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"in name only" relationship to true Christianity, we have to be thankful for those who devote much time and effort to the translation of works from other languages, and skillfully so.
We must also be thankful for qualified editors and those who commit to publishing, not to mention offering at reasonable prices, works saved for English readership.
This particular work of the noted 17th century Lutheran theologian and professor, Johann Gerhard, is thoughtfully translated from the German by Elmer M. Hohle and edited by David O. Berger, Director of Library Services, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, MO. The publisher, Repristination Press, Malone, TX, must be credited with selecting this wonderful Gerhard work to publish and provide at inexpensive prices for such valuable content.
The work itself, approximately 330 pages, is select sermons of Gerhard on the Passion of Christ in its stages. To quote the editor, "Johann Gerhard views the Passion of Christ with Old Testament eyes ... The events, people, and prophecies of the Old Testament are seamlessly connected with their culmination in the suffering, death, burial, and resurrection of Christ."
Suffice it to say that one is disappointed only that this work
does end, but you are prompted to want to read other Gerhard translations that are available in English not to mention returning to Scripture. Gerhard was a great exegete for his time and today. Thankfully, the translation is very well done by Hohle so that the English reader may savor what German readers have been able to do until now.
I could not encourage anyone enough to add this volume to their library.
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More importantly your future could depend upon it.
It is concise and clear about investments we are all going to have to make decisions about at sometime in our lives ie, pensions, mortgages , the stock market and gets to the point of what they really are, .
If you are serious about your future and your families , you should read this book.
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Buy one from zShops for: $18.95
I enjoyed it so much, in fact, that I couldn't so much as remove 1 star even though I cringed every time Desiree (Des) broke out into 'black speak.' It wouldn't have been so disturbing I suppose, if her background hadn't been mainstream/middle class. It just felt inconsistent that she spoke 3rd generation ghetto. When people, even black people, are born and raised in an environment where proper English is spoken, they typically talk like their peers - trust me, I know. Unless they're having an identity crisis and incorrectly assume they must talk like an uneducated thug in order to feel black. However, this character was portrayed as strong and self-assured, sans identity issues. Normally, I steer clear of books where the black characters are portrayed so stereotypically, but Mr. Handler managed to make this one so interestingly multidimensional that I forgive him.
I'm also glad I ignored the review that referred to the romance in the story as 'gratingly cute.' I thought it was one of the most emotionally honest depictions of two wounded people falling in love that I've read - and I read a lot. It adds an additional endearing element to this mystery that is absorbing and well written.
When the police determine somebody murdered Moose, Resident Trooper Desiree Mitry finds herself in the middle of homicide investigation that confuses her because the victim was driving her sister's car and Takai had more enemies than anyone else in town. Before they can flush out the perpetrator they have to find out who was the intended victim. Mitch Berger, Desiree's lover and Frye's movie critic pal finds himself in the unique position of being able to give Des all the answers to her questions if he doesn't get himself killed first.
Mitry and Berger are a great team both personally and professionally but the star of the book is the town of Dorset, which looks perfect on the surface but has all the problems and eccentric characters of the inner city. There are a surplus of suspects who could have killed Moose but the actual perpetrator will come as a total shock to readers, who will enjoy this regional mystery.
Harriet Klausner
Surprisingly, Mitch finds the town charming and even rents a home from Dolly Seymour on exclusive Big Sister as he sees this as an opportunity to start over again. However, his need for a new type of tranquillity is disturbed when he finds a corpse in his garden. Police Lieutenant Desiree Mitry of the State Major Crimes Squad leads the official investigation even as Mitch makes his own brand of inquiries. As they run into one another, Mitch and Desiree form an attraction, but he feels guilty and she hurts from the abandonment of her first spouse, making it obvious that once the case is solved the relationship is over or is it?
Renowned for his Hoag novels, David Handler begins a new series starring two attractive and complex individuals. A die hard New Yorker, Mitch remains in mourning until he arrives at Big Sister while Dolly is a beautiful Amazonian African-American who mistrusts males except if they are cats. Thrown together in an interesting police-procedural-amateur sleuth who-done-it, they form the basis for a wonderful opening novel.
Harriet Klausner