Jumat, 31 Desember 2010

[M978.Ebook] PDF Download The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton

PDF Download The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton

Make use of the innovative technology that human develops this day to discover the book The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton conveniently. But first, we will ask you, just how much do you enjoy to check out a book The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton Does it consistently till surface? For what does that book check out? Well, if you truly enjoy reading, aim to read the The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton as one of your reading compilation. If you just read the book based upon requirement at the time and also unfinished, you need to aim to such as reading The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton first.

The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton

The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton



The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton

PDF Download The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton

The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton. Delighted reading! This is just what we intend to say to you which love reading so much. Exactly what about you that assert that reading are only obligation? Don't bother, checking out practice should be begun with some specific factors. One of them is reading by obligation. As just what we intend to offer below, the publication entitled The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton is not type of required e-book. You can enjoy this book The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton to check out.

If you ally need such a referred The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton publication that will certainly offer you value, obtain the very best vendor from us currently from numerous preferred authors. If you intend to entertaining books, numerous books, tale, jokes, and more fictions compilations are additionally launched, from best seller to one of the most current released. You could not be puzzled to take pleasure in all book collections The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton that we will provide. It is not about the costs. It has to do with what you require now. This The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton, as one of the very best sellers here will be one of the right options to check out.

Discovering the right The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton book as the right necessity is kind of lucks to have. To start your day or to end your day at night, this The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton will certainly be proper enough. You can merely hunt for the floor tile here and also you will certainly get guide The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton referred. It will not trouble you to reduce your valuable time to opt for purchasing book in store. By doing this, you will also invest money to spend for transport and also other time spent.

By downloading the on the internet The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton publication right here, you will certainly get some benefits not to opt for the book store. Just hook up to the net as well as start to download and install the page web link we share. Now, your The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton is ready to appreciate reading. This is your time and also your serenity to obtain all that you desire from this book The Last Prophet, By Jeff W Horton

The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton

Would you believe it if someone told you that you were one of the last two prophets mentioned in the book of Revelation? It is the End of Days. The power of the Antichrist and his grip on humanity grows stronger with each passing day, enabling him to deceive the world and entice humanity into joining him in his corruption, and in his eternal punishment. With the help of the False Prophet, the Beast persuades many to fall down and worship him, also forcing them to take his mark. When someone tells John March that he has been chosen by God to become the last of the two prophets mentioned in the book of Revelation, he doesn’t believe it. After a visitation by an angel followed by a miraculous sign however, he becomes convinced that it is true and decides to embrace his calling, despite learning that doing so will lead to his untimely death. March begins his mission by proclaiming God's message: that the End of Days is at hand, to beware the growing power and influence of the Beast, and to know that the Second Coming of Jesus Christ is imminent. Supernatural disasters, including a worldwide drought, rivers of blood, massive earthquakes, and a devastating asteroid, testify that the end of the world is at hand. Join John March on his journey to becoming, The Last Prophet.

  • Sales Rank: #4184169 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: World Castle Publishing
  • Published on: 2011-07-22
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .74" w x 6.00" l, .96 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 296 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Review
FIVE STAR RATING
"This book reminded me a bit of the Left Behind Series. I was quickly caught up in the tale... The plot is well developed and interesting. The characters are believable. I very much enjoyed this book and highly recommend it to others."�
Reviewed by Lynn F. for Readers Favorite

"..."The Last Prophet" tells the story of John March as he discovers his duty as one of the prophets of the book of Revelation, to stand against the Anti-Christ...he must stand for faith in a time where people will have none. "The Last Prophet" is a riveting religious thriller, highly recommended."� Midwest Book Review

About the Author
Jeff Horton was born in North Dakota, the youngest son of a career Air Force Master sergeant, where he spent the first four years of his life before moving to North Carolina. A somewhat voracious reader growing up, he read everything from comic books to The Bible, including stories by many popular authors such as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, H. G. Wells, Jules Verne, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Michael Crichton, Tom Clancy, C. S. Lewis, and J. R. R. Tolkien. Jeff Horton's novel, The Great Collapse, a story about the coming of the pulse and the end of civilization, was published in 2010. He is a member of the North Carolina Writers Network. When he's not penning his next novel, he enjoys reading, going to church, and spending time with his family.

