This document provides an index and overview of a published collection of essays, stories, poems and other works by Christopher G. Burley exploring philosophical and social issues. The preface introduces some of the key themes to be examined, including the nature of perception, duality, free will and the possibility of meaning or purpose to life. It references concepts like omnipotence, omniscience and a singular creative force or god behind the universe. The first work in the collection, "Subject and Object", is a short story that uses allegory to examine the emergence of duality and relationships between self and other.
This document is a summary of 15 chapters from a book about heaven based on descriptions from the book of Revelation in the Bible. Each chapter examines a different aspect of heaven such as its beauty, clothing, colors, food, glory, gold, humor, jewels, occupations, location, music, order, recognition of others, river, and sun. The summary provided for the sample chapter discusses how heaven will be a place of perfect beauty where God's love reigns and nothing imperfect is allowed, as the bride of Christ and believers will be made perfectly beautiful to be with their heavenly husband and God forever.
Lord's work through Jakob Lorber containing a collection of impressive narrations referring to the conditions of death and existence in the beyond of a few representative persons: a famous man, a rich man, a scholar, a young mundane woman, a general, a pope, a ministry, a poor man etc.
This document appears to be a collection of poems and inscriptions privately printed in 1902. It contains romantic poems dedicated to a woman referred to as "Her", vacation poems, and inscriptions dedicated to friends and family members on occasions like birthdays and Christmas. The collection showcases the author's talents in crafting short lyrical works in different forms of poetry.
This document provides 3 poems that discuss themes of despair, anxiety, and finding comfort in God. The first poem talks about finding purpose and meaning even in difficult times by hungering for righteousness. The second poem is about birds finding contentment without worry by trusting in God's care. The third poem is a call to wandering children to return home, referencing how Christ's blood was shed for them. Overall the poems convey messages of trusting in God during life's hardships.
This document contains a collection of quotes and reflections on various philosophical and spiritual topics. In 3 sentences:
The document touches on themes of nature, mindfulness, compassion, love and spirituality. It includes quotes and passages from figures like the Dalai Lama, Rumi, Einstein and others. The selections provide insights into topics like prayer, art, kindness and finding simplicity from various religious and philosophical perspectives.
The document contains analyses of four poems:
1) "The New Remorse" by Oscar Wilde, about a passionate love that is impossible or without a future.
2) "I Saw Thee Weep" by Lord Byron, comparing happiness and sadness through rhyme and descriptions of feelings.
3) "Amor eterno" by Gustavo Adolfo Becquer, expressing eternal love for a woman that cannot be extinguished, even by death.
4) "The Rape of the Lock" by Alexander Pope, a satirical poem about a petty quarrel between two aristocratic families that escalates due to the theft of a lock of hair.
This document provides a summary of American poetry from the 1900s, highlighting several notable poets from that era. It discusses Paul Laurence Dunbar as the first African American poet to make a living from writing. It also mentions poets Robert Frost, Langston Hughes, Edna Millay, Sylvia Plath, Carl Sandburg, and Wallace Stevens, providing brief biographical details and examples of their works.
This document provides an index and overview of a published collection of essays, stories, poems and other works by Christopher G. Burley exploring philosophical and social issues. The preface introduces some of the key themes to be examined, including the nature of perception, duality, free will and the possibility of meaning or purpose to life. It references concepts like omnipotence, omniscience and a singular creative force or god behind the universe. The first work in the collection, "Subject and Object", is a short story that uses allegory to examine the emergence of duality and relationships between self and other.
This document is a summary of 15 chapters from a book about heaven based on descriptions from the book of Revelation in the Bible. Each chapter examines a different aspect of heaven such as its beauty, clothing, colors, food, glory, gold, humor, jewels, occupations, location, music, order, recognition of others, river, and sun. The summary provided for the sample chapter discusses how heaven will be a place of perfect beauty where God's love reigns and nothing imperfect is allowed, as the bride of Christ and believers will be made perfectly beautiful to be with their heavenly husband and God forever.
Lord's work through Jakob Lorber containing a collection of impressive narrations referring to the conditions of death and existence in the beyond of a few representative persons: a famous man, a rich man, a scholar, a young mundane woman, a general, a pope, a ministry, a poor man etc.
This document appears to be a collection of poems and inscriptions privately printed in 1902. It contains romantic poems dedicated to a woman referred to as "Her", vacation poems, and inscriptions dedicated to friends and family members on occasions like birthdays and Christmas. The collection showcases the author's talents in crafting short lyrical works in different forms of poetry.
This document provides 3 poems that discuss themes of despair, anxiety, and finding comfort in God. The first poem talks about finding purpose and meaning even in difficult times by hungering for righteousness. The second poem is about birds finding contentment without worry by trusting in God's care. The third poem is a call to wandering children to return home, referencing how Christ's blood was shed for them. Overall the poems convey messages of trusting in God during life's hardships.
This document contains a collection of quotes and reflections on various philosophical and spiritual topics. In 3 sentences:
The document touches on themes of nature, mindfulness, compassion, love and spirituality. It includes quotes and passages from figures like the Dalai Lama, Rumi, Einstein and others. The selections provide insights into topics like prayer, art, kindness and finding simplicity from various religious and philosophical perspectives.
The document contains analyses of four poems:
1) "The New Remorse" by Oscar Wilde, about a passionate love that is impossible or without a future.
2) "I Saw Thee Weep" by Lord Byron, comparing happiness and sadness through rhyme and descriptions of feelings.
3) "Amor eterno" by Gustavo Adolfo Becquer, expressing eternal love for a woman that cannot be extinguished, even by death.
4) "The Rape of the Lock" by Alexander Pope, a satirical poem about a petty quarrel between two aristocratic families that escalates due to the theft of a lock of hair.
This document provides a summary of American poetry from the 1900s, highlighting several notable poets from that era. It discusses Paul Laurence Dunbar as the first African American poet to make a living from writing. It also mentions poets Robert Frost, Langston Hughes, Edna Millay, Sylvia Plath, Carl Sandburg, and Wallace Stevens, providing brief biographical details and examples of their works.
This is a study of how Jesus is the source of our good works. We are God's workmanship created in Christ Jesus to walk in a path of doing good for the glory of God.
This poem by Andrew Marvell describes a "gallery" or collection within the speaker's mind containing various portraits or representations of his love interest, Clora. The gallery walls are decorated with "arras-hangings" made up of many faces. The only furniture contained within is Clora's picture in the speaker's mind. The gallery contains opposing portraits - one depicting Clora as a cruel "murderess" examining the speaker's heart, and another portraying her like the dawn goddess Aurora when she appears beautifully at dawn. The speaker invites Clora to view this interior gallery within his soul and mind.
The document contains several poems and short stories on various themes:
1) A poem about Saint Jerome depicts the saint eternally kneeling in penitence.
2) A poem suggests Shakespeare's characters like Hamlet and Lady Macbeth may have benefited from antidepressants.
3) A poem envisions a utopian world where gods of different religions coexist harmoniously.
4) Two sonnets - one questions the depth of a lover's affection, the other desires dreamless sleep.
5) Short stories include Barbie dolls dealing with a melted pink sofa and sibling rivalry.
The document contains poems written by M.A. Parry Eugene that explore themes of love, nature, spirituality, and memory. The poems use vivid imagery and flowery language to describe feelings of longing, connection to nature, spiritual awakening, and remembering past relationships. Many of the poems reference wandering in nature, dreams, and finding solace or inspiration from a loved one or natural surroundings.
The document is a prayer service for world peace that includes songs, prayers, and reflections from various religious traditions. It begins with a welcome and call to worship using words from Hindu traditions. It includes the well-known "Prayer of Saint Francis" asking to be an instrument of peace. There are also reflections on peace from the prophet Isaiah and a prayer by Rabbi Harold Kushner asking for rain to wash away bitterness and the sun to bring understanding between all people. The service closes with blessings and a concluding song.
This document contains summaries of Buddhist devotional songs and children's Buddhist songs. It includes summaries of 17 songs from a "Buddhist Hymns book" and 7 children's songs from a album called "PASS IT ON". The songs cover a variety of Buddhist themes including the life of the Buddha, the three signs of existence, karma, compassion, and finding refuge and peace in the Buddha's teachings.
The Completed Compendium Of Kaldorei Songs and Poemsdashpot
This document is a collection of poems and hymns dedicated to Elune, the goddess of the moon in Warcraft. It contains 18 poems by Shaelyssa Bladesinger praising Elune and 3 additional poems by Sorayah Moonseeker also in worship of Elune. The collection is divided into parts containing hymns, songs, and haiku focused on Elune and night elf spirituality.
