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What is justice, and how can it be defined? Justice has been defined in various ways throughout the development of political, social, economic, philosophical, and religious literature over the centuries. Justice has been defined as a process as well as an outcome. In how many movies have we seen a character who was told that the evil character had suffered some type of setback and the character said, "This is the first time I have believed there is a God!" What is the connection? Why was the suffering of the evil character an example of the existence of God? This need for right to prevail over wrong is at the foundation of what we call justice. We all believe and need to believe that evil will not triumph and there will be recompense for doing evil. Secular or religious, the need for justice is satisfied in the belief that a "higher power" or "a God" or "the universe" or "karma" will apply the higher truths of right and wrong to the events of mankind, ensuring that evil does not prevail. I Am He Who Sees: Justice Defined by the Hand of God proposes that justice is defined by who God is and what God does and why God does what He does. Justice, the Scriptures tell us, is in the eyes of God, and His hand will apply justice and the weak will be defended. It is proposed in this book that the utilization of a literal, historical, and contextual hermeneutical review of the Bible itself answers the question of what is justice in the hand of God. Justice includes the proposition that God is involved in the affairs of mankind. Justice, as the Scriptures tell us, occurs through the interaction of her three daughters - law, mercy, and grace. The approach taken in this book is that the Bible is true and can be used as an exclusive authoritative source for determining the definition, purpose, and operation of justice and law.
God sees. God hears. God answers. Life hurts, and in times of failure, do you wonder if God hears? Does he see? Does he care? The Bible says have faith and it also says hope deferred makes the heart sick. How do you have faith when your heart is sick? Lord, Help My Unbeliefreviews famous stories in the Bible with a focus on the human pain within these stories, and how God sees our pain and doubts and fears and works with them, and in them, to prove his love for us and to make life better. Lord, Help My Unbelief proposes that God's heart and hand are shown to be practical and can be counted upon. In times of trouble, it is less about our faith and more about his faithfulness in the process of time. The heart is made sick in the middle of that process, but in God's time that longing of the heart is fulfilled by the root of the tree of life.
Abonner på vårt nyhetsbrev og få rabatter og inspirasjon til din neste leseopplevelse.
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