Most helpful customer reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
Enjoyable Concept
By Deborah Silva Alvarado
Plotted closely on the lines of Biblical apocalyptic narrative, The Last Prophet takes the reader on an imagined "what if" - what if an otherwise ordinary American man found himself playing a lead role in end times events as one of the two "witnesses" mentioned in the Revelation? This is unapologetically religious literature that quotes heavily from these high drama scriptures, and has enough minor characters finding salvation through Christian belief to make it suitable for a tract. One feels at times that's what the story's purpose is - to use the horrors of the ends times to persuade readers to get serious about God. Nothing wrong with that, certainly; but let's be clear about it.

As such, it does a good job of getting its point across in an entertaining adventure story. Abe Addon, the U.S. president who is actually a demon taken on human form as the "False Prophet" to serve his master, Satan, i.e. "the Beast", makes a believable, though quite conventional, lackey of old Horny. The "last prophet", Jonathan Elijah March (surprisingly enough a Gentile), knows quite well, along with his co-witness, Moe Princeton, and various angels that appear, that he and Moe must die three and half years into the seven-year period known as the Tribulation. These deaths are to be a publicly celebrated and world-viewed event in Jerusalem, after which, both he and Moe are to be brought back to life. John March's battles with the demon masquerading as the U.S. president take him through the gambit of action hero suffering: his son Samuel is kidnapped, causing his wife, Lara, to worry frantically as any mother would. He is followed; he is hated; he is threatened with bodily harm by Abe Addon's devotees. He continually faces the moral decision - will he sacrifice himself to his mission even though it will cause his little family to suffer?

As one who grew up studying the Bible, I'm usually put off by Hollywood drama that is supposed to be based on Bible stories but makes free use of poetic license to add a little more of a human-interest twist here, more of a love story there - adding tinsel town glitz to a drama that was already far above the average just the way it was. That Hollywood arrogance always seemed to me a corruption of the greatest literature of the world, to say nothing of the affront to sacred scripture. The Last Prophet never crosses that line for me, though Mr. Horton does add one bow to the drama preferences of the modern reader - Abe Addon takes a fancy to John Elijah's girlfriend, Lara, attempting to corrupt her "just because she is such a pure spirit", as fallen angels are so very prone to delight in doing. This causes our hero a type of romantic stress that I don't believe was in the original script.

I am a bit amused by the fact that the modern day incarnation of the prophet Eliyahu (Elijah), for whom Jews everywhere leave an extra cup out at the Passover Seder every year because of his soon expected arrival to herald the coming of the Moshiach (Messiah), is a card-carrying American Christian Gentile in this story. In addition, his co-witness, Moe Princeton, another American Gentile, is the modern day incarnation of Moshe (Moses). Add to this the American False prophet, and you get quite an Americo-centric telling of this well-known Biblical drama. I'd always figured the Anti-Christ/False Prophet would come from the EU, myself; more specifically from Germany (the one horn rising up amongst the ten horns), given that nation's history with the Jews. But I say amused, rather than offended, because...well...Americans do tend to think they should always get the lead role on the world stage. And in the same way that the blonde-haired, blue-eyed Christ has replaced the dark-skinned Semitic gentleman who roamed Roman-era Israel with his very Jewish disciples, such transformations are so obviously culturally biased they are almost high camp.

All in all, I enjoyed the book. It was fast-paced and looked at an old story from a new premise. I would definitely recommend it.

