Globequake: Living in the Unshakeable Kingdom While the World Falls Apart
By (Author) Wallace Henley
Thomas Nelson Publishers
Thomas Nelson Publishers
1st July 2012
United States
General
Non Fiction
Religious social and pastoral thought and activity
Christian life and practice
Spirituality and religious experience
269
Paperback
288
Width 139mm, Height 213mm, Spine 19mm
262g
From globalization to the digital revolution, secularization to the great recession, change has never happened so fast and wide and deep as we have seen in recent years. The nature of information and the speed with which it travels is unparalleled, and it is changing our world in seismic ways that reach into every crevice of our lives. It's as if the tectonic plates of society and culture are being torn apart and reshaped right under our feet. We are living through a cultural "GLOBEQUAKE."
How should we respond as families In business Through our churches
With the hope and stability found not on this shifting ground but in the one who created the heavens and earth, says pastor and best-selling author Wallace Henley. Drawing from his experiences in politics and journalism plus his deep biblical knowledge, Henley's analysis is clear, insightful, and thought provoking. There is no alarmist agenda here. Globequake is a well-reasoned guide to navigating the spheres of our lives in a godly manner, even as those spheres wobble on their axes.
"Globequake looks at current events and puts them in the context of the larger prophetic picture." Cal Thomas, syndicated and USA Today columnist, and Fox News contributor.
Wallace Henley was born two days before the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 5, 1941. After serving as a White House aide during the Nixon administration, Henley went on to become an award-winning journalist for theBirmingham Newsin Alabama. He is the author of more than twenty books, includingGod and Churchillwith Jonathan Sandys, Winston Churchills great-grandson. Henley has led leadership conferences around the globe. He has been married to his wife, Irene, for more than fifty years. They have two children, six grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren.