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Books with author Ms Jane Vogel

  • The Case for Christ/The Case for Faith--Student Edition Leader's Guide

    Jane Vogel

    Paperback (Zondervan, March 7, 2004)
    Equip your youth group with solid reasons for their faith. How well do the kids in your group know why they believe what they believe? Don’t leave them groping for answers---equip them now with a strong apologetic for the real-life questions and challenges they’ll face as Christians. In The Case for Christ and The Case for Faith student editions, Lee Strobel unfolds the compelling evidence that turned him from an atheist to a Christian. This leader’s guide gives you everything you need to take your youth group or Sunday school class through both books. Five riveting sessions per book (ten sessions total) will furnish your kids with persuasive reasons for their faith in Christ. Here’s what you and your group can expect: Session 1 dramatically illustrates for your group the importance of knowing the facts about Christianity. Sessions 2, 3 and 4 consider the important objections people raise to Christianity, and respond with an in-depth look at the evidence for belief in Jesus and the Christian faith. Session 5 takes your group from learning to application as they draw on what they’ve learned in an actual evangelistic scenario. You’ll also find a skit suitable for publicizing The Case for Christ sessions in church to both kids and parents. Get excited! These powerful studies will boost the faith of your kids, and their confidence to share it, to a whole new level.
  • The Case for Miracles: A Journalist Explores the Evidence for the Supernatural

    Lee Strobel, Ms Jane Vogel

    Paperback (Zondervan, March 27, 2018)
    Do miracles really exist? Bestselling and award-winning author Lee Strobel decided to find out. In The Case for Miracles Student Edition, he presents the interviews, real-life stories, and provable facts behind historical and modern-day incidents many people claim are "miraculous" and others see as false, then lays out the solid truth, giving young adults like you the evidence you need to make your own decision on whether miracles and other supernatural events ever happened, and if they still happen today.A woman on the news says she saved a boy from drowning after a glowing man told her where to go. A man says his cancer miraculously disappeared, and doctors agree they can't find any trace of the disease. A classmate says the answers to his final exam came to him in a dream and claims it must have been a miracle. None of these things are normal events--but are they really miracles, or just strange coincidences? And what about all the miracles in the Bible? Can modern science explain them away? In The Case for Miracles Student Edition, Lee Strobel asks the hard questions as he interviews scientists, skeptics, and first-hand witnesses, and also uses his award-winning journalist background to examine the evidence behind modern-day and historical miracles and "supernatural" claims to see if they are really from God or just wishful thinking. As he presents the evidence, you can decide: Does God really perform miracles in our world? And if he does, what does that mean for us?The Case for Miracles Student Edition Answers the questions teens and young adults thirteen and up ask about miracles and otherworldly events, looking at all the possible angles and presenting proof of God's presenceExplores all types of miracles--and why they sometimes don't happen when we think they shouldCan also be used in the classroom, in group studies, or as part of a religious studies classPairs well with The Case for Christ Student Edition, The Case for a Creator Student Edition, and The Case for Faith Student Edition
  • The Case for Miracles Student Edition: A Journalist Explores the Evidence for the Supernatural

    Lee Strobel, Ms Jane Vogel

    eBook (Zondervan, March 27, 2018)
    Do miracles really exist? Bestselling and award-winning author Lee Strobel decided to find out. In The Case for Miracles Student Edition, he presents the interviews, real-life stories, and provable facts behind historical and modern-day incidents many people claim are "miraculous" and others see as false, then lays out the solid truth, giving young adults like you the evidence you need to make your own decision on whether miracles and other supernatural events ever happened, and if they still happen today.A woman on the news says she saved a boy from drowning after a glowing man told her where to go. A man says his cancer miraculously disappeared, and doctors agree they can't find any trace of the disease. A classmate says the answers to his final exam came to him in a dream and claims it must have been a miracle. None of these things are normal events--but are they really miracles, or just strange coincidences? And what about all the miracles in the Bible? Can modern science explain them away? In The Case for Miracles Student Edition, Lee Strobel asks the hard questions as he interviews scientists, skeptics, and first-hand witnesses, and also uses his award-winning journalist background to examine the evidence behind modern-day and historical miracles and "supernatural" claims to see if they are really from God or just wishful thinking. As he presents the evidence, you can decide: Does God really perform miracles in our world? And if he does, what does that mean for us?The Case for Miracles Student Edition:Answers the questions teens and young adults thirteen and up ask about miracles and otherworldly events, looking at all the possible angles and presenting proof of God’s presenceExplores all types of miracles—and why they sometimes don't happen when we think they shouldCan also be used in the classroom, in group studies, or as part of a religious studies classPairs well with The Case for Christ Student Edition, The Case for a Creator Student Edition, and The Case for Faith Student Edition
  • Going Crazy Till Wednesday

    Jane Vogel

    Paperback (Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., March 15, 1889)
    None
  • Fast Forward to Normal

    Jane Vogel

    Paperback (Focus on the Family, March 15, 1614)
    None