The document contains a collection of poems and reflections on spiritual themes such as love, angels, peace, and eternity. The poems explore connections between humans, nature, and the divine. They emphasize spreading love, nurturing others, and living according to spiritual principles of compassion.
This document provides commentary on Psalm 23 from multiple authors. It includes short summaries and interpretations of the psalm from authors such as Spurgeon, Beecher, Trapp, Plumer, Deffinbaugh, Wiersbe, Roper, Steller, Miller, and Cochrane. The commentary discusses themes such as God as the good shepherd who provides for and protects believers, the psalm bringing comfort in times of darkness, and its significance as one of the most memorized passages in the Bible.
The poem "The Utopian's Cry" describes a utopian who searches for ideals of beauty, love, and harmony but finds reality to be ugly and lacking in compassion. The utopian cries out for change but feels unheard by the miserable mortals who find solace only in immortality. The collection of poems explores themes of dreams, destiny, loneliness, faith, love and mythical creatures.
I An Eye for the Beautiful .
II Christ the Norm of Beauty .
III Transfigurations . .
IV The Principles of Beauty .
V Beauty Released .
VI Spiritual Beauty Triumphant ,
1. The document is a story that describes the journey of the soul from its origin in God to its experiences in different lifetimes on Earth and eventual return to God.
2. In the beginning, all souls existed as drops of light in the ocean of God. God created the world as a play for souls to act out lifetimes in different forms.
3. During human lifetimes, souls can find a living master who helps them use meditation to follow a hidden path back to God. By following the master, souls can eventually reunite with God in the ocean of light.
Hi. This is Marvin Morales, i hope this slide will help you in your studies in as an Bachelor of Secondary Education Major in English. i just want to share.
This document provides guidance on lighting "fires of hope" through experimenting with new models and methods in challenging times. It suggests 10 steps: 1) lead with spiritual substance; 2) gather an encouraging team; 3) think like a garden, not a tree; 4) use your history creatively; 5) raise funds or do it without money; 6) bring in new people; 7) leverage outside resources; 8) add before subtracting; 9) think like a movement; 10) join God in loving others. It emphasizes celebrating progress now, embracing opponents with prayer, and finding hope through small acts of courage and community.
Sample of a book of poems sampling what I've squeezed out of life that past years. Please support self publishing by picking up a copy at Lulu. Thanks, enjoy.
http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/electric-chair-for-the-sun/12305241
The poem expresses the speaker's devotion to God after the death of his wife. He describes how loving his wife prepared him to love God, but he cannot share this love with anyone else. While he has found God and his thirst has been quenched, he remains in a state of holy thirst. The speaker portrays God as wooing his soul in place of his deceased wife, and questions why he should beg for more love when God offers all of his in return.
A collection of texts published in various web pages at random who were together in one volume the author (smcvinicius) for editing a book. They are poetry, poetic prose, music lyrics and tests that report the most varied themes.
This document is a collection of quotes about the afterlife and heaven. It discusses heaven as a real and beautiful place that is more lasting than earth. The quotes describe heaven as a place without sorrow, death, or captivity where people will have bodies that are immortal and able to travel at the speed of thought. Heaven is portrayed as a place of perfect harmony, joy, and work to help bring the universe to perfection under God. Death is seen as a relief and graduation to better rewards in heaven for eternity.
Many look out longingly toward another life, in
which they implicitly believe, yet of which they
can know nothing save in the dimmest, most
shadowy way. Loved ones are taken from them
into that strange land, and they long then more
than ever to know about the country that is the
new home of their friends — its beauty, its joys,
its fellowships, its occupations. The Bible does
not lift the veil, but it gives many glimpses of the
heavenly life. It is the purpose of this little book
to note some of these glimpses.
This is a study of how Jesus is the source of our good works. We are God's workmanship created in Christ Jesus to walk in a path of doing good for the glory of God.
This poem by Andrew Marvell describes a "gallery" or collection within the speaker's mind containing various portraits or representations of his love interest, Clora. The gallery walls are decorated with "arras-hangings" made up of many faces. The only furniture contained within is Clora's picture in the speaker's mind. The gallery contains opposing portraits - one depicting Clora as a cruel "murderess" examining the speaker's heart, and another portraying her like the dawn goddess Aurora when she appears beautifully at dawn. The speaker invites Clora to view this interior gallery within his soul and mind.
The document contains several poems and short stories on various themes:
1) A poem about Saint Jerome depicts the saint eternally kneeling in penitence.
2) A poem suggests Shakespeare's characters like Hamlet and Lady Macbeth may have benefited from antidepressants.
3) A poem envisions a utopian world where gods of different religions coexist harmoniously.
4) Two sonnets - one questions the depth of a lover's affection, the other desires dreamless sleep.
5) Short stories include Barbie dolls dealing with a melted pink sofa and sibling rivalry.
The document contains poems written by M.A. Parry Eugene that explore themes of love, nature, spirituality, and memory. The poems use vivid imagery and flowery language to describe feelings of longing, connection to nature, spiritual awakening, and remembering past relationships. Many of the poems reference wandering in nature, dreams, and finding solace or inspiration from a loved one or natural surroundings.
The document is a prayer service for world peace that includes songs, prayers, and reflections from various religious traditions. It begins with a welcome and call to worship using words from Hindu traditions. It includes the well-known "Prayer of Saint Francis" asking to be an instrument of peace. There are also reflections on peace from the prophet Isaiah and a prayer by Rabbi Harold Kushner asking for rain to wash away bitterness and the sun to bring understanding between all people. The service closes with blessings and a concluding song.
This document contains summaries of Buddhist devotional songs and children's Buddhist songs. It includes summaries of 17 songs from a "Buddhist Hymns book" and 7 children's songs from a album called "PASS IT ON". The songs cover a variety of Buddhist themes including the life of the Buddha, the three signs of existence, karma, compassion, and finding refuge and peace in the Buddha's teachings.
The Completed Compendium Of Kaldorei Songs and Poemsdashpot
This document is a collection of poems and hymns dedicated to Elune, the goddess of the moon in Warcraft. It contains 18 poems by Shaelyssa Bladesinger praising Elune and 3 additional poems by Sorayah Moonseeker also in worship of Elune. The collection is divided into parts containing hymns, songs, and haiku focused on Elune and night elf spirituality.
The document contains a collection of poems and reflections on spiritual themes such as love, angels, peace, and eternity. The poems explore connections between humans, nature, and the divine. They emphasize spreading love, nurturing others, and living according to spiritual principles of compassion.
This document provides commentary on Psalm 23 from multiple authors. It includes short summaries and interpretations of the psalm from authors such as Spurgeon, Beecher, Trapp, Plumer, Deffinbaugh, Wiersbe, Roper, Steller, Miller, and Cochrane. The commentary discusses themes such as God as the good shepherd who provides for and protects believers, the psalm bringing comfort in times of darkness, and its significance as one of the most memorized passages in the Bible.
The poem "The Utopian's Cry" describes a utopian who searches for ideals of beauty, love, and harmony but finds reality to be ugly and lacking in compassion. The utopian cries out for change but feels unheard by the miserable mortals who find solace only in immortality. The collection of poems explores themes of dreams, destiny, loneliness, faith, love and mythical creatures.
I An Eye for the Beautiful .
II Christ the Norm of Beauty .
III Transfigurations . .
IV The Principles of Beauty .
V Beauty Released .
VI Spiritual Beauty Triumphant ,
1. The document is a story that describes the journey of the soul from its origin in God to its experiences in different lifetimes on Earth and eventual return to God.
2. In the beginning, all souls existed as drops of light in the ocean of God. God created the world as a play for souls to act out lifetimes in different forms.
3. During human lifetimes, souls can find a living master who helps them use meditation to follow a hidden path back to God. By following the master, souls can eventually reunite with God in the ocean of light.
Hi. This is Marvin Morales, i hope this slide will help you in your studies in as an Bachelor of Secondary Education Major in English. i just want to share.
This document provides guidance on lighting "fires of hope" through experimenting with new models and methods in challenging times. It suggests 10 steps: 1) lead with spiritual substance; 2) gather an encouraging team; 3) think like a garden, not a tree; 4) use your history creatively; 5) raise funds or do it without money; 6) bring in new people; 7) leverage outside resources; 8) add before subtracting; 9) think like a movement; 10) join God in loving others. It emphasizes celebrating progress now, embracing opponents with prayer, and finding hope through small acts of courage and community.
