22,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
11 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

We live in a post-modern world. We live in a post-Christian culture where everything is upside down. It's an uncharted time of upheaval and uncertainty. So, what's a person to hold onto? What's important? What counts forever? A hundred years from now, what will really matter? Does God bring us into this world and tell us to just figure it out on our own? Of course not. And fortunately, He uses one of Jesus' "best buds" to allow us to know exactly how to behave . . . in any time and place. But most importantly, He allows us to know exactly how to behave today, in the time and place that God…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
We live in a post-modern world. We live in a post-Christian culture where everything is upside down. It's an uncharted time of upheaval and uncertainty. So, what's a person to hold onto? What's important? What counts forever? A hundred years from now, what will really matter? Does God bring us into this world and tell us to just figure it out on our own? Of course not. And fortunately, He uses one of Jesus' "best buds" to allow us to know exactly how to behave . . . in any time and place. But most importantly, He allows us to know exactly how to behave today, in the time and place that God ordained for us before time began. God uses Peter to answer the big questions of life, and to face today and tomorrow and the next day with confidence and peace, regardless of what the world around us looks like. He brings calm in the midst of chaos and serenity in the midst of the storm, all because we know with assurance what it is that constitutes The Most Important Thing.
Autorenporträt
G. Boyce Clay, a native of Durant, Oklahoma, has been a student and teacher of the Word for almost fifty years. A youth director and deacon for almost a decade, he has served two congregations as elder and is an ordained minister and Colson Fellow. He is among the fourth of five generations of eye doctors in his family and has served on numerous medical missions to Guatemala and Togo, West Africa. He and his wife of almost fifty years, Pam, have three married daughters and seven grandchildren.