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Church service bulletin containing ministry announcements, prayer information, baptism teaching, worship song lyrics, and a sermon outline on humility, repentance, and turning from evil for a September 6, 2020 gathering at The Grove Church in Painesville, Ohio.
Year:
2020
Date:
September 6, 2020
Location:
Painesville, Ohio, United States
Venue:
The Grove Church
Address:
1697 Mentor Ave., Painesville, OH 44077
Organization:
The Grove Church
Pastor:
Pastor Jeff
Contact Phone:
440.363.1160
Pastor Contact:
440.463.2821
Website:
www.grovechurch.cc
Type of Document:
Church service bulletin and ministry announcements
Religious Tradition:
Christianity
Event Reference:
The Return (simulcast gathering)
Event Date Mentioned:
September 26, 2020
Content Elements:
prayer schedule, ministry opportunities, baptism teaching, sermon outline, worship song lyrics
Sermon Title:
The Return – Part 1: Humility, Turning From Evil, Repentance
Biblical References:
Jonah 1:2; Jonah 3:2–10; 2 Chronicles 7:14; Deuteronomy 8:11–14; Proverbs 14:16–18; Psalm 31:18; Luke 18:9–11; Proverbs 12:15; Proverbs 13:1; Proverbs 15:31–32; Jeremiah 13:8–10; Matthew 7:1–5; 1 Peter 5:5–6; Romans 2:4–5
Music Licensing:
CCLI Song #7089024; #7051511; #7138219
Audience:
Church congregation and visitors
Price: 8 / 10 USD
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Year:
2026
Region / City:
N/A
Topic:
Religion, Personal Transformation
Document Type:
Religious Text
Organization / Institution:
N/A
Author:
N/A
Target Audience:
Christians seeking spiritual guidance
Period of Validity:
N/A
Date of Approval:
N/A
Date of Changes:
N/A
Year:
No specific year
Region / City:
No specific region
Theme:
Philosophy, spirituality
Document type:
Prose
Organization / Institution:
No specific institution
Author:
Kahlil Gibran
Target Audience:
General public, readers of philosophy and spirituality
Effective period:
No specific period
Approval date:
No approval date provided
Date of changes:
No changes listed
Year:
2026
Region / City:
International / Online Publication
Topic:
Theology, Philosophy of Religion
Document Type:
Academic Article
Institution / Organization:
Unaffiliated / Scholarly Journal Submission
Author:
Not specified
Target Audience:
Philosophers, Theologians, Religious Scholars
Period Covered:
Biblical references to divine repentance, contemporary theological analysis
Keywords:
God, Repentance, Omnibenevolence, Omniscience, Open Theism, Geachianism, Paradox, Perfect Being Theology
Format:
Textual analysis with philosophical argumentation
Year:
2015
Date:
September 6
Type of Document:
Worship resources / Prayers
Theme:
Racial justice, confession, repentance, community unity
Author / Contributor:
United Church of Christ; United Church of Canada; Yolanda Pierce
Target Audience:
Congregations, church leaders, worship participants
Language:
English
Related Event:
Racial Justice Sunday
Format:
Litany, prayers of intercession, devotional texts
Source:
Online church resources and personal blog
Year:
2012
Region / City:
N/A
Theme:
Biblical Counseling, Guilt, Repentance
Document Type:
Sermon / Teaching
Organization:
Grace Fellowship Church
Author:
Brad Bigney
Target Audience:
Christian believers, those seeking spiritual guidance
Period of Validity:
N/A
Date of Approval:
N/A
Date of Changes:
N/A
Context:
This document provides a theological and biblical exploration of guilt and repentance, emphasizing the role of God’s provision through the Gospel in overcoming guilt.
Book:
Gospel of Mark
Biblical Passage:
Mark 10:1–52
Week:
14
Main Point:
Value what God values
Genre:
Religious instructional lesson
Religious Tradition:
Christianity
Primary Figure:
Jesus
Topics:
Marriage, Divorce, Children, Family, Humility, Faith
Cultural Context:
Greco-Roman world and Second Temple Judaism
Audience:
LifeGroup participants
Related Biblical References:
Deuteronomy 24:1–4; Malachi 2:13–16; Matthew 19:9; 1 Corinthians 7:15; Mark 9:35–37
Religious instructional lesson outlining Jesus’ teaching in Mark 10:
1–52 on marriage, divorce, children, and the values of God’s kingdom in contrast to Greco-Roman and Jewish social norms.
Year:
2021
Region / City:
United States
Subject:
Political Polarization, Intellectual Humility
Document Type:
Academic Paper
Author:
Shauna M. Bowes, Madeline C. Blanchard, Thomas H. Costello, Alan I. Abramowitz, Scott O. Lilienfeld
Target Audience:
Researchers, Academics, Students
Period of Action:
N/A
Approval Date:
N/A
Revision Date:
N/A
Year:
2025
Region / City:
Not specified
Topic:
Patient-centered communication, trust, humility, bedside cardiac assessment
Document Type:
Educational resource
Organization / Institution:
Not specified
Author:
Not specified
Target Audience:
Medical professionals, healthcare educators
Duration:
Approximately 60-90 minutes
Approval Date:
Not specified
Modification Date:
Not specified
Year:
2022
Event:
Edge Hill Religious Education Summer School
Institution:
Edge Hill University
Author:
Karen Steele
Subject:
Intellectual Humility in Religious Education
Discipline:
Religious Education
Type of document:
Educational reflective essay
Referenced authors:
Church & Samuelson; Hook & Davis; Trevor Cooling
Educational context:
Key Stage 4 Religious Education
Thematic focus:
Virtue epistemology, classroom discourse, debate, worldview approaches
Year:
Not specified
Region:
Not specified
Theme:
Christian theology, biblical commentary
Document type:
Exegetical article
Author:
Not specified
Target audience:
Christians, Bible students
Biblical references:
Philippians 2:1-8, Galatians 5:26, James 3:16, Matthew 11:29;18:4;23:12, Jeremiah 17:9, Romans 8:1,5, 1 Timothy 3:16
Key concepts:
Unity, humility, imitation of Christ, spiritual transformation
End text:
Analysis of New Testament passages explaining the causes of disunity among the Philippians and presenting humility and Christlike attitudes as the path to unity.