Sample of a book of poems sampling what I've squeezed out of life that past years. Please support self publishing by picking up a copy at Lulu. Thanks, enjoy.
http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/electric-chair-for-the-sun/12305241
The poem expresses the speaker's devotion to God after the death of his wife. He describes how loving his wife prepared him to love God, but he cannot share this love with anyone else. While he has found God and his thirst has been quenched, he remains in a state of holy thirst. The speaker portrays God as wooing his soul in place of his deceased wife, and questions why he should beg for more love when God offers all of his in return.
A collection of texts published in various web pages at random who were together in one volume the author (smcvinicius) for editing a book. They are poetry, poetic prose, music lyrics and tests that report the most varied themes.
This document is a collection of quotes about the afterlife and heaven. It discusses heaven as a real and beautiful place that is more lasting than earth. The quotes describe heaven as a place without sorrow, death, or captivity where people will have bodies that are immortal and able to travel at the speed of thought. Heaven is portrayed as a place of perfect harmony, joy, and work to help bring the universe to perfection under God. Death is seen as a relief and graduation to better rewards in heaven for eternity.
Many look out longingly toward another life, in
which they implicitly believe, yet of which they
can know nothing save in the dimmest, most
shadowy way. Loved ones are taken from them
into that strange land, and they long then more
than ever to know about the country that is the
new home of their friends — its beauty, its joys,
its fellowships, its occupations. The Bible does
not lift the veil, but it gives many glimpses of the
heavenly life. It is the purpose of this little book
to note some of these glimpses.
The document discusses what is known about heaven and hell from biblical passages. Heaven is described as a place of holiness, beauty, unity, perfection, joy and eternity. It will have no temple, sea, tears, sickness, pain, death, thirst, hunger, sin, judgment, sun or moon. In heaven, there will be singing, serving God, and learning new things. Regarding the resurrected body, it will be like Christ's, allow eating, be dominated by spirit, unlimited by time and space, eternal and glorious. Hell will involve unquenchable fire, memory, remorse, thirst, misery, frustration, and was created for Satan. The document seeks to address myths about heaven and
The document discusses the history and growth of the 5 Nights of Glory event held annually in Port Harcourt, Nigeria, describing how it started as a miracle crusade in 2007 and expanded into a 5 day event by 2012 due to immense crowds and miracles. It provides details on the themes and scriptures of some of the early events that helped transform many lives through signs, wonders, and massive harvests of souls responding to the altar calls. The 5 Nights of Glory has become a iconic gathering known for incredible testimonies of salvation and deliverance over the years.
MY apology for adding another book of conso-
lation to the number of like publications,
and of imitating such models as have before found
favor with the sorrowing, is twofold.
First, the wealth of such literature ever increases,
and, like the ripe harvest, ought to be gathered,
even though the granary seem already quite full.
Second, an important part of every true pastor's
labor is to comfort those that mourn. It is with
the devout hope that among the varied selections
here offered ministers may find some aid in cheering
the sorrowing that this little volume is sent forth.
This document summarizes a chapter from the book "The Wider Life" by J.B. Miller. The chapter discusses how life is a continual learning process, and that we must learn from both positive and negative experiences. It notes that even great figures like St. Paul and Jesus had to learn important life lessons through the experiences they faced. The main point is that we should view hardships as opportunities to learn and grow rather than just see the present difficulty, and have faith that difficulties will eventually yield positive fruit.
This document discusses the concept of space and room in both natural and built environments. It contrasts the open, fluid spaces found in nature and traditional Aboriginal dwellings with the rigid, angular rooms of modern Western architecture, characterized by three-plane corners at ceilings and floors. While people have adapted to indoor living, the document suggests built spaces can disrupt our connection to the natural world and challenges of the skyline.
The document provides a summary of a book titled "Heaven Is" by Ed Gaulden. It describes Gaulden's experience being taken on a tour of Heaven by an angel one night in 1991. Gaulden also recounts a dream he had in 1977 that he believes was related to his heavenly experience. The summary aims to share Gaulden's first-hand account of what Heaven looks and feels like based on what he was allowed to experience.
Great Southern Streetwalking Nomads 1524 2286John Latham
A WORK IN PROGRESS
... Take me don’t take me, let me go with you away engulfed in your sea of joy - found interactive with a tribal family and foreigners inter-pollen and play. I don’t want to stop, simply to flow and break where necessary with a diamond facet in sync with a quasar edge to let it be the essence that nurtures a quoll, … whilst shining sanity to a witness who is a prisoner of war once leach ridden in a jungle ditch, formed at the base of a huge fallen tree whose fate was set by a bomb fallen at its other side. They are loved by many, the brave over-and-done stories of the hard won victories or the wasted lost battles that were part thereof; the lovers of the loved lean into the gloom finding a light, a warmth, an attitude, a valiance and characters to love. The story of a chapter of a life, the substance of desperate-sweat, endurance, genius, determination showing a success that one may like to share. It was here in the wind of mentality, yours and mine, the sole one; but stopping to manifest it here, I face but an echo of silence - just an error a ripple in our fluid. I am now again the pilot, my instrument keyboard, at one time a brush, is the glider in our wind. We unfold the wild wind of our angry hearts and roll out the moist words of our supreme joy. Retell me foreign gentleman … of the best way to prune the olive tree and I will explain the tapping of oil from the eucalypt and together we may see a quasar joining us through its veil. ... ./..
This document provides an overview of a book titled "Christmas with Dr. Luke" which contains 15 chapters exploring various subjects related to the birth of Christ as described in Luke's Gospel. Each chapter is based on a passage from Luke 2 and focuses on a different Christmas-related topic such as the angelic anthem, Christmas animals, the approachable God, and more. The introduction provides background on Luke's Gospel and why he is considered the primary source of information about Jesus' birth. It encourages readers to explore each independent chapter to treasure more about what God did on the first Christmas.
This document contains 59 short poems or fragments on various themes including nature, life, death, memory, and the passage of time. The poems range from 3 to 6 lines and explore ideas through minimal yet vivid language and imagery. Overall, the collection provides a glimpse into the human experience and condition through concise and impactful poetic expressions.
The document provides reflections on Heaven from various sources, describing it as a real and beautiful place where earthly troubles are healed. Heaven is portrayed as a better and more lasting realm than the current world, where death means freedom and passing to eternal rewards. The document encourages thinking of death positively as a release and graduation to a better afterlife that one should look forward to rather than fear.
Global blights can be resolved by individuals getting together. Global warming and global arming are symptoms of our failure to obtain joy in our individual lives.
This document provides cover concepts and interior pages for several book design projects. It includes draft covers and interior pages for books on topics like existentialism, poetry, leadership, and faith. Sample covers show variations on layout, images, and text treatments. Interior pages show page designs, headers, chapter openings, and tips for writing poetry. The document was created by Kinetics Design and contains work for several publishers and authors.
The document describes a vision of Heaven as a perfect place without suffering. It depicts Heaven as a beautiful city with golden streets, crystal buildings, and parks with laughing children and gentle animals. The document emphasizes that Heaven is a real place that departed loved ones currently inhabit, and that one day believers will join them there in a state of eternal joy.
This document discusses theories about the upcoming alignment of the Earth with the Galactic Center in December 2012. It suggests we will pass through a "dark tube" or "photon belt" that will block light from the sun and stars for 3 days. This event will mark the transition to a new era called the Golden Age. The document encourages maintaining a positive, loving vibration and using the time for spiritual preparation and manifestation of a better world.
This document provides an overview of "The Last Testament of Jesus Christ" by Bruce {Brewster} Peterson. It includes a dedication to the author's parents and brother, followed by three parts: God, Spirit, and You. The first part discusses messages from God about who God is. The second part discusses the spirit. The third part discusses helping the reader understand themselves as a spiritual being connected to God. It encourages feeling good by being good and feeling love through being love.
This document provides an overview of "The Last Testament of Jesus Christ" by Bruce {Brewster} Peterson. It includes a dedication to the author's parents and brother, followed by three parts: God, Spirit, and You. The first part discusses messages from God about who God is. The second part discusses the spirit. The third part discusses helping the reader understand themselves as a spiritual being connected to God. It encourages feeling good by being good and feeling love through being love.
The document discusses various perspectives on love, relationships, truth, and human experience from numerous authors and literary works. Some key ideas discussed include the pain of lost love, love transcending laws and customs, forgiveness being necessary to overcome infidelity, and how individuals shape their own lives through the choices they make between hope and despair.
