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Evil Communications!

Episode 13 of the The People of The Book podcast, hosted by Jeret Scipio, titled "Evil Communications!" was published on August 3, 2024 and runs 18 minutes.

August 3, 2024 ·18m · The People of The Book

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Thanks for tuning in to The People of The Book Podcast where we talk about all things pertaining to The People of The Book. Today's episode we will be discussing the dangers of evil communications! Be sure to Like, Comment. Share and Subscribe! Listen to TPTBPodcast on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Join the Family! Follow us on IG: @tptbpodcast Follow my main page on IG: @watchmanotw Follow me on TikTok: watchmanotw CashApp: $TPTBPod

Thanks for tuning in to The People of The Book Podcast where we talk about all things pertaining to The People of The Book. Today's episode we will be discussing the dangers of evil communications! Be sure to Like, Comment. Share and Subscribe! Listen to TPTBPodcast on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Join the Family! Follow us on IG: @tptbpodcast Follow my main page on IG: @watchmanotw Follow me on TikTok: watchmanotw CashApp: $TPTBPod
Book 3, Chapter 19

Apr 11, 2026 ·44m

Book 3, Chapter 20

Apr 11, 2026 ·40m

Book 3, Chapter 21

Apr 11, 2026 ·44m

Book 3, Chapter 22

Apr 11, 2026 ·27m

Book 3, Chapter 23

Apr 11, 2026 ·19m

Book 3, Chapter 24

Apr 11, 2026 ·27m

London Labour and the London Poor Volume I by Henry Mayhew (1812 - 1887) LibriVox Subtitled, "A Cyclopaedia of the condition and earnings of those that will work, those that cannot work, and those that will not work.""The history of a people from the lips of the people themselves .. their labour, earnings, trials and sufferings, in their own unvarnished language, and to pourtray the condition of their homes and their families by personal observation of the places ..." "My earnest hope is that the book may serve to give the rich a more intimate knowledge of the sufferings, and the frequent heroism under those sufferings, of the poor ..."Henry Mayhew was a social researcher and journalist; he compiled a four volume work in minute detail on the lives of the poor in London, of which this is the first volume, published in 1851.(Peter Yearsley)Notes:1 The reader has attempted different voices to separate the interviewees from the narrator, but makes no claim to the accents being appropriate to the speakers.2 Very Numbers (KJV) by King James Version Loyal Books The Book of Numbers is the fourth book of the Hebrew Bible, and the fourth of five books of the Jewish Torah/Pentateuch. This book may be divided into three parts:1. The numbering of the people at Sinai, and preparations for resuming their march (1–10:10).2. An account of the journey from Sinai to Moab, the sending out of the spies and the report they brought back, the murmurings (eight times) of the people at the hardships by the way, and the subsequent exile into the wilderness for 40 years (10:11–21:20).3. The transactions in the plain of Moab before crossing the Jordan River (21:21–36).The period comprehended in the history extends from the second month of the second year, as measured from the Exodus, to the beginning of the eleventh month of the fortieth year, in all about thirty-seven years and nine months; a dreary period of wanderings. (Introduction from Wikipedia) Robert Elsmere by Mary Augusta Ward (1851 - 1920) LibriVox Essentially the book covers the life of Robert Elsmere, a boyishly intellectual clergyman. The first part covers his meeting with and eventual marriage to Catherine Leyburn. After a period as a country vicar, Robert’s meetings with the local squire, an intellectual atheist, lead to his having a crisis of faith. The pair move to London where Robert works with the poor and uneducated. The lives of the people closely associated with the pair are also covered.The book is set against the late Victorian world and its reactions to Darwinism, Unitarianism and the rise of secularism and modernism. At the time, it was a runaway best seller and its attack on orthodox Christianity was fiercely debated by all, including Gladstone. - Summary by Simon Evers Foxe's Book of Martyrs, A History of the Lives, Sufferings by John Foxe Loyal Books The Book of Martyrs, by John Foxe, is an English Protestant account of the persecutions of Protestants, many of whom had died for their beliefs within the decade immediately preceding its first publication. It was first published by John Day, in 1563. Lavishly illustrated with many woodcuts, it was the largest publishing project undertaken in Britain up to that time. Commonly known as, "Foxe's Book of Martyrs", the work's full title begins with "Actes and Monuments of these Latter and Perillous Days, Touching Matters of the Church." There were many subsequent editions, by Day, and by other editors down through the years. Foxe's original work was enormous (the second edition filling two heavy folio volumes with a total of 2,300 pages, estimated to be twice as long as Edward Gibbon's "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire." This edition is much abridged from Foxe's original.This book was first published shortly after the death of Queen Mary. During Mary's reign, common people of Protestan
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