Sentences with phrase «entire description of this book»

Not exact matches

Next to the description of Pentecost in the second chapter of Acts, this passage is the most important in the entire book, for what takes place here opens up for the church its largest field for expansion and makes possible the eventual winning of the Roman Empire to Christianity.
(ENTIRE BOOK) As a pioneer in the development in the specialized ministry of pastoral counseling, and a teacher of Protestant ministers in various theological school settings, the author offers his assessment of the state of the ministry in the late 1960's, a critique of the various forms that ministry has taken, and an description of creative new forms of ministry.
It is significant that from the second century to the nineteenth, when modern historical scholarship became current, theories about the Bible were held which no competent historian now accepts, such as that Moses wrote the entire Pentateuch (the first five books of the Old Testament) including the description of his own death.
My husband passed along Michael Pollan's book Omnivore's Dilemma when he was done, and I was especially fascinated by Joel Salatin's Polyface Farms, specifically Michael's description of the techniques used to raise pastured beef, eggs and chicken and the resulting health of the farm's entire ecosystem.
It makes it impossible to read the description of the book, without highlighting the entire window with your cursor.
Amazon's description: «A comprehensive guide for all sizes of libraries, this book guides you through the entire process of effectively redesigning your library's website — from evaluating your current site and understanding user needs, to creating a budget, through to launching and maintaining your updated site.»
Rather than being confined to a vertical column on the inside flap, the book's cogent description, written by Walker, is laid out horizontally and incorporated into the entire dust jacket, which unfolds into a poster - size sheet that on the reverse features a detail of one of her works, ``... (And Modern Black Identity).»
It's hard to square the surroundings with the description in the book of how an entire academic discipline has been made to feel under siege, but Mann insists that it is a given.
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