Books by "George Campbell Morgan"

12 books found

The Parables of the Kingdom

The Parables of the Kingdom

by George Campbell Morgan

1907

The Life of the Christian

The Life of the Christian

by George Campbell Morgan

1904

The Analyzed Bible

The Analyzed Bible

by George Campbell Morgan

1908

Geochemical Characteristics of Mineralized Breccia Pipes in the Red Mountain District, San Juan Mountains, Colorado

Geochemical Characteristics of Mineralized Breccia Pipes in the Red Mountain District, San Juan Mountains, Colorado

by Frederick S. Fisher, Henry Bell, Norman L. Hatch, Paul Averitt, Richard F. Marvin, George E. Siple, Lorreda Lopez, Rolfe S. Stanley, T. W. Stern, Willard P. Leedy, Saville Cyrus Creasey, Harald H. Mehnert

1972

A compendium of about 1,300 geological reports, maps, and statistical summaries.

Who Said That?

Who Said That?

by George Sweeting

1995 · Moody Publishers

From politics to religion. From adversity to trust and truth. From the deadly serious to the seriously humorous, you'll read quotes comfortably familiar and refreshingly new. Arranged alphabetically by topic. Includes an index of authors. All to help you find a new quote or the one you've been searching for.

The Christ of To-day

The Christ of To-day

by George Campbell Morgan

1905

The Morning Message

The Morning Message

by George Campbell Morgan

1906

Lessons on the Lord's Prayer

Lessons on the Lord's Prayer

by George E. Thompson

2010 · Xlibris Corporation

For over thirty years now I have believed that the main purpose of the Lord's Prayer was not give to us as a prayer to be quoted daily or weekly. I also do not believe the main purpose was to serve as a model prayer. Although both these terms are used in this writing because the reader knows exactly what is meant by the use of these terms. This book in no way demeans anyone's use of the Lord's Prayer. My previous congregation quoted it weekly and my current congregation quotes it weekly. The aim of this book is to encourage the reader to look at the Lord's Prayer from a new perspective and, when finished reading, think, "That's a possibility. I'm going to think about that some more." Let's think about this together, shall we?