Contato - A lista de pedidos de Jesus para o NatalSpiritualibrary
O documento discute como o verdadeiro significado do Natal pode ser esquecido na correria das compras e preparativos. Contém histórias que ilustram como momentos simples com a família e uma conexão genuína com Jesus Cristo são mais importantes do que presentes ou festividades. Conclui enfatizando a necessidade de parar para apreciar o que o Natal realmente significa.
O documento discute o verdadeiro significado do Natal, que é a celebração do nascimento de Jesus Cristo, o Filho de Deus. Apesar de ter nascido humildemente, Jesus trouxe uma mensagem de amor, esperança e salvação para o mundo. Ele ensinou sobre o amor a Deus e ao próximo e realizou muitos milagres, porém foi rejeitado e crucificado. No entanto, ressuscitou três dias depois, vencendo a morte. Jesus é o maior presente que Deus deu à humanidade.
O documento descreve várias tradições natalinas em diferentes partes do mundo, como enfeitar árvores, presépios, troca de presentes e costumes religiosos. O Natal é celebrado de maneiras únicas em cada cultura, mas sempre com o objetivo comum de lembrar o nascimento de Jesus e espalhar alegria.
1) O documento apresenta cinco histórias pessoais sobre experiências vividas no Natal que, apesar das diferenças, compartilham o foco em dar ao próximo em vez de receber.
2) A história de Misha, uma criança órfã na Rússia, que ao ouvir sobre o nascimento de Jesus quis ficar com Ele na manjedoura para sempre.
3) Os oito milagres associados ao primeiro Natal de Jesus, como a concepção virginal, os anúncios angélicos e os sinais celestes que acompan
O documento discute como o Natal significa coisas diferentes para pessoas diferentes e como as mesmas tradições de Natal podem ser interpretadas de maneiras diversas. Em três frases, resume-se: O Natal traz alegria para alguns, solidão para outros. Alguns veem as decorações como símbolos de esperança, enquanto outros preferem gnomos musicais ao presépio. O documento reflete sobre os diferentes significados que o Natal pode ter.
O documento discute a importância de passar o Natal com as pessoas que amamos, compartilhando amor e atenção, em vez de nos concentrarmos apenas nas compras e presentes materiais. Também reflete sobre Jesus, o verdadeiro motivo do Natal, e como Ele deseja receber nosso amor e convite para viver em nosso coração.
O documento descreve uma viagem de Natal feita pelo autor para visitar os pais. No caminho, ele para para ajudar um motorista que teve problemas com o carro e acaba passando o Natal com essa família, tendo a oportunidade de compartilhar sobre Jesus.
Este documento conta a história de um casal missionário que enfrentou dificuldades financeiras e de saúde ao tentar manter sua obra missionária. Eles acolheram uma jovem grávida expulsa de casa e ajudaram-na. A história mostra como Deus cumpriu Sua promessa de forma inesperada ao ajudá-los nesse momento difícil.
Libri, ebook e riviste gratuiti - www.spiritualibrary.com
devozioni, devozione, giovani, adulti, vita cristiana, la vita cristiana, auto-aiuto, auto-miglioramento, relazioni con altre persone, capacità di comunicazione, capacità di lavorare in gruppo, etica,
Chandra Dev: Unveiling the Mystery of the Moon GodExotic India
Shining brightly in the sky, some days more than others, the Moon in popular culture is a symbol of love, romance, and beauty. The ancient Hindu texts, however, mention the Moon as an intriguing and powerful being, worshiped by sages as Chandra.
Sanatan Vastu | Experience Great Living | Vastu ExpertSanatan Vastu
Santan Vastu Provides Vedic astrology courses & Vastu remedies, If you are searching Vastu for home, Vastu for kitchen, Vastu for house, Vastu for Office & Factory. Best Vastu in Bahadurgarh. Best Vastu in Delhi NCR
The Hope of Salvation - Jude 1:24-25 - MessageCole Hartman
Jude gives us hope at the end of a dark letter. In a dark world like today, we need the light of Christ to shine brighter and brighter. Jude shows us where to fix our focus so we can be filled with God's goodness and glory. Join us to explore this incredible passage.
Heartfulness Magazine - June 2024 (Volume 9, Issue 6)heartfulness
Dear readers,
This month we continue with more inspiring talks from the Global Spirituality Mahotsav that was held from March 14 to 17, 2024, at Kanha Shanti Vanam.
We hear from Daaji on lifestyle and yoga in honor of International Day of Yoga, June 21, 2024. We also hear from Professor Bhavani Rao, Dean at Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham University, on spirituality in action, the Venerable BhikkuSanghasena on how to be an ambassador for compassion, Dr. Tony Nader on the Maharishi Effect, Swami Mukundananda on the crossroads of modernization, Tejinder Kaur Basra on the purpose of work, the Venerable GesheDorjiDamdul on the psychology of peace, the Rt. Hon. Patricia Scotland, KC, Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, on how we are all related, and world-renowned violinist KumareshRajagopalan on the uplifting mysteries of music.
Dr. Prasad Veluthanar shares an Ayurvedic perspective on treating autism, Dr. IchakAdizes helps us navigate disagreements at work, Sravan Banda celebrates World Environment Day by sharing some tips on land restoration, and Sara Bubber tells our children another inspiring story and challenges them with some fun facts and riddles.
Happy reading,
The editors
A375 Example Taste the taste of the Lord, the taste of the Lord The taste of...franktsao4
It seems that current missionary work requires spending a lot of money, preparing a lot of materials, and traveling to far away places, so that it feels like missionary work. But what was the result they brought back? It's just a lot of photos of activities, fun eating, drinking and some playing games. And then we have to do the same thing next year, never ending. The church once mentioned that a certain missionary would go to the field where she used to work before the end of his life. It seemed that if she had not gone, no one would be willing to go. The reason why these missionary work is so difficult is that no one obeys God’s words, and the Bible is not the main content during missionary work, because in the eyes of those who do not obey God’s words, the Bible is just words and cannot be connected with life, so Reading out God's words is boring because it doesn't have any life experience, so it cannot be connected with human life. I will give a few examples in the hope that this situation can be changed. A375
The Vulnerabilities of Individuals Born Under Swati Nakshatra.pdfAstroAnuradha
Individuals born under Swati Nakshatra often exhibit a strong sense of independence and adaptability, yet they may also face vulnerabilities such as indecisiveness and a tendency to be easily swayed by external influences. Their quest for balance and harmony can sometimes lead to inner conflict and a lack of assertiveness. To know more visit: astroanuradha.com
Protector & Destroyer: Agni Dev (The Hindu God of Fire)Exotic India
So let us turn the pages of ancient Indian literature and get to know more about Agni, the mighty purifier of all things, worshipped in Indian culture as a God since the Vedic time.
Trusting God's Providence | Verse: Romans 8: 28-31JL de Belen
Trusting God's Providence.
Providence - God’s active preservation and care over His creation. God is both the Creator and the Sustainer of all things Heb. 1:2-3; Col. 1:17
-God keep His promises.
-God’s general providence is toward all creation
- All things were made through Him
God’s special providence is toward His children.
We may suffer now, but joy can and will come
God can see what we cannot see
A Free eBook ~ Valuable LIFE Lessons to Learn ( 5 Sets of Presentations)...OH TEIK BIN
A free eBook comprising 5 sets of PowerPoint presentations of meaningful stories /Inspirational pieces that teach important Dhamma/Life lessons. For reflection and practice to develop the mind to grow in love, compassion and wisdom. The texts are in English and Chinese.
My other free eBooks can be obtained from the following Links:
https://www.slideshare.net/ohteikbin/presentations
https://www.slideshare.net/ohteikbin/documents
2nd issue of Volume 15. A magazine in urdu language mainly based on spiritual treatment and learning. Many topics on ISLAM, SUFISM, SOCIAL PROBLEMS, SELF HELP, PSYCHOLOGY, HEALTH, SPIRITUAL TREATMENT, Ruqya etc.A very useful magazine for everyone.
The Enchantment and Shadows_ Unveiling the Mysteries of Magic and Black Magic...Phoenix O
This manual will guide you through basic skills and tasks to help you get started with various aspects of Magic. Each section is designed to be easy to follow, with step-by-step instructions.
The Book of Samuel is a book in the Hebrew Bible, found as two books in the Old Testament. The book is part of the Deuteronomistic history, a series of books that constitute a theological history of the Israelites and that aim to explain God's law for Israel under the guidance of the prophets.
