Tesoro Escondido – (Spanish)
$18.75
Hidden Treasure – Youth Devotional 2015
This book seeks to help young people to find soul satisfaction. This devotional contains a meditation for each day in which God’s divine plan and the resources to find happiness and significance to life are exposed.
2 in stock
Pablo Claverie
Binding: Cloth Text
Published: January 2015
Publisher: Pacific Press Publishing Association
| Weight | 0.855 kg |
|---|
You must be logged in to post a review.
Related products
-
Perfect Star
$18.19Add to cartKendra, Ruth-Ann, and Megan are best friends who enjoy riding their ponies together. When Kendra receives and English saddle for her birthday, the girls start dreaming of flying over fences and hedges like the riders they’ve seen on TV and in jumping classes at horse shows. But Kendra discovers that her pony, Star, won’t jump over even the smallest obstacle.
Together the three friends form the Ready to Ride Club (R2R) and begin taking riding lessons from Trish Klein. Trish knows a lot about horses and ponies, and a lot about people. For example, she knows no one is perfect. Another very important thing she knows is that God can always be trusted.
The first book in the Ready to Ride series will remind you that all people (and horses) are different in one way or another, but God has made all of them special. Sometimes we need to be patient with others and even with ourselves as we grow and learn and develop the gifts God has given us.
-
Tell The World (DVD)
$8.99Add to cartThe correct equations, but the wrong interpretation. The result was sadness, pain and discouragement. That’s how the story of the Seventh-day Adventist Church begins.
Based on true events, Tell the World tells the compelling story of a small group of farmers from the northeast of the United States. They set the foundation of an organization that has been at the forefront of issues such as health, education, communication and Biblical interpretation.
The film begins with a startling discovery made by farmer and former militia member William Miller, played by Bill Lake. After years of study, Miller concludes that Jesus will return in 1843. His sermons along with the Biblical and historical evidence were so convincing that thousands of people sold everything, confessed their sins and waited for the event with high expectations. Eventually they settled for a specific date: October 22nd, 1844.
But the day came, and Jesus did not return. In addition to Miller and his wife Lucy, played by Kate Hurman, few people remained faithful to God, among them Ellen Harmon (Tommie Amber-Pirie), James White (Stephen MacDonald) and Joseph Bates (Timothy Paul Coderre).
Produced by the Seventh-day Adventist church in Australia, the series presents vivid details of the pain and joy experience by writer Ellen G. White, considered one of the 100 most influential people in American history by the Smithsonian Institute.
Her guidance and advice, obtained through Bible studies, as well as dreams and visions revealed by God, guided the steps of this church in becoming a worldwide movement of compassion in the areas of health, education, community development and disaster relief.
The denomination is present in over 200 countries with approximately 19 million members. It manages thousands of educational and health institutions, food factories, a global humanitarian agency, and it opens a new church every 3 minutes.
Written by H. G. Sloan and Aaron Harzler and directed by Kyle Portbury, with the aid of Allan Lindsay, George Knight and James Nix as consultants, this is the biggest production ever made about the history of Adventism. It shows the harsh beginnings of the church. Uncertainty, doubt, death and poverty were challenges that the pioneers had to overcome.
When watching Tell The World, it’s likely that you will relate to your own experience, and may find that both the disappointment and the success of this movement were the key to their physical, mental and
-
Zippitty-do-dah
$7.27Add to cart“I had no idea how much fun it would be to wash a horse!” Ruth-Ann exclaimed.
Zippitty Do Dah, shortened to Zipper, is Ruth-Ann’s sorrel and white Paint pony.
Ready to Ride friends Ruth-Ann Chow, Kendra Rawling, and Megan Lewis worked hard to get their ponies washed and groomed. They even braided the ponies’ manes with ribbons. The Fun Fair would begin the next day at Sedgwick Adventist Church. The girls had decided to give pony rides to kids for one dollar.
The girls had planned carefully and checked all of their equipment. They had helmets for all the riders, and adults were on hand if anything happened. Beyond that, they had prayed that God would keep the riders safe and no one would get hurt. So, why didn’t God answer their prayer?
Life isn’t always the way we’d like it to be. But in troubles large and small, God can be trusted.
-
Sunrise Hope
$26.09Add to cartWhen Stephanie Kent moves to a new town to work with disadvantaged teens, she vows not to let her fears and doubts take over. Young and optimistic, she can’t help seeing worlds of potential in the teens and feeling drawn to her boss Paul, a cynical ex-pastor who has given up on God. But the more she works with Paul (who treats her like a naive do-gooder) and the teens (who are addicts, criminals, and world-class manipulators), the more uncertain she becomes about everything. Just when she feels like giving up, Stephanie realizes God is still working on all of them and she senses hope rising once again.







Reviews
There are no reviews yet.