Contributed by Guy Mcgraw on Jan 14, 2002
based on 81 ratings
| 1,791 views
Probably never heard of Hetty Green. She died in 1916 and left an estate with an estimated value of $100 Million Dollars(not pesos and not 1960 but 1916).
Hetty regularly ate cold oatmeal because it cost too much to heat it.
Her son had his leg amputated because she took so long to get him
...read more
Tags:
Contributed by Sermon Central on Jan 19, 2002
based on 2 ratings
| 2,244 views
In an article in this week’s issue of TIME magazine, Nancy Gibbs ponders the paradoxical nature of Thanksgiving. She says:
“It is an ordeal to travel and yet we do; family reunions can be wildly stressful and yet painful to miss…. This is the kind of holiday we need right now, an intrinsically
...read more
Tags:
Contributed by Sermon Central on Jan 19, 2002
based on 1 rating
| 2,882 views
A few years ago, a Dutch professor took time to calculate the cost of an enemy soldier’s death at different times in history. He estimated that during the reign of Julius Caesar, it cost less than one dollar. It cost Napoleon, $2,000. At the end of the First World War, it cost $17,000. During the
...read more
Tags:
Contributed by Sermon Central on Jan 20, 2002
based on 5 ratings
| 2,424 views
It is the duty of nations as well as of men to own their own independence upon the overruling power of God . . . and to recognize the sublime truth announced in the Holy Scriptures and proved by all history, that those
...read more
Tags:
Contributed by Mike Kern on Jan 27, 2002
based on 13 ratings
| 3,586 views
AMERICAN ARMY OF TWO
Rebecca and Abigail Bates lived on the coast of Massachusetts, near a little village named Scituate. Their father was the keeper of the lighthouse, which stood at the entrance of the harbor and warned ships away from the rocky coast.
One day Rebecca and Abigail were up in
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Evangelical/Non-Denominational
Contributed by A. Todd Coget on Feb 14, 2002
based on 9 ratings
| 3,658 views
Someone once asked Jay Kesler, former president of Youth for Christ International, if he believed that God could make a fish big enough to swallow a man.
As a college president and above average in intelligence, in a world in which we have learned to split the atom and go to the moon and send
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Evangelical/Non-Denominational
Contributed by David Yarbrough on Mar 15, 2002
based on 12 ratings
| 1,478 views
One day, in 1888, Alfred Nobel picked up the morning newspaper and read his obituary. It was his brother who had passed away, but an over-zealous reporter, who had failed to check the facts, wrote that the world saw Alfred Nobel as the inventor of dynamite, an armaments manufacturer, a merchant of
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Evangelical/Non-Denominational