1. glimpses of heaven
glimpsesofheaven
“Can you visualize a world with no more death,
no more pain, no more hunger, no more fear,
no more sorrow, no more crying nor sickness, a
world where everything is a joy and a pleasure?
— A society where everybody works together in
harmony, cooperation and love? That’s Heaven!”
Glimpses of Heaven is a unique, thought-
provoking and uplifting collection of anecdotes,
reflections, literary quotations and verse,
revealing the wonders that await us in the
next life. Drawing from a multitude of sources
and authors, Glimpses of Heaven convincingly
affirms that the closing of this life is but “a
passage out of a prison into a palace,” where
our deepest longings and desires will be fulfilled!
A TREASURY OF REFLECTIONS ON THE REALM BEYOND
ISBN 978-3-03730-195-1
9 7 8 3 0 3 7 3 0 1 9 5 1
A – E N – B A – D V – 0 0 1 – H auroraproduction.com
glimpses of heavenglimpses of heaven
2.
3.
4. A TREASURY OF REFLECTIONS ON THE REALM BEYOND
glimpses of heaven
8. 1glimpses of heaven
Introduction
The subject of Heaven and the next life often
raises mixed feelings. Many of us believe it to be a
wonderful place where we will be eternally happy.
Yet despite this, it is almost second nature to view
our passing on—or that of a loved one—to the
next life with great foreboding, as if Heaven were a
terrible place to be avoided for as long as possible!
We hope that this collection of reflections, personal
accounts, anecdotes, Scripture, and verse will
encourage your faith that Heaven is a very real
place, where each of us can find unconditional love
and complete fulfillment. Being assured of a future
eternal home is a great help in enduring the trials of
life, and, as Shakespeare said, “makes one heavenly.”
Such assurance also enables us to embark on that
final journey with, as one believer put it, “the
gladness of a boy bounding away from school.”
9. 2
Homesick for Heaven
glimpses of heaven
Surely it is not wrong for us to think
and talk about Heaven. I like to find
out all I can about it. I expect to live
there through all eternity. If I were
going to dwell in any place in this
country, if I were going to make it
my home, I would inquire about its
climate, about the neighbors I would
have — about everything, in fact, that
I could learn concerning it. If soon you
were going to emigrate, that is the way
you would feel.
Well, we are all going to emigrate in a
very little while. We are going to spend
eternity in another world. … Is it not
natural that we should look and listen
and try to find out who is already there
and what is the route to take?
Dwight L. Moody
10. 3glimpses of heaven
Homesick for Heaven
It certainly seems like a good idea to talk about Heaven,
meditate about Heaven and read about Heaven,
because, after all, that’s where we’re going to spend
eternity. It’s an important place — our eternal home.
So it’s only natural to want to know what it’s like and
what we’re going to be like when we get there.
We can enjoy
Heaven now. We
can have half of
the enjoyment
ahead of time by
looking forward to
it, thinking about
it, reading about it
and anticipating it.
11. 4 glimpses of heaven
If God has made this world so fair,
Where sin and death abound,
How beautiful beyond compare,
Will Paradise be found.
James Montgomery
Love rules the camp,
the court, the grove
— for love is Heaven,
and Heaven is love.
Lord George gordon
Byron
Heaven —
the treasury
of everlasting
life.
William
Shakespeare
Homesick for Heaven
12. 5glimpses of heaven
As he neared his end, John Newton
exclaimed, “I am still in the land of the dying;
I shall be in the land of the living soon.”
The English scientist Michael Faraday is considered to have
been one of the greatest experimental physicists. When Faraday
was questioned on his speculations of a life after death, he
replied: “Speculations? I know nothing about speculations. I’m
resting on certainties. I know that my Redeemer lives, and
because He lives, I shall live also.”
Homesick for Heaven
13. 6 glimpses of heaven
Homesick for Heaven
Dr. Werner von Braun, well-known for his part in pioneering the U.S. space program,
said that he had “essentially scientific” reasons for believing in life after death. He
explained: “Science has found that nothing can disappear without a trace. Nature
does not know extinction. All it knows is transformation. If God applies the
fundamental principle to the most minute and insignificant parts of the universe,
doesn’t it make sense to assume that He applies it to the masterpiece of His creation
— the human soul? I think it does.”
It is very beautiful
over there.
Last words of
Thomas Edison
14. 7glimpses of heaven
Be assured
that just as
an hour is
only part of
a day, so life
on Earth is
only part of
eternity.
Charles L. Allen
Earth has no sorrow that
Heaven cannot heal.
Thomas Moore
Homesick for Heaven
15. 8 glimpses of heaven
Heaven is a city without a
cemetery.
Author unknown
Homesick for Heaven
Think of it —
Stepping on shore,
and finding it Heaven!
Of taking hold of a hand,
and finding it God’s hand.
Of breathing a new air,
and finding it celestial air.
Of feeling invigorated,
and finding it immortality.
Of passing from storm to tempest
to an unbroken calm.
Of waking up and finding it Home.
author unknown
16. 9glimpses of heaven
Thinking about Heaven can
inspire and encourage us to
be more heavenly-minded and
realize that Heaven is a real place
where we’re really going to live.
Heaven is
something that
we can easily
get excited
and thrilled
about and
look forward
to. It will be
like Christmas
is for children,
only it will be
the greatest
Christmas
we’ve ever had!
Homesick for Heaven
17. 10 glimpses of heaven
Heaven is a permanent residence … a
place where we unpack our bags and stay
forever. … What a glorious thought to
wake up in Heaven and realize it is home!
Charles L. Allen
If we really understood Heaven, we
would be most unhappy and unsatisfied
with life on Earth. We would rebel against
our earthly limitations. If we saw Heaven,
we could not bear this earth. That’s why
Heaven is forever: we cannot bear to
leave it after we get there.
Charles L. Allen
Homesick for Heaven
18. 11glimpses of heaven
Heaven
and the
spirit world
are much
more real,
beautiful
and lasting
than the
world which
you can see
with your
natural eyes
at this very
moment.
Homesick for Heaven
19. 12 glimpses of heaven
Homesick for Heaven
Heaven is going
to be like this
life, only better.
It will be like this
life with all its
joys and beauties
and pleasures,
but without the
drawbacks —
with all the assets
but none of the
liabilities.
20. 13glimpses of heaven
Homesick for Heaven
Heaven is a beautiful place to be,
full of beautiful people having a beautiful time!
In Heaven, you’re going to get just about whatever
you want. Heaven’s the place where all your heart’s
desires will be fulfilled — if they’re good ones.
Put in your order now!
The more of Heaven we cherish,
the less of Earth we covet.
21. 14 glimpses of heaven
Oh, there’s no disappointment in Heaven
No weariness, sorrow, nor pain,
No hearts that are bleeding and broken,
No song with minor refrain.
The clouds of our earthly horizon
Will never appear in the sky,
For all will be sunshine and gladness,
With never a sob nor a sigh.
I’m bound for that beautiful city
My Lord has prepared for His own,
Where all the redeemed of all ages
Sing glory around the white throne.
Homesick for Heaven
Sometimes I grow homesick for Heaven
And the glories I there shall behold.
What a joy that will be
When my Savior I see
In that beautiful city of gold.
22. 15glimpses of heaven
We’ll never pay rent for our mansions;
The taxes will never come due.
Our garments will never grow threadbare,
But always be fadeless and new.
We’ll never be hungry or thirsty,
Nor languish in poverty there;
For all the rich bounties of Heaven,
His Heaven-bound children will share.
Frederick Martin Lehman
Homesick for Heaven
23. 16 glimpses of heaven
Leaving this
life is just
like going
from one
room to
another and
closing the
door.
Let us believe that when death comes, and it
will come sooner or later to every human being,
we can be assured it will come as a friend who
lovingly leads us to our eternal home, Heaven.
Charles L. Allen
Life After Life
Death is not extinguishing the
light; it is putting out the lamp
because the dawn has come.
Rabindranath Tagore
24. 17glimpses of heaven
Life After Life
Death is but a passage out of a prison into a palace.
Author unknown
Living is death; dying is life. On this side of the grave we are
exiles, on that, citizens; on this side, orphans, on that, children;
on this side, captives; on that, freemen; on this side, disguised,
unknown; on that, disclosed and proclaimed as the sons of God.
Henry Ward Beecher
What we call life is a
journey to death. What
we call death is the
gateway to life.
Author unknown
25. 18 glimpses of heaven
To die is to
go and live in
another home.
Charles L. Allen
Life After Life
I am standing on the seashore.
