Without Purse Or Scrip

Without Purse Or Scrip
Author: Lynn M. Hilton
Publisher: CreateSpace
Total Pages: 102
Release: 2015-09-07
Genre:
ISBN: 9781516950386

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to do missionary work Without Purse or Scrip - meaning without food, money, or a place to sleep?Lynn M. Hilton, a Mormon Missionary was asked to do this type of mission in 1947, in the State of Maine. He and his companions were told to take one small suitcase filled with copies of the Book of Mormon, a bar of soap, razor, toothbrush, comb, and other small items. He and his missionary companion, got off the bus and started walking. This day-to-day journal will allow you to travel with Elder Hilton on this mission of faith.Lynn was a B-24 bomber pilot during World War II. Ten days after being released from his army duties, he was called to the New England Mission. During the last four months of his mission, he and all the young male missionaries were asked by Mission President S. Dilworth Young to go out and work without purse or scrip.This books contains:* Stories of Faith from his Mission* How he and his companion were able to find food and lodging without cost* How he was guided by the spirit* His hand-written journal entries * Instructions from his Mission President* Final comments by Church President George Albert Smith

The Writings Against The Manichaeans And The Donatists

The Writings Against The Manichaeans And The Donatists
Author: St. Augustine of Hippo
Publisher: Jazzybee Verlag
Total Pages: 638
Release:
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 3849674312

This volume gives a fair sample of Augustin’s controversial powers. His nine years’ personal experience of the vanity of Manichæism made him thoroughly earnest and sympathetic in his efforts to disentangle other men from its snares, and also equipped him with the knowledge requisite for this task. No doubt the Pelagian controversy was more congenial to his mind. His logical acuteness and knowledge of Scripture availed him more in combating men who fought with the same weapons, than in dealing with a system which threw around its positions the mist of Gnostic speculation, or veiled its doctrine under a grotesque mythology, or based itself on a cosmogony too fantastic for a Western mind to tolerate.[25] But however Augustin may have misconceived the strange forms in which this system was presented, there is no doubt that he comprehended and demolished its fundamental principles;[26] that he did so as a necessary part of his own personal search for the truth; and that in doing so he gained possession, vitally and permanently of ideas and principles which subsequently entered into all he thought and wrote. In finding his way through the mazes of the obscure region into which Mani had led him, he once for all ascertained the true relation subsisting between God and His creatures, formed his opinion regarding the respective provinces of reason and faith, and the connection of the Old and New Testaments, and found the root of all evil in the created will.