Weldon Johnson patterned after traditional African-American religious oratory. African-American scholars Henry Louis Gates and Cornel West have identified the collection as one of Johnson's two most notable works, the other being Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man .
Charles Rozell Swindoll / ˈ s w ɪ n ˌ d ɒ l / (born October 18, 1934) is an evangelical Christian pastor, author, educator, and radio preacher. He founded Insight for Living , headquartered in Frisco , Texas , which airs a radio program of the same name on more than 2,000 stations around the world in 15 languages.
Today, there are more than 500 million Pentecostal and charismatic believers across the globe, [34] and it [was] the fastest-growing form of Christianity today [in 1978]. [14] The Azusa Street Revival is commonly regarded as the beginning of the modern-day Pentecostal Movement. [22] [35] [36]
Sermon 125: On Living without God - Ephesians 2:12, Rotherham, 6 July 1790 Sermon 126: On the Danger of Increasing Riches - Psalm 62:10 , Bristol , 21 September 1790 Sermon 127: Trouble and Rest of Good Men - Job 3:17, preached at St. Mary's in Oxford on Sunday, 21 September 1735 and published at the request of several of the hearers [ 10 ]
Answering a reader's question about the poem in 1879, Longfellow himself summarized that the poem was "a transcript of my thoughts and feelings at the time I wrote, and of the conviction therein expressed, that Life is something more than an idle dream." [13] Richard Henry Stoddard referred to the theme of the poem as a "lesson of endurance". [14]