Year:
N/A
Region / City:
N/A
Subject:
Personal virtues and values
Document type:
Ethical principles
Organization / Institution:
N/A
Author:
N/A
Target audience:
General public
Effective period:
N/A
Approval date:
N/A
Amendment date:
N/A
Year:
Not specified
Region / City:
Not specified
Theme:
Christian teachings on humility and faith
Document type:
Religious exposition / Sermon notes
Author:
Not specified
Target audience:
Christians seeking spiritual growth
Scripture references:
Matthew 18:4; Luke 18:14, 15, 16-17; Mark 10:16; Luke 9:23; 1 John 2:15-17; Philippians 2:3, 1, 2
Key concepts:
Humility, selflessness, childlike faith, spiritual emptiness, pride, Christian conduct
Context description:
Exposition on Christian scriptures illustrating humility, self-emptying, and reliance on God as a child, emphasizing the spiritual struggle against pride and self-centeredness.
Year:
2026
Course:
Philosophy 450/650 / EP&E 478
Topic:
The Problem of Evil, Universalism, and Free Will
Document type:
Lecture notes
Instructor:
Keith DeRose
References:
http://campuspress.yale.edu/keithderose/1129-2/
, https:
//www.facebook.com/keith.derose/posts/10157578756770576
Audience:
University students in philosophy
Date:
October 17, 2026
Deadline for first papers:
October 19, 2026
Key concepts:
Non-universalism, strong exclusivist Christian views, free will theodicies, Murray on purpose of life, Plantinga on significant freedom, D. Lewis on playpens, autonomy
Title:
Sinister Aesthetics: The Appeal of Evil in Early Modern English Literature
Author:
Joel Elliot Slotkin
Author Affiliation:
Associate Professor, English Department, Towson University
Genre:
Literary criticism
Subject:
Early modern English literature and religious culture
Thematic Focus:
Aesthetic representations of evil and early modern theodicy
Chronological Scope:
Late 16th century to late 17th century
Geographical Focus:
England
Literary Figures Discussed:
William Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe, John Milton, Edmund Spenser
Key Work Examined:
Paradise Lost
Religious Context:
Protestantism and Puritan sensibility
Intellectual Context:
Renaissance poetics and Christian theology
Type of Source:
Academic book summary
Note:
Year
Document Type:
Speech
Target Audience:
Members of the White Eagles and Allies
Year:
2026
Region / City:
Worldwide
Theme:
Spiritual Warfare, Human Rights, Politics
Document Type:
Exposé
Organization / Institution:
Not specified
Author:
Steve Quyale
Target Audience:
General public, those interested in global politics and spiritual matters
Period of Validity:
Ongoing
Approval Date:
February 5, 2026
Modification Date:
Not specified
Note:
Prologue
Why, Vasher thought, do so many things begin with me getting thrown into prison? The guardsmen laughed to one another outside, slamming the cell door shut with a clang. Vasher stood and duste:
land of Returned Gods, Lifeless servants, BioChromatic research, and--of course--color. The large guard sauntered toward the cell, leaving his friends to their fun with Vasher’s pack. “They say you’re pretty tough,” the man said, sizing up Vasher. Vasher did not respond. “The bartender says you beat down some twenty men in the brawl.” The guard rubbed his chin. “You don’t look that tough to me.” Vasher shrugged. The guard snorted. “You should have known better than to strike a priest. The others, they’ll spend a night locked up. You, though--you’ll hang. Colorless fool.” Vasher turned away, looking over his cell. It was functional, if unoriginal. A thin slit in the top let in light, the stone walls dripped with water and lichen, and a pile of dirty straw decomposed in the corner. “You ignoring me?” the guard asked, stepping closer to the bars. As he did so, the colors of his uniform brightened faintly, like he’d stepped into a stronger light. The change was slight. Vasher didn’t have much Breath remaining. The guard didn’t notice the change in color--just like he hadn’t noticed back in the bar, when he and his buddies had picked Vasher up off the floor and thrown him in their cart. He’d soon wish that he’d been more observant. “Here, now,” one of the men said from behind. “What’s this?” Those two were still looking through Vasher’s pack. Vasher had always found it odd that the men who patrolled dungeons tended to be as bad, or worse, than the men they guarded. Perhaps that was intentional. Society didn’t seem to care if such men were outside the cells or in them--just as long as they were kept away from more honest men. Assuming that such a thing existed. A guard pulled a long object--wrapped in white linen--free from Vasher’s bag. The man frowned at the object, then unwrapped it, revealing a large, thin-bladed sword in a silver sheath. The hilt was pure black. The guard whistled quietly. “Who do you suppose he stole this from?” The lead guard eyed Vasher again, frowning. He was likely wondering if Vasher might be some kind of nobleman. Though such things didn’t really exist in Hallandren, many neighboring kingdoms had their lords and ladies. Yet, what lord would wear a drab brown cloak, ripped in several places? What lord would sport bruises from a bar fight, a half-grown beard, and boots worn from years of walking? Eventually, the guard turned away, apparently convinced that Vasher was no lord. He was right. And he was wrong. “Let me see that,” t