A ship spreads her white sails
to the morning breeze and
starts for the ocean. I stand
watching her until she fades on
the horizon, and someone at my
side says, “She is gone.” Gone
where? The loss of sight is in me,
not in her. Just at the moment
when someone says, “She is
gone,” there are others who are
watching her coming. Other
voices take up the glad shout,
“Here she comes!” That is dying.
Henry Scott Holland
26. 19glimpses of heaven
Your body is not the real you.
It’s just the physical house you
live in. The real you is your
spirit, which will live on forever.
Life After Life
This world is to be likened to the porch;
the world to come unto the palace.
The Talmud
27. 20 glimpses of heaven
From dust thou art to
dust returneth, was not
spoken of the soul.
Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow
God will redeem my
soul from the power of
the grave: for He shall
receive me.
Psalm 49:15
Life After Life
28. 21glimpses of heaven
Cartoonist Arthur Brisbane once pictured a crowd of grieving caterpillars carrying
the corpse of a cocoon to its final resting place. The poor, distressed caterpillars,
clad in black raiment, were weeping, and all the while the beautiful butterfly
fluttered happily above the muck and the mire of Earth, forever freed from its
earthly shell.
Needless to say, Brisbane had the average funeral in mind and sought to convey
the idea that when our loved ones pass, it is foolish to remember only the cocoon
and concentrate our attention on the remains, while forgetting the bright butterfly.
Author unknown
A soldier said,
“When I die, do
not sound taps
over my grave, but
reveille — the
morning call, the
summons to rise.”
Author unknown
Life After Life
29. 22 glimpses of heaven
The body of Benjamin Franklin, Printer, like the cover
of an old book, its contents torn out and stripped of its
lettering and gilding, lies here. ... Yet the Work itself
shall not be lost; for it will, as he believed, appear once
more in a new and more beautiful edition, corrected
and amended by the Author.
Draft for epitaph of Benjamin Franklin, originally
printer
The last enemy
that shall be
destroyed is
death.
1 Corinthians 15:26
Life After Life
30. 23glimpses of heaven
Death is not something to be feared, but rather
anticipated. Of course, we are not to precipitate it
ourselves, as suicide is surrender and defeat of the
worst kind. But if each of us can have the patience
to wait and die in God’s time, when His time has
come for us, that’s the day we’re going to be the
most thankful. We’re going to arrive in our heavenly
home and see that it was really worth it all!
Death from this life is just graduation from this grade.
It’s our release, our graduation, our promotion.
School is out! We’ve finished our schooling
in this grade and we pass on to the next grade.
Life After Life
31. 24 glimpses of heaven
Even though we have so
much to live for on this earth,
there is even more to live for
in the next life. Death does
not cheat a person out of life;
death enriches life.
Charles L. Allen
When Christ calls me Home I shall go with
the gladness of a boy bounding away from school.
Adoniram Judson
Life After Life
32. 25glimpses of heaven
Once the great evangelist, Moody, said
in his buoyant way: “Some day you will
read in the papers that Dwight L. Moody,
of East Northfield, is dead. Don’t you
believe a word of it. At that moment I
shall be more alive than I am now. I shall
have gone up higher, that is all; out of
this old clay tenement into a house that is
immortal, a body that death cannot touch.”
I am the
Resurrection,
and the Life: he
that believeth
in Me, though
he were dead,
yet shall he live:
And whosoever
liveth and
believeth in Me
shall never die.
Jesus, John 11:25,26
Life After Life
33. 26 glimpses of heaven
Lord, when Thou seest that my work is done
Let me not linger on,
With failing powers,
Adown the weary hours,
A workless worker in a world of work.
But with a word,
Just bid me home,
And I will come
Right gladly,
Yea, right gladly
Will I come.
John Oxenham
Because I live, ye
shall live also.
Jesus, John 14:19
Life After Life
34. 27glimpses of heaven
I shall not live ’till I
see God; and when
I have seen Him, I
shall never die.
John Donne
God is not the God of the dead,
but of the living.
Jesus, Matthew 22:32
Life After Life
The Apostle Paul wrote, “The
things which are seen are temporal;
but the things which are not seen
are eternal” (2 Corinthians 4:18).
The physical dies away, but the
spiritual is forever.
35. 28 glimpses of heaven
Life After Life
Jesus said, “The Kingdom of Heaven is like a grain
of mustard seed” (Matthew 13:31). Just as the
seed is the beginning of growth, so this life is the
beginning but not the end. We continue living the
moment our spirits are released from our bodies.
Charles L. Allen
36. 29glimpses of heaven
Life After Life
Jesus said, “I
go to prepare
a place for you”
(John 14:2).
We do not enter
the next life as
strangers. We
are expected
and prepared for.
We are eagerly
desired.
Charles L. Allen
For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle
were dissolved, we have a building of God, an house
not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.
2 Corinthians 5:1
37. 30 glimpses of heaven
The twenty-third
Psalm is always a
great comfort in
time of need. It
reassures us that
the Lord will never
depart from us nor
leave us comfortless.
Though we walk
through the valley
of the shadow of
death, the Lord says
that He will be with
us. He’ll be with us
then to comfort and
lead us into a new
life forever.
Comfort and Refuge
38. 31glimpses of heaven
The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want [lack].
He maketh me to lie down in green pastures:
He leadeth me beside the still waters.
He restoreth my soul:
He leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil:
For Thou art with me;
Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort me.
Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies:
Thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life:
And I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.
PSALM 23
Comfort and Refuge
39. 32 glimpses of heaven
Comfort and Refuge
God conceals from men
the happiness of death
that they may endure life.
Author Unknown
At death the soul, freed from the pains,
weariness, ills and limitations of the
body, begins its highest life. Death is
the beginning of the higher life.
Charles L. Allen
40. 33glimpses of heaven
Comfort and Refuge
O death,
where is
thy sting?
O grave,
where is thy
victory?
1 Corinthians 15:55
41. 34 glimpses of heaven
Can you visualize a world with no more death,
no more pain, no more hunger, no more fear,
no more sorrow, no more crying nor sickness,
a world where everything is a joy and a pleasure?
— A society where everybody works together
in harmony, cooperation and love? That’s Heaven!
No More Tears
42. 35glimpses of heaven
Thank God for Heaven! —
That’s where everything will
get straightened out and
made right!
In Heaven we’ll
understand why we’ve
suffered on Earth.
The Apostle Paul
explained, “For now
we see through a glass,
darkly; but then, face
to face. Now I know in
part, but then shall I
know even as also I am
known [of God]”
(1 Corinthians 13:12).
No More Tears
43. 36 glimpses of heaven
One of the most
beautiful verses in the
Bible about Heaven is
in the 21st chapter of
Revelation, the fourth
verse. John says, “And
God shall wipe away all
tears from their eyes;
and there shall be no
more death, neither
sorrow, nor crying,
neither shall there
be any more pain: for
the former things are
passed away.”
No More Tears
44. 37glimpses of heaven
The whole point of
Heaven is to relieve us of
the suffering, pain, death
and tears brought into
the world by the evil of
humanity. That is why God
says that in Heaven there
will be no more sorrow,
pain, death or crying.
All the disappointments, broken
dreams, and deep dark experiences
will soon be forgotten and blotted
out like a bad dream, when that
glorious dawn of Heaven arrives!
No More Tears
45. 38 glimpses of heaven
There the
wicked
cease from
troubling;
and there the
weary be at
rest.
Job 3:17
There will be no more
danger, pollution or
destruction, none of
these things that we
suffer from so much
today. Everything will
be heavenly, beautiful
and natural, the way
it was when God first
created the earth.
No More Tears
46. 39glimpses of heaven
The only place where
we’re going to be
completely relieved of
pain is in Heaven.
The heavenly society will be ruled fairly and well with true
freedom, peace, plenty and happiness for all. Isaiah prophesied
that in that day, “They shall beat their swords into plowshares,
and their spears into pruning-hooks: Nation shall not lift up
sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more”
(Isaiah 2:4).
No More Tears
47. 40 glimpses of heaven
One of the best things about Heaven is
that we will be able to reunite with loved
ones who have already passed on. It will
be the greatest family reunion we’ve ever
known, with our loved ones, relatives and
ancestors all together in one place at the
same time, rejoicing. All together at last!
There are no “good-byes”
in Heaven.
