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Allen P. Ross (PhD, University of Cambridge) is professor of divinity at Beeson Divinity School. Prior to this, he taught at Trinity Episcopal School of Ministry and Dallas Theological Seminary. His publications include Creation and Blessing: A Guide to the Study and Exposition of Genesis, Holiness to the Lord: A Guide to the Exposition of the Book of Leviticus, and Introducing Biblical Hebrew.
The Lost Teachings of Spiritualism is a book taken from the evening slide lecture by the same name, which Alan has presented in the US, the UK and Canada. The presentation is based upon the channeled messages of the Washington DC lawyer, James E. Padgett and his successor Dr. Daniel G. Samuels. In The Lost Teachings of Spiritualism many historic, scientific, philosophical, and spiritual subjects are examined. This book traces Spiritualism from its ancient beginnings to the emergence of Modern Spiritualism in America. it explains the creation of the world, the origin of man, the destiny of the human soul, a description of the spirit world and of God are just some of the subjects contained in This book.
Legislators, journalists and concerned citizens in general, when consider ing what to do about the plague of heroin addiction in large cities, ask an obvious question: "Is methadone treatment effective?"
An autobiography of Alan Ross deals with his postwar life as cricket correspondent, publisher, man of letters and racehorse owner.
Although admitting, perhaps too modestly, to the influence of Graham Greene's "The Lawless Roads" and "Journey Without Maps" and therefore 'too inclined to see Corsica in terms of defeated priests, corrupt politicians and saintly monks', the author describes Corsica of 1947 which he visited, in the footsteps of Edward Lear.
Alan Ross was a poet and a brilliant writer on cricket. This first volume begins in Bengal, where he was born, and ends in Germany in 1946 when the author was twenty-four. It takes in his childhood in India, his schooldays in England, and his time at Oxford, and, most hauntingly, his experiences on the Arctic convoys during the Second World War.
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