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Une histoire des Églises de Frères chrétiens au Canada français, 1926-2010 L'histoire des Églises de Frères chrétiens au Canada français, et plus particulièrement au Québec, est marquée par plusieurs périodes de changements. L'auteur s'appuie sur différents documents à valeur historique pour faire ressortir les évènements et les personnages qui ont marqué l'oeuvre du mouvement des Frères dans la province de Québec. Il ajoute à cela ses propres souvenirs qu'il a accumulés au cours des nombreuses années que lui et sa femme ont passées à oeuvrer au Québec. Ce livre veut renforcer la foi et le courage des ouvriers d'aujourd'hui et de demain qui servent le Seigneur dans la Belle Province. Que la connaissance des revers, aussi bien que des succès du passé, leur soit profitable. Qu'ils se souviennent de ces leaders qui leur ont transmis la Parole de Dieu, et qu'ils persévèrent dans l'imitation de leur foi. Qu'ils puissent à jamais se soumettre à l'autorité du Seigneur Jésus-Christ qui a dit: Je bâtirai mon Église. À lui soit la gloire !
Comment les découvrir ? Comment les développer ? Comment ne pas prendre les uns pour les autres ? Pour rendre tout chrétien capable de le servir, Dieu lui a donné des dons naturels, ou talents, et des dons spirituels. Par contre, l'ignorance sur la question des dons rend stérile la vie de nombreux chrétiens. Elle empèche certains de porter tout le fruit qu'ils pourraient avoir. Cela a des répercussions jusque dans les familles et la formation de l'Église de demain. L'auteur traite de la nature des dons naturels et des dons spirituels, et de la façon de les découvrir et de les développer. Il décrit aussi la nature et la fonction particulières des dons miraculeux, et il examine leur manifestation à travers toute la révélation biblique. Auteur Samuel Coppieters exerce un ministère d'enseignement de la Parole de Dieu au Québec depuis 1963. Il a enseigné l'Histoire biblique et la rédaction à l'Institut Biblique Béthel. Il a également publié des histoires dans des revues séculières, des articles dans des revues chrétiennes, et un périodique pour les Assemblées de frères. Avis des lecteurs
'Live at the Continental'...The inside story of the world famous Continental Baths I built the Continental Baths in 1968 and discovered Bette Midler in 1969. The Baths were not only an expression of sexual liberation, but also heralded in a rebirth of Cabaret in the city of New York. Artists of the ilk of Barry Manilow, Manhattan Transfer, Peter Allen, Margaret Whiting, Melba Moore, Liz Torres, Patti LaBelle and countless others in addition to Bette got their first big break at the Continental Baths.The Baths and I are the subject of several chapters in the latest biography of Bette called Bette (1995 Birch Lane press, Carol Publishing Group). The Baths and I have also been extensively written about in Bette's own book, A View From A Broad, Barry Manilow's autobiography My Sweet Life; James Gavin's Intimate Nights; The Golden Age of Cabaret, Stephen Maclean's The Boy From Oz, and countless other books depicting the age of sexual revolution etc. In addition the Baths were the subject of a major motion picture The Ritz, which was released in the late seventies. The Continental was a phenomenon that came out of a pre-AIDS world that we will probably never experience again. But more than just being a bathhouse and showplace, the Baths were a place where people came out of their closets and found out who they were. It was the first gay establishment to treat gay people as equals and not exploit them. It was instrumental in having the laws against homosexuality rescinded and gave birth, along with Stonewall, to a whole generation where gay was in. Beyond that it ushered in an era of sexual liberation and alternative lifestyles that, to this day, has never been equaled.I feel that it is now time for me to tell the whole story of the Baths for the first time. The inside story of how and why it came about, and the whole subculture is engendered. But far from being just another chronicle of a bygone era, and as I was a rather prominent fellow in the gay world, having been crowned 'King Queen' in a 16-page Rolling Stone article, I also relate my own life story, leading up to what motivated me to create such a place and the ramifications it had on myself and my family as I, too, was liberated together with the Baths.Much has been written about the Baths, but the story of how it came about---the 200 raids by the New York Police Department; the pressures from the Mafia; the famous people who visited it; the relationships that were formed; the drug culture that existed in the city; the political upheaval in the city of New York---all of this has never been revealed.During the 8 years that the Continental was in vogue, over 1 million people a year came through its doors. I believe that there is a large market for this book in the gay world, where it is internationally famous, and in the straight world, because of the prominence of its stars. The gay population of the US, using Kinsey's formula of about 10% to 16% of the population, would be well over 20 million. Latest census figures show that 25% of that population is over the age of 40. These 5 million people, I would presume, would be our primary target.The book, however, would not only appeal to those who lived through the 70's, but also to the young amongst us to whom the 70's, the Baths and Bette Midler represent a fascinating golden era that they will never experience, but can only read about.Woven through the book is my own journey as I simultaneously pursued an operatic career, having sung with some of the most famous opera stars in the world in Germany, France, the United States, Canada and Australia. I also try to explore and share the confusion and frustrations I have felt as a bisexual, not understood by the gay or the straight world.
Anybody who does it need not be a genius. Genius has never been supposed to be a particularly good teacher of any art. It is better that the teacher of the Art of Thinking should not be a person who knows no difficulty in thinking, or produces such brilliant thoughts that they will be disheartening to the tyro. A delicate physician does not give the example of health-any woodsman can do that-he only gives the example of a small capital of health intelligently increased: yet, we know he can be more useful from his comprehension of indifferent health and from his appreciation of hygiene, and we often prefer him.
Lost Horizon first published in 1933, this novel won Hilton the Hawthornden Prize in 1934. Hilton is said to have been inspired to write Lost Horizon, and to invent "Shangri-La" by reading the National Geographic Magazine articles of Joseph Rock, an Austrian-American botanist and ethnologist exploring the southwestern Chinese provinces and Tibetan borderlands. Still living in Britain at the time, Hilton was perhaps influenced by the Tibetan travel articles of early travelers in Tibet whose writings were found in the British Library.
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