Author Unknown
Reunion with Loved Ones
48. 41glimpses of heaven
Very often people come to me and say:
“Mr. Moody, do you think we shall know
each other in Heaven?” Very often it is
a mother who has lost a dear child, and
who wishes to see it again. Sometimes it
is a child who has lost a mother, a father;
and who wants to recognize them in
Heaven. There is a verse in Scripture
in answer to this, and that is: “We shall
be satisfied” (Psalm 17:15). It is all I
want to know. My brother who went up
there the other day I shall see, because
I shall be satisfied. We will see all those
we loved on Earth up there, and if we
loved them here, we will love them ten
thousand times more when we meet
them there.
Dwight L. Moody
Reunion with Loved Ones
49. 42 glimpses of heaven
Reunion with Loved Ones
After death we are not
disembodied spirits.
Somewhere in God’s
wonderful creation
there is a place where
we can again be with
those we have loved
and lost for a while.
Charles L. Allen
Peace, peace! He is not dead,
he does not sleep —
He hath wakened
from the dream of life.
Percy Bysshe Shelley, writing about the death of
his friend John Keats
50. 43glimpses of heaven
Reunion with Loved Ones
Dear Child,
I condole with you. We have lost a most dear and valuable
relation, but it is the will of God and Nature that these mortal
bodies be laid aside, when the soul is to enter into real life: ’tis
rather an embryo state, a preparation for living.
A man is not completely born until he is dead. Why then
should we grieve that a new child is born among the immortals?
A new member added to their happy society?
That bodies should be lent to us is a kind and benevolent act
of God. When they become unfit for these purposes and afford
us pain instead of pleasure — instead of an aid, become an
encumbrance and answer none of the intentions for which they
were given — it is equally kind and benevolent that a way is
provided by which we may get rid of them.
Death is that way. … Why should you and I be grieved at this,
since we are soon to follow, and know where to find him.
Excerpt of a letter from Ben Franklin to the widow of his
brother John, Feb. 22, 1756
51. 44 glimpses of heaven
Reunion with Loved Ones
It seemeth such a little way to me,
Across to that strange country, the Beyond;
And yet, not strange, for it has grown to be
The home of those of whom I am so fond;
They make it seem familiar and most dear,
As journeying friends bring distant countries near.
And so for me there is no sting to death,
And so the grave has lost its victory;
It is but crossing with abated breath
And white, set face, a little strip of sea,
To find the loved ones waiting on the shore,
More beautiful, more precious than before.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox, THE BEYOND
52. 45glimpses of heaven
What Heaven is, I know not; but I long have dreamed of its purple
hills and its fields of light, blossoming with immortal beauty; of its
brooks of laughter and its rivers of song and its palace of eternal
love. … I long have dreamed of opal towers and burnished domes;
but what care I for gate of pearl or street of gold, if I can meet the
loved ones who have blessed me here, and see the glorified faces of
father and mother and the boy brother who died. … What care I
for crown of stars and harp of gold if I can love and laugh and sing
with them forever in the smile of my Savior and my God.
Bob Taylor, MY DREAM OF HEAVEN
Reunion with Loved Ones
I am not resigned to
the shutting away of
loving hearts in the
hard ground.
Edna St. Vincent Millay
53. 46 glimpses of heaven
We can’t really
understand just
how wonderful
Heaven will
be unless we
first know how
wonderful each of
us will be when
we get there.
You are still going to be you.
You’ll look a lot the same,
only better — much better!
This earthly body is slow and heavy in all its
motions, listless and soon tired with action.
But our heavenly bodies shall be as fire; as
active and as nimble as our thoughts are.
John Wesley
Our Heavenly Bodies
54. 47glimpses of heaven
When Jesus came back from the dead,
He still looked like Himself, still felt like
Himself, and could still eat, drink, and
even cook, just like before His crucifixion,
when He was still in His earthly body. He
said to His disciples, “Behold My [nail-
pierced] hands and My feet, that it is
Myself. Handle Me, and see; for a spirit
hath not flesh and bones as ye see Me
have” (Luke 24:39). His followers could
actually touch and feel Him, as well as
see Him, and yet He was in a miraculous
supernatural resurrected body!
His new body could also materialize or
dematerialize, appear or disappear. It
could pass from one dimension to the
other, and through locked doors and solid
walls. (See John 20:19, 26.)
Our Heavenly Bodies
55. 48 glimpses of heaven
In Heaven, our bodies are going
to be the same make, but a
new model. Our old, decaying,
worn-out natural, physical body
will go back to the dust. We will
trade it in for an entirely new
heavenly model!
Our Heavenly Bodies
We are going to have bodies like Jesus
did after He was resurrected. Each of us
is going to have a new eternal, glorified
body. It will actually be constructed as
we are now, of flesh and bones — but
eternal flesh and bones, incorruptible,
immortal flesh and bones. It’s going to be
material, natural, recognizable, seeable
and feelable. (See 1 John 3:2.)
56. 49glimpses of heaven
Our heavenly bodies
are going to be similar
to our present ones,
only better. We’ll look
enough like we do now
to recognize and identify
each other. We’re going
to have a lot of the same
characteristics that we
have now.
All of the pleasures of this present physical
life can be continued into the next life as well,
since we will have a body which is similar to
our present physical body, but so much more
glorious and wonderful and supernatural. We
will be able to eat, drink, be merry and have
fun without ever suffering pain or sickness or
weariness or death.
From the accounts of those who have had
glimpses of Heaven in visions and revelations,
it seems that we do mature somewhat in
Heaven. Those who arrive in their youth grow
to maturity, while older people appear more
middle-aged, in the prime of life.
Our Heavenly Bodies
57. 50 glimpses of heaven
Learning, Learning, Learning
We’re still going to be learning in Heaven. We will still be
developing and are not yet absolutely perfect. That’s what
the future is all about — to continue the learning process
that we have begun here. We’ve all still got a lot to learn!
God has a lot of
things to teach
us in Heaven,
things we didn’t
learn in this life.
58. 51glimpses of heaven
Learning, Learning, Learning
In Heaven, God will reveal
what on Earth He chose to conceal.
Author unknown
Contrary to popular belief, the moment
we land in Heaven we don’t immediately
know everything! If we did, we’d be God
Himself — all-knowing.
God has left that for the rest of time and
eternity in order to give us something to
do in the hereafter. We’ll be able to learn
more about the past and why things
happened, as well as God’s logic and
purposes and the meaning of it all.
59. 52 glimpses of heaven
Eternity is a constant learning
process. It will be another grade,
another step, a chance to do
what we failed to do before and
to learn what we failed to learn
before. Thank God for eternity!
We’ve all probably got a lot of
bad habits to change and failures
to make up for. Maybe God will
give each of us a chance to meet
people who we’ve wronged and
straighten things out and tell
them we’re sorry.
Learning, Learning, Learning
60. 53glimpses of heaven
Learning, Learning, Learning
Paul observed, “We brought
nothing into this world, and it
is certain we can carry nothing
out” (1 Timothy 6:7). He was
referring to material things,
wealth. However, we will take our
knowledge and experience and
training from this life with us into
the next life.
In Heaven, a lot
of things will be
different, but many
things are going to
be the same, enough
so that we’ll still be
able to use much
of the knowledge,
skills, talents and
experience that we
have gained in this
life. God will not
allow all the training
we have received to
be wasted.
61. 54 glimpses of heaven
Learning, Learning, Learning
We will be able to travel
backward or forward in
time and see what has been
and what is going to be,
as well as experience the
glorious wonderful present!
We will see, hear, feel and
experience the very events
of the past, just as they
happened.
This life is just your schooling for what you have to do when you graduate.
62. 55glimpses of heaven
Learning, Learning, Learning
God will probably allow us to ask
questions about and discover some
of the things we’ve always been
curious about. Isn’t it marvelous to
think about how we will be able to
actually meet and talk to people
who lived throughout history?
Heaven is not the end:
It’s only the beginning!
63. 56 glimpses of heaven
A lot of people think Heaven is sitting
around on a cloud playing a harp all day,
doing nothing except being “holy” — and
they don’t find it very appealing! Thank God
that is not what Heaven is like!
Heaven is not a
state or condition.
Heaven is a place.
“I go to prepare
a place for you,”
promised Jesus. “In
My Father’s house
are many mansions”
(John 14:2).
Charles L. Allen
Heaven is a
pretty practical,
commonsense,
down-to-earth
place!
A Down-to-Earth Heaven
64. 57glimpses of heaven
Heaven is not so
terribly different from
this present existence
to where we can’t
even comprehend
or understand it.
Otherwise, when we
arrived there, we would
be completely lost and
we wouldn’t be able to
relate to it.