13 of 15 people found the following review helpful.
AS ORIGINAL AND GRIPPING A NOVEL AS ONE IS LIKELY TO READ
By Richard S. Friedman
Would you believe it if someone told you that you were one of the last two prophets mentioned in the book of Revelation?
It is the End of Days. The power of the Antichrist and his grip on humanity grows stronger with each passing day, enabling him to deceive the world and entice humanity into joining him in his corruption, and in his eternal punishment.

WHAT A PLOT!!

Another winner from the brilliant Jeff Horton- plot, characters and locales so finely rendered- this is not simply a book to read- but to experience!
Kudos to Mr. Horton for creating such an original novel- very highly recommended

A JAMES MASON COMMUNITY BOOK CLUB MUST READ

RICK FRIEDMAN
FOUNDER
THE JAMES MASON COMMUNITY BOOK CLUB

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Never Thought I would Like a Book as This
By June Ahern
I surprised myself by choosing to read this book, thinking it was only for bible kind of people - no not so! It has a strong message for many while entertaining the reader.

Jonah (Jon) Elijah March is born to ordinary parents in an ordinary town in the United States. But he is no ordinary child. He is one of the last of two prophets mentioned in the Bible's Book of Revelations.

He has dreams that in time prove to manifest as actual events that become stronger when he is a teen. When his earlier visions, like the one about Lara--literally a girl of his dreams--being involved in an accident does not manifest as he envisioned, Jon thinks he is wrong. In time he realizes that his vision have merit and are not wrong, only he has not been patient or trusting enough to see them to fruition. In time Jon and Lara marry.

Another tells Jon he is slated for great things because of his visions and that God has chosen him to be a prophet but he doesn't believe it. And then an angel appears to him and follows it up with a miraculous sign. It is then that he accepts his fate. Along with his acceptance comes an ominous message--with the glory comes imminent death.

Jon is not alone in this journey. There are people who see him for what his purpose is to be, such people as the kind Pastor Weathersby who guides Jon to understand his gift and later he meets the Pope along with other spiritual world leaders who believe in his prophesies.

As Jon begins his mission by proclaiming God's message spreading the news that "The End of Days is at hand," the reader can find comfort in what Horton reminds us, "The world is a very transient place..." And warns people that the Beast (the Bible Beast who's not a very nice chap) is gaining power and influencing those weakened by their greediness and materialistic needs to where they "worship him" --the Beast --thus forsaking all reason and goodness (God). Sounds familiar. I believe there's a lot of that going on now, don't you? Jon then reassures all that will listen that "Jesus Christ will once again come to enlighten (or save) them." The Beast is in the image of a charismatic politician, Abe Addon who scams the people into trusting him and his false promises. All the while his only purpose is to control and dominate mankind. We have here what all good stories have--a good protagonist and a good bad antagonist and Abe Addon is a really bad guy with a winning smile.

Jon, Lara and their son Samuel travel to Israel as the end comes closer. In time Jon meets the other prophet Moe Princeton. I liked this character. There was something very earthly about him. Jon at times seemed so intense, even in his loving and insightful ways. On the other hand Moe is more of a regular kind of guy. Both have visions and messages for humankind, who per the usual, aren't listening.

Horton tells his readers that "Life is a only a brief stop on the road to eternity." And I find that reassuring while reading about the worldwide disasters spreading--drought, floods massive earthquakes, and finally, a devastating asteroid alerting us that the end of the world is at hand.

I'm not crazy for "Hey, guys! You screwed up big time and now it's a done deal," kind of books, but the journey with Jon is an interesting one. I had to agree that the world is in a very precarious position and too many leaders (corporations) have sold out the health of our planet and the welfare of the people for their greed and power ego. All in all, if you want to acquaint yourself with the Bible prophecies and/or be aware that life is fragile and fleeting, this book could be of interest to you.

See all 10 customer reviews...

The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton PDF
The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton EPub
The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton Doc
The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton iBooks
The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton rtf
The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton Mobipocket
The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton Kindle

The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton PDF

The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton PDF