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The Good Life (Week 4) - Nathan Lambert

An episode of the Slate Church podcast, hosted by Slate Church, titled "The Good Life (Week 4) - Nathan Lambert " was published on October 11, 2021 and runs 35 minutes.

October 11, 2021 ·35m · Slate Church

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In The Good Life (Week 4), Pastor Nathan Lambert encourages us to root ourselves in the Word of God and embrace the practice of gratitude and thankfulness in our lives. 

In The Good Life (Week 4), Pastor Nathan Lambert encourages us to root ourselves in the Word of God and embrace the practice of gratitude and thankfulness in our lives. 

State Road Coumity Church Pastor Christopher Kissell Not about religion about Jesus At The Cross michaeldavid Commentary on the state of the church, personal holiness, repentance, separating from the world, set apart for the gospel and the Kingdom of God. Christianity in the 18th and 19th Century, Volume 1 by Various LibriVox The 30 works in this volume are arranged thematically around the following headings: materialism or anti-supernaturalism (responses to David Friedrich Strauss, David Hume, Thomas Henry Huxley, sermons about natural religion and its limits), church and state or politics (contrasting perspectives from Britain, America and the Netherlands), the office of the pastor (sermons, opinions on church government, evidence from the early church, personal experiences, principles for preaching), sermons and miscellaneous pieces (theology and history).Note: "Receipt" in the title of section 2 means "recipe". - Summary by InTheDesertChristianity in the 18th and 19th Century, Volume 2 The Principles of Secularism George J. Holyoake http://www.adfreebooks.com - 500+ audiobooks, all ad freeGeorge Jacob Holyoake was an English secularist and newspaper editor. He was one of the last people convicted for blasphemy and served six months in prison. In 1851, he coined the term "secularism". In this short pamphlet from 1871, he explains the meaning of the term - essentially a separation of church and state in all matters of life. He also lists the benefits of a secular education and of a secular society as a whole. Finally, Holyoake lists the character traits that members of a secular guild should possess, in light of continued persecution of freethinkers at the time.
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