Searching for Heaven on Earth (e-bog) af Jeremiah, Dr.  David
Jeremiah, Dr. David (forfatter)

Searching for Heaven on Earth e-bog

135,85 DKK (ekskl. moms 108,68 DKK)
Don't you deserve a little happiness? They are the questions that plague us: Is happiness within my reach? Why is life so frustrating? Is it too late for me? Or to put another way, "e;Where can I find a little heaven on earth?"e; History's most successful man, Solomon, wondered just that. As Dr. David Jeremiah shows us, he was a man who tested life's haunting questions head-on. And taste…
Don't you deserve a little happiness? They are the questions that plague us: Is happiness within my reach? Why is life so frustrating? Is it too late for me? Or to put another way, "e;Where can I find a little heaven on earth?"e; History's most successful man, Solomon, wondered just that. As Dr. David Jeremiah shows us, he was a man who tested life's haunting questions head-on. And tasted life's riches full-on. And who found his answers in the last place he thought to look. Listen, then, to his voice. A voice that, if you pay attention, will speak directly to your flesh and bones and heart. A voice that admits: Maybe happiness is an empty hope. Or maybe we've simply been looking in all the wrong places. . .
E-bog 135,85 DKK
Forfattere Jeremiah, Dr. David (forfatter)
Forlag Thomas Nelson
Udgivet 16.09.2007
Længde 352 sider
Genrer HRCM
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781418570415
Don't you deserve a little happiness? They are the questions that plague us: Is happiness within my reach? Why is life so frustrating? Is it too late for me? Or to put another way, "e;Where can I find a little heaven on earth?"e; History's most successful man, Solomon, wondered just that. As Dr. David Jeremiah shows us, he was a man who tested life's haunting questions head-on. And tasted life's riches full-on. And who found his answers in the last place he thought to look. Listen, then, to his voice. A voice that, if you pay attention, will speak directly to your flesh and bones and heart. A voice that admits: Maybe happiness is an empty hope. Or maybe we've simply been looking in all the wrong places. . .