| Loren Cunningham - 1997 - 164 páginas
...the place of prayer." What should you pray for to move forward in your focus area from Question 1? 3. "Gain all you can. Save all you can. Give all you can," John Wesley urged Christians. Which are you doing the best? Which area needs the most improvement?... | |
| James M. Childs - 164 páginas
...good and generous stewardship. As John Wesley said in his well-known sermon "On the Use of Money," "Gain all you can. Save all you can. Give all you can."' Looking deeper into the phenomenon of greed and the way it seeps into the pores of every appendage... | |
| Rosemary H. T. O'Kane - 2000 - 612 páginas
...as a sacred duty and educated them in the trusteeship theory of wealth - remember Wesley's counsel "gain all you can, save all you can, give all you can" - at the same time as it made the masses extraordinarily willing to suffer their burdens in peace.... | |
| Martin H. Manser - 2001 - 524 páginas
...better than their possession. Fernando de Rojas Many a man's gold has lost him his God. George Swinnock Gain all you can, save all you can, give all you can. John Wesley To lay up treasure on earth is as plainly forbidden by our Master as adultery and murder.... | |
| Peter Johnson, Chris Sugden - 2001 - 180 páginas
...Wesley's exhortation (not without its own challenges!), given in a sermon on the Use of Money in 1744, to 'Gain all you can: save all you can: give all you can' (quoted in Harries, 1992, p. 76). Gains that are made in the market can be redistributed to others... | |
| A. James Reichley - 2004 - 456 páginas
...own sake but as an instrument of benevolence, as in John Wesley's famous exhortation to Christians to "gain all you can, save all you can, give all you can."" In more recent times, libertarian theorists like Milton Friedman and Robert Nozick, pursuing a line... | |
| David W. Kling - 2004 - 403 páginas
...revolution and was exceedingly concerned for the poor. The itinerant evangelist urged his followers to "gain all you can; save all you can; give all you can" — with an emphasis on the third imperative. A century later, during America's era of the so-called... | |
| Horst Hutter - 2006 - 1978 páginas
...average more willing to go to church and to spend time and money on good causes. John Wesley's injunction "gain all you can, save all you can, give all you can" struck an answering chord in all the multifarious congregations in America. They tended to cooperate... | |
| Scott Cutler Shershow - 2005 - 276 páginas
...understanding which God has given you" (2:273). This sermon is built around the famous homiletic formula "Gain all you can, save all you can, give all you can," which conveys with remarkable concision how working and giving remain the central points of interest... | |
| Pamela Marin - 2007 - 242 páginas
...notebook and copied the words attributed to John Wesley that had been neatly printed on the chalkboard: "Gain all you can. Save all you can. Give all you can." I couldn't make heads or tails of it. I was counting folding chairs and trying not to think how much... | |
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