From the very beginning it would seem that God had a plan for America. From its discovery by Europeans to its settlement, from the Revolution to Manifest Destiny, from the stirrings of civil unrest to civil war, America was on a path. In our pluralistic world, when textbooks are being rewritten in ways that obscure the Judeo-Christian beginnings of our country, the books in the Discovering God's Plan for America series help ground young readers in a distinctly evangelical way of understanding early American history. As young readers look at their nation's development from God's point of view, they will begin to have a clearer idea of how much we owe to a very few--and how much is still at stake. These engaging books bring history alive in a way that will inspire young people to do their important part in shaping this nation into the future.
The Light and the Glory for Young Readers leads children ages 9 to 12 on a journey of surprising discoveries about how God worked through the founders of America to establish this nation.
See Lee Miller's Roanoke: Solving the Mystery of the Lost Colony (Arcade, 2001). 12. Smith, Writings, 915. 13. Milton, Elizabeth, 237. He would later write this in a letter to Richard Hakluyt. Chapter 6: Garboil 1.
This interactive edition of the best-seller reveals how God worked through America's founding fathers. Ages 9-12.
This is the story of the discovery of that plan, and how it dramatically affects the conventional view of our nation's history--and purpose.
Now revised and expanded for the first time in thirty years, The Light and the Glory is the perfect handbook to our nation's beginnings--and its future.
Burke Davis, in Old Hickory, p. 208, gives Jackson 155,800 votes, Adams 105,300, ... Davis, Old Hickory, 223. 17. Ibid., 226. 18. ... Frank Grenville Beardsley, A History of American Revivals, 3d ed. (New York: American Tract Society, ...
Returning to high school in a wheelchair, head half-shaved and face distorted, Tiffany vowed to be normal and live the dream. And for a season, she did. But just when the fairytale was within reach, God surprised Tiffany.
David Herbert Donald, Lincoln (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995), 216. 5. Ibid. 6. Lincoln, Collected Works, vol. 3, 3. 7. Paul L. Angle, The Lincoln-Douglas Debates (Chicago: Chicago Historical Society, 1958), 1. 8.
This book brings one of the most crucial times in America's past to life, the years of 1837 to 1860.
This children's edition, the third in the historical series, dramatically portrays the nation's struggle with slavery and human rights in the pre-Civil War years. Ages 9-13.