We’re going to be surprised when we discover
that things in Heaven are normal and natural,
much like this life. Of course, it will be better,
much more beautiful and supernatural, without
all the troubles, trials, tribulations, suffering,
tears and pain we have here. However, it
will still be enough like this life that we will
survive the change and not suffer some sort
of traumatic “culture shock.” It’ll be life very
much like we’re living now, only without the
bad and evil.
A Down-to-Earth Heaven
65. 58 glimpses of heaven
A Down-to-Earth Heaven
Heaven is not a place of eternal rest,
but a place of eternal life.
Charles L. Allen
Concerning the loved ones who have passed on …
do not try to make me believe that they are doing
nothing, merely resting, careless ever. That would
imply the condition of Hell, not of Heaven.
Campbell Morgan
66. 59glimpses of heaven
A Down-to-Earth Heaven
Death is the opposite of retiring.
Jesus made a promise to those who
are faithful in this life: “Well done,
good and faithful servant; thou
hast been faithful over a few things,
I will make thee ruler over many
things; enter thou into the joy of
thy Lord” (Matthew 25:23). Death
is the emancipation of the soul into
greater activity.
Charles L. Allen
In Heaven we shall not rest from our work,
but from our labors. There will be no toil,
no pain in the work.
67. 60 glimpses of heaven
The material universe … even down to
the smallest electron, is in motion. Heaven
undoubtedly is a very active place. Suns
and planets are speeding through the
universe at terrific speeds. Nothing could
be further from the truth than the old
idea that in Heaven the people are just
sitting around, or lolling about, with
nothing to do — an idle, stagnant life. It is
inconsistent to imagine a Heaven in which
people would sit under the shade of the
trees, or on the bank of the River of Life,
twanging a harp — “perhaps a thousand
strings” — and spend an eternity in a do-
nothing world! … We cannot conceive
that God would put us in another world
with renewed and enlarged powers of body
and mind, and leave us with nothing to do.
Leewin B. Williams
A Down-to-Earth Heaven
68. 61glimpses of heaven
We’re going to have plenty of work to do, but it’s going
to be a lot easier than here. There’ll be no sorrow, no
sickness, no pain, no weariness, no death, no more tears,
no more crying. That’s certainly going to make things
easier. We’re going to have rest in Heaven compared to
what we’ve had in this life, but we’re also going to have
something to do. We’d eventually be unhappy if we didn’t!
The thought of eternal rest is boring.
If we had nothing to do and no
responsibilities, living would become
a bore and a burden. Paradise … is a
place of beauty because it is a place
of growth.
Charles L. Allen
A Down-to-Earth Heaven
69. 62 glimpses of heaven
The Heavenly City
The paradise that God has prepared for us, the marvelous
Heavenly City, is clearly and explicitly described in His Holy
Book, the Bible, in the last two chapters of Revelation, the
prophecies of Saint John. It is so amazing, so breathtakingly
beautiful, that it is almost beyond description!
It is the largest City ever built, built by God Himself! It is
2,200 kilometers wide and 2,200 kilometers high. It glows
with golden light from its crystal golden beauty and is full of
golden mansions for you and me!
The streets are made of scintillating crystal-clear gold. It
is surrounded by a very high wall with twelve pearly gates.
This is to prevent the entry of any who are not yet ready to
enter therein.
Within its shimmering gates is the Paradise of God, where
the River of Life winds gracefully through lush parks where
laughing children and gentle animals play — and where
departed loved ones await our coming!
70. 63glimpses of heaven
— Mansions, Children, Music, and Pets
In Heaven, each of us will have a special place to live. Before Jesus
left this earth, He told His followers that He would prepare a place for
them and all believers in the hereafter. “In My Father’s house are many
mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a
place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again,
and receive you unto Myself; that where I am, there ye may be also”
(John 14:2,3). One of these days, we’re going to own a mansion that
isn’t going to cost us anything — no upkeep, no expenses!
It would be hard to imagine
Heaven without children.
It wouldn’t be Heaven!
71. 64 glimpses of heaven
The Heavenly City
Music will still be a big part of our environment. The Bible
talks about choirs of angels and how there is singing in Heaven.
We’re going to have the greatest choirs, the greatest bands and
symphony orchestras, the greatest music that the world has ever
known. The world has never even heard music yet compared
to what we’re going to have there! If humans can make the
beautiful music they have learned to make with these handmade
instruments, think what God can do supernaturally!
[Heaven is] a land where children shall walk on
cool springy turf, and among myrtle trees, and eat
fruits that shall heal while they delight them, and
drink the coolest of water, fresh from the River of
Life, and have space to stretch themselves, and
bathe, and leap, and run, and whichsoever way
they look meet Christ’s eyes smiling on them.
Thomas Moore
72. 65glimpses of heaven
— Mansions, Children, Music, and Pets
There are going to be animals
in Heaven. The prophet
Isaiah said that “the wolf shall
dwell with the lamb, and the
leopard shall lie down with
the young goat, ... and the
lion shall eat straw like the ox”
(Isaiah 11:6–9).
God put many animals
here [on Earth] for
pets, playthings and
companions for us and
our children, and we’re
still going to enjoy them
[in Heaven].
Heaven is the perfect place to raise children. Everything
will be just the way it was intended to be in the beginning, a
perfect environment without pain and danger, accidents and
death and the horrors of this world. Babies won’t have to cry.
— They’ll have everything they need. We’ll be able to read
their little minds, and we won’t have to wonder what they’re
needing. Just think of all the advantages of rearing children in
Heaven. It will be pure pleasure!
73. 66 glimpses of heaven
Conclusion
Many aspects of Heaven have been presented
in these pages. However, some questions remain
unanswered. Perhaps the most important is,
“How can I know for certain that I am going
to Heaven?” Most of us want to go, but when
pressed, aren’t really sure if we qualify.
The same God who loves us enough to create us,
this life, the universe and the Heaven we have
just read about has made it very easy for each
of us to be assured of a place there. It is best
summed up in a very simple, but very important
verse from the Bible.
For God so loved the world [each of us], that
He gave His only begotten Son [Jesus], that
whoever believes in Him should not perish, but
have everlasting life. (Jesus, John 3:16, NKJ)
God loves each of us in a very special way. He
knows that the only way we’re going to be truly
happy and personally fulfilled is to live with Him
forever. To make this possible, He sent His Son,
Jesus, to show us how to live and love, and to
die for us. Jesus is the bridge between this life
and Heaven.
74. 67glimpses of heaven
And don’t ever think that you are too “bad” to
go to Heaven. God knows everything you have
ever done or said or even thought, and He still
loves you unconditionally. Heaven is full of
sinners — that is, people who have done bad
things, but asked God for His forgiveness. All
He wants you to do is to tell Him you’re sorry
and invite Him into your life.
Would you like to know for sure that you’re
going to Heaven? If you wish, you can sincerely
pray this simple prayer:
“Jesus, I want to know You and to live forever in
Heaven. I know I’ve made mistakes and done bad
things — and I’m sorry. I know I don’t deserve it,
but I accept Your love and ask that I can be with
You in Heaven. Please come into my life and help
me, and give me peace.”
God has promised to answer your prayer, so you
now have a home in Heaven! God bless you with
a wonderful, fulfilling eternity! See you there!
75. When we see what He has for us there,
we’ll agree with Paul, when he wrote about
Heaven, “Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard,
neither have entered into the heart of man,
the things which God hath prepared for
them that love Him” (1 Corinthians 2:9). —
Things we didn’t even imagine could be so
beautiful and wonderful.
76.
77.
78.
79. glimpses of heaven
glimpsesofheaven
“Can you visualize a world with no more death,
no more pain, no more hunger, no more fear,
no more sorrow, no more crying nor sickness, a
world where everything is a joy and a pleasure?
— A society where everybody works together in
harmony, cooperation and love? That’s Heaven!”
Glimpses of Heaven is a unique, thought-
provoking and uplifting collection of anecdotes,
reflections, literary quotations and verse,
revealing the wonders that await us in the
next life. Drawing from a multitude of sources
and authors, Glimpses of Heaven convincingly
affirms that the closing of this life is but “a
passage out of a prison into a palace,” where
our deepest longings and desires will be fulfilled!
A TREASURY OF REFLECTIONS ON THE REALM BEYOND
ISBN 978-3-03730-195-1
9 7 8 3 0 3 7 3 0 1 9 5 1
A – E N – B A – D V – 0 0 1 – H auroraproduction.com
glimpses of heavenglimpses of heaven