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Books with title Let My People Go!

  • Let My People Go!

    Tilda Balsley, Ilene Richard

    eBook (Kar-Ben Publishing ®, Jan. 1, 2014)
    The Passover story is enlivened in this creative rendition of the Ten Plagues. Everyone can take part as Moses implores Pharoah to "Let My People Go!" This light-hearted rhyming tale can be read alone or with a cast of characters as a "Reader's Theater."
  • Let My People Go!

    Tilda Balsley, Ilene Richard

    Paperback (Kar-Ben Publishing ®, Jan. 1, 2008)
    Read alone or with a cast and chorus, this light-hearted, rhyming tale takes readers through the Ten Plagues while the mean Pharaoh continues to shout "NO, NO, NO," Perfect for family seders, library story times,and classroom dramatizations.
  • Let My People Go!

    Tilda Balsley, Ilene Richard

    Paperback (Kar-Ben Publishing ®, Jan. 1, 2008)
    Read alone or with a cast and chorus, this light-hearted, rhyming tale takes readers through the Ten Plagues while the mean Pharaoh continues to shout "NO, NO, NO," Perfect for family seders, library story times,and classroom dramatizations.
    L
  • My People

    Langston Hughes, Charles R. Smith Jr.

    Hardcover (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Jan. 6, 2009)
    This Coretta Scott King Award-winning photography book based on Langston Hughes’ classic poem is perfect for kids and moving and powerful for readers of all ages.Langston Hughes's spare yet eloquent tribue to his people has been cherished for generations. Now, acclaimed photographer Charles R. Smith Jr. interprets this beloved poem in vivid sepia photographs that capture the glory, the beauty, and the soul of being a black American today.
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  • Let My People Go!

    Alison Greengard, Jessica Goldstein, Inna Inker, Carol Racklin-Siegel

    Perfect Paperback (EKS Publishing, Sept. 1, 2011)
    Let My People Go! retells the Biblical story of Moses encounter with God and his role leading the Israelites from slavery to freedom. This triumph over spiritual and physical oppression has become an inspiration for subsequent generations struggling to achieve liberation. Like the other titles in this series, Let My People Go! features full-color reproductions of silk paintings and includes a word-for-word translation, glossary and transliteration.
  • Let My People Go

    Grace Cutts

    Paperback (Christian Pubns, June 1, 1991)
    Children']s book on the life of missionary Robert A . Jaffray
  • Let My People Go

    Penny Frank, Tony Morris

    Hardcover (Lion, March 15, 1986)
    Retells the story of the Israelite leader Moses, as found in Exodus.
  • Exodus: Let My People Go

    Daniel Berrigan, Ched Myers

    eBook (Cascade Books, an Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers, May 28, 2015)
    The prophets exhort us to defend the poor; but we lionize the rich. They assure us that chariots and missiles cannot save us; yet we seek refuge under their cold shadow. They urge us to forgo idolatry; but we compulsively fetishize the work of our hands. Above all, the prophetic Word warns us that the way to liberation in a world locked down by the spiral of violence, the way to redemption in a world of enslaving addictions, the way to genuine transformation in a world of deadened conscience and numbing conformity, is the way of nonviolent, sacrificial, creative love. But neither polite religion nor society is remotely interested in this--which is why Jesus had to "translate" and "midwife" the prophetic insights for his companions in their historical moment. Dan has done the same for us in ours. As this reading of Exodus attests, he has a keen eye for both text and context, and exegetes both with his life. Thus does he help us shed our denial, connect the dots, and move from our pews to the streets.--from the foreword by Ched Myers"Dan Berrigan has given us a prophetic interpretation of the story of a people's liberation from slavery, contagious violence, and the shocking actions of an ambiguous god. Berrigan has lived out a nonviolent exodus from our own pharaohs. His vision parts the waters of empires past and present. This prophet, like Isaiah, sees a divinely given way from the divisive exodus of our spiritual ancestors to the hope of a promised land for everyone."--James Douglass, Catholic Worker, Founder of Mary's House and Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action "The retrieval of the prophetic in Christian faith and practice is an underlying theme of the renewal and revisioning in today's grassroots Catholicism. Perhaps the prophetic voice of our time is that of Daniel Berrigan, SJ, whose insightful writing and courageous vision has now become the blending of activism and mystic wisdom. Berrigan on Exodus--a profound journey back to the very roots of our tradition and a clarion call to let ourselves be freed and chosen for God's work today."--Robert A. Ludwig, Director of the Institute of Pastoral Studies at Loyola University Chicago"In this lyrical, powerful, and dangerous reading of the second book of Moses, Daniel Berrigan does more than explicate or comment upon the text. Instead, heinvites us to fulfill the text through our own questions, reverence and, as Berrigan says, indignation. To read Exodus is to truly participate in the mystery of Scripture. A beautiful, challenging, and invigorating work by one of our most fearless and tenacious contemporary prophets."--Karin Holsinger Sherman, author of A Question ofBeing: The Integration of Resistance and Contemplation in James Douglass's Theology of NonviolenceDaniel Berrigan is an internationally known voice for peace and disarmament. A Jesuit priest, an award-winning poet, and the author of over fifty books, he has spoken for peace, justice, and nuclear disarmament for nearly fifty years. He spent several years in prison for his part in the 1968 Catonsville Nine antiwar action and later acted with the Plowshares Eight. Nominated many times for the Nobel Peace Prize, he lives and works in New York City.
  • Exodus: Let My People Go

    Daniel Berrigan

    Paperback (Cascade Books, Dec. 31, 2007)
    The prophets exhort us to defend the poor; but we lionize the rich. They assure us that chariots and missiles cannot save us; yet we seek refuge under their cold shadow. They urge us to forgo idolatry; but we compulsively fetishize the work of our hands. Above all, the prophetic Word warns us that the way to liberation in a world locked down by the spiral of violence, the way to redemption in a world of enslaving addictions, the way to genuine transformation in a world of deadened conscience and numbing conformity, is the way of nonviolent, sacrificial, creative love. But neither polite religion nor society is remotely interested in this--which is why Jesus had to "translate" and "midwife" the prophetic insights for his companions in their historical moment. Dan has done the same for us in ours. As this reading of Exodus attests, he has a keen eye for both text and context, and exegetes both with his life. Thus does he help us shed our denial, connect the dots, and move from our pews to the streets. --from the foreword by Ched Myers
  • Let My People Go

    T'helah Ben-Dan, Justin Moore

    Paperback (Kefar Publishing, March 15, 2013)
    Let My People Go is the brilliantly illustrated version of the spiritual melody "Go Down Moses," also called "Let My People Go." This book is perfect for the Passover season, or for anytime you want to teach your children about Moses and the Exodus!
  • Let My People Go!

    Penny Frank, Tony Morris

    Hardcover (Lion Publishing, March 15, 1987)
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  • Let My People Go

    Penny Frank

    Paperback (Lion Pub, Jan. 1, 2002)
    Book by Frank, Penny
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