A Sword On the Land Revised; is an updated version of Pastor Bill Randles' 2013 book; which was written to show the significance of the "Arab Spring" in view of Bible Prophecy. Pastor Randles has explained the scriptural context for understanding the religion of Islam and it's significance in the last days and the events leading up to the great Tribulation and the Day of the LORD. Theway he does this is by updating the ancint names used in the words of the Biblical prophecies; such as Edom; Moab; Ammon; Persia; Gog; Magog; Put and Ethiopia. Once these designations are updated it is easy to read these ancient prophecies as though one were reading the latest edition fo the newspaper.The prophecies of Joel; Amos; Isaiah; Jeremiah; Obadiah; Ezekiel and Zechariah are shown to be starly relevant to our times. This book is designed to help the "man on the street" to grasp the implications of events in the Middle East and even spilling over into Europe and the Western World.
#3585300 in Books Walter D Kamphoefner 2014-07-14Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 10.00 x .49 x 7.01l; .90 #File Name: 0691608717232 pagesThe Westfalians From Germany to Missouri Princeton Legacy Library
Review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Very Revealing StudyBy Illiniguy71This book; originally published in English in 1987; has become perhaps THE classic study of the settlement of German peasants in the rural Midwest in the pre-Civil War period. Kamphoefner describes chain migration from peasant villages in certain parts of Westphalia and Lippe Detmold in northwest Germany to rural counties west of St. Louis; Missouri between 1830 and 1860. He then examines settlement and social mobility of these immigrants in Missouri. Much of the author's most central work was a matching of names from the out-migration lists created by German authorities with American manuscript census lists. Despite its formal social science quantitative methodology; the book can be appreciated by any intelligent reader. Readers can learn a great deal about the common experiences of ordinary German peasants who created settlements in rural America.