Ideas on Scrapbooking Supplies
Posted on Jan 2, 2008 at 03:11 PM by Rob Bernabe
Scrapbooking is a favorite past time because you can create a story from pictures and journals. There are many places to find your scrapbooking supplies for creating memory books that will last a life time. Many people find scrapbooking to be relaxing and a great way to express your creative side while making a memory keepsake. Follow a few tips to finding and using scrapbooking supplies to make your scrapbooking hobby affordable and fun.
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Scrapbooking Software Ideas
Posted on Dec 3, 2007 at 07:53 AM by Rob Bernabe
Obtaining the perfect page layout and finding the perfect items to display on your scrapbook pages is so much fun. In fact, scrapbooking has become a very popular craft and hobby for many people. The best part of scrapbooking is that you create memories that will last a life time. The use of scrapbooking software takes scrapbooking to a whole new level for crafters and hobbyists to enjoy.
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Digital Scrapbooking
Posted on Nov 26, 2007 at 09:40 PM by Rob Bernabe
There are many forms of scrapbooking to enjoy. Scrapbooks make wonderful memory keepsakes to treasure for years or even give as gifts to others. With the increasing popularity of scrapbooking, digital scrapbooking is also growing in popularity. Digital scrapbooking is the process of making your scrapbook with digital media.
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Scrapbooking Quotes
Posted on Nov 19, 2007 at 10:12 AM by Rob Bernabe
There is a great deal of fun in scrapbooking. In fact, many people are turning to scrapbooking as a hobby to showcase vacations and special events in their lives. Scrapbooks are wonderful to share with other people that were on a trip with you or for those that attended a special event. For those that have received scrapbooks or enjoyed scrapbooking, it is common to see scrapbooking quotes. Quotes can add flair and fun to the scrapbooks.
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Is Your Life Full
Posted on Jan 10, 2007 at 03:51 AM by Roy Henshaw
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A professor stood before his philosophy class and had some items in front of him. When the class began, wordlessly, he picked up a very large and empty mayonnaise jar and proceeded to fill it with golf balls. He then asked the students if the jar was full. They agreed that it was.
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Beyond a Minute for Peace
Posted on Sep 27, 2006 at 08:53 AM by Roy Henshaw
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To eradicate terrorism from our midst and bring about a healing requires that all the people of our world accept Gods simple truth, that all men women and children were created equal and belong to the one big family that we call mankind.Brother Mandus once gave a prayer “Beyond a Minute for Peace” in the United Nations Chapel in New York. He believed then; as I do now in a universal brotherhood and that God loves us all. I would now like to offer this prayer again as a healing for all mankind.
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Scrapbook Layouts
Posted on Sep 8, 2006 at 09:38 PM by Gary Heimbach
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Caught up in the scrapbooking fever? If you are, you are sure to have a heap of supplies - precut cards, packaged themes, stickers, papers and so on. But what if you feel your scrapbooking efforts are becoming ho-hum? You need to get inspired!
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Alaska Cruises Are The Ideal Way To Visit Alaska And Experience The Unique Alaskan Cruise Wonders.
Posted on Jul 15, 2006 at 03:30 PM by Mary Hanna
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Have you ever wanted to go to Alaska and explore the unique beauty of this state? Try planning your vacation by taking an Alaska Cruise. An Alaskan cruise can take you to the great wonders of this majestic place.
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A Question of Faith
Posted on May 11, 2006 at 04:06 PM by Roy Henshaw
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In answer to the many questions I have received regarding faith, I am reminded of H G Wells. He was never a particularly religious man, but after he had studied the history of the human race and had observed human life, he came to an interesting conclusion: “Religion is the first thing and the last thing, and until a man has found God and been found by God, He begins at no beginning, he works to no end. He may have his friendships, his partial loyalties, his scraps of honour. But all these things fall into place and life falls into place only with God.”
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A Healing For Terrorism
Posted on Apr 25, 2006 at 02:52 AM by Roy Henshaw
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Be still and know one truth, that the Kingdom of God is the Kingdom of Love. That in the Kingdom of Love we commune with and release love, unto every person on earth. In this love is founded the brotherhood of man, and the eternal purpose of God.
Brother Mandus
9th January 1907 – 8th March 1988
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Life after Death
Posted on Apr 20, 2006 at 09:07 AM by Roy Henshaw
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I am often asked the age old question what happens after death. While some believe it's impossible to know whether there is life after death, belief in immortality is timeless. People of all times and places in history have believed that the human soul survives death.
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I Am One Of Them
Posted on Apr 11, 2006 at 08:35 AM by Roy Henshaw
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A short time ago I fell very ill and had to take some time off from my duties. During that time I read to take my mind off the illness and came upon an article about the island of Molokai.
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The Healing Power of Love
Posted on Feb 27, 2006 at 04:04 AM by Roy Henshaw
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There is only one pure emotion. That is love. All other emotions are an expression of love or of fear of losing love.
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It Was A Very Happy Household
Posted on Feb 18, 2006 at 04:21 PM by Roy Henshaw
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It was a very happy household. There was Leopold, a fine musician, who was the Vice-master of Bishop's Chapel in Salzburg, Austria. There was his adoring wife and his young daughter Marianne and then there was his son little Wolfgang, a child not quite four years old. Marianne was learning to play the harpsichord, and day after day the hand-some Leopold stood behind her as she practiced in the drawing-room upstairs.
