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Connecting the Unconnected

Harding, Nathan
Connecting the Unconnected
This is a doctoral dissertation and presents new information about evangelical clerical leadership. It is informed, in part, by the theories of adaptive leadership, chaos theory, digital ecclesiology, and critical realism. The purpose of this narrative inquiry research was to research how church pastors experienced adaptations to evangelistic strategies and how they described the outcomes of their decisions during the pandemic. The study was a...

CHF 54.90

The Pentateuch

Harding, Nathan
The Pentateuch
The Pentateuch is the first five books of the Bible and is the combined translation work of William Tyndale and John Rogers with Miles Coverdale as taken from the Matthew Bible. It was published under the pseudonym "Thomas Matthew" by men targeted by an antagonistic queen. The Matthew Bible is a 1537 Bible made easily readable for today's readers -- without changing the wording. Every previous attempt has made changes. These five books were ta...

CHF 29.90

Behind the Veil - Paperback

Harding, Nathan
Behind the Veil - Paperback
A study guide for the book of Revelation. It is designed to stimulate thought and prayerful study. Included is a Guide to the Prophetic Symbols - the heart of this book. This section provides commentary, word studies, cross-references, associated word listings, and a location guide for finding each word's location in the book of Revelation. Also included is the entire book of Revelation (KJV).

CHF 14.90

Christ

Harding, Nathan
Christ
Christ: Lost in the word, is an easy to read history book. It traces the background of the first original languages-to-English Bible translation and the men who made it possible. This book includes a Bible Key card that can be used to identify "good" Bibl

CHF 14.90

Christmas

Harding, Nathan / Harding, William
Christmas
Christmas: The way it used to be is an easy-to-read, yet in-depth research book that looks into this religious festival's murky past. It spans hundreds of years and many countries to show the real history. Julius Caesar introduced the Julian calendar in 46BC placing December 25 as the day with the shortest daylight hours. In AD 350, this day was appointed as the Feast of the Nativity. In later years, it was called Mass of Christ. Today people ...

CHF 13.90