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Religious Healing in First-Century Christianity
Posted on Feb 9, 2006 at 07:49 AM by Roy Henshaw
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The acts of miraculous healing by Jesus and his disciples form a major theme in the development of early Christianity. In particular, these New Testament accounts frequently portrayed healing as the casting out of evil spirits from possessed individuals. In so doing early Christianity established a model of behaviour for both sufferer and religious healer that would continue to modern times.
What were the first-century contexts and possible sources for the emergence of early Christian healing? Masses of individuals believing themselves possessed by unclean or evil spirits sought the help of Jesus and his disciples. How can we understand this historical portrayal, its literary and behavioural reality? Does it bear a correspondence to our modern formulation of crowd behaviour and possession?
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Brother Mandus 9 January 1907 – 8 March 1988
Posted on Feb 9, 2006 at 04:10 AM by Roy Henshaw
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Brother Mandus was born in an English seaport - Hartlepool in 1907, son of a water clerk for a ship's chandler. An average mischievous youngster in school, he and a companion, in celebration of Guy Fawkes Day and the Gunpowder Plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament, had made gunpowder with chemicals bought with their pooled resources, constructed bombs of ink bottles filled with the powder, and nearly succeeded in blowing up the house and neighbourhood. Naturally they received a sound thrashing.
As an aftermath of this experience, he says, standing one day before a mirror in a gilt frame, somehow he knew that "there was only eternal life and endless security." He says he felt so strongly that he would live forever that he took a nail and scratched on the bottom of the frame, "I will live forever."
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Healing in First-Century Christianity
Posted on Jan 11, 2006 at 04:11 PM by Roy Henshaw
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The acts of miraculous healing by Jesus and his disciples form a major theme in the development of early Christianity.
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God and Extraterrestrial Civilizations
Posted on Jan 2, 2006 at 04:45 PM by Roy Henshaw
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I believe within this decade that the leaders and followers of all faiths on this planet will need to begin contemplating a future which includes the existence of extraterrestrial life forms. When this happens, all our beliefs may be brought into question in the early stages of inter-planetary relations.
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For He Who Casts the First Stone.
Posted on Dec 30, 2005 at 01:43 PM by Roy Henshaw
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We have all heard or read the story about the woman being accused of committing adultery being brought before Jesus by the scribes and Pharisees and that they had insisted that under the Law of Moses, she should be condemned to death by stoning.
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The Praying Hands
Posted on Dec 19, 2005 at 04:34 PM by Roy Henshaw
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I was inspired to write this story when I received one day, a sculpture of the “Praying Hands” that had been made by my dear friend Alfred.
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Testimony To Answered Prayer
Posted on Dec 11, 2005 at 03:00 PM by Roy Henshaw
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I am an international minister and registered healer and I communicate daily with all my friends around the world. I believe in a hands on approach to Religion.
Recently I received the following testimony via email from a lady who lives in America. I was so moved by her demonstration of courage that I asked her permission to publish both her email to me and my response to her, so that it may help others who find themselves in a similar heartrending situation.
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The Spirit Of Christmas
Posted on Dec 1, 2005 at 04:42 PM by Roy Henshaw
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Today is the 1st December and soon it will be that most important date in our calendar ‘Christmas,’ when people from all around the world will celebrate the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ. There is a surprising freshness about Christmas, it comes round once every year and yet it always brings with it a quality of magic.
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Christmas Scrapbooks
Posted on Nov 30, 2005 at 07:48 AM by Pamela M. Darbonne
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Though I am not a scrapbooker who has every photo in an album, I can say with great joy that I have faithfully kept up with all my Christmas photos each year. I have one album dedicated solely to Christmas, and I make a point to develop and scrapbook those photos before the lights dim and sun sets on January 31. How do you do this? By careful planning and organizing of your products and photos.
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Who Cares For the Carer
Posted on Nov 25, 2005 at 03:04 PM by Roy Henshaw
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When I was a freelance nurse, I would often notice that a patient would be receiving all the professional care whilst their carer who was also suffering all the emotional pain and a feeling of helplessness was ignored.
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It's Not Too Late to Leave a Legacy
Posted on Nov 13, 2005 at 09:32 AM by Pamela M. Darbonne
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The days to Christmas are slipping away, and yet there is plenty of time left to make gifts that will last a lifetime. It takes a little planning and intentional time set aside, but the gratitude and exclaims of joy over your gift of lasting memories far surpasses any time invested.
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Sprinter or Marathoner
Posted on Oct 7, 2005 at 08:38 AM by Pamela M. Darbonne
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I've been scrapbooking for about seven years, and in that time I've found myself flucuating between wanting to sprint through the process and be finished, or to train myself for the long-term marathon of leaving a lasting legacy in words and pictures for my family.
To say the world of scrapbooking has exploded in the past five years is to say a hurricane drops a "little" rain and wind. Part of my inner struggle with the "art" of scrapbooking is the plethora of embellishments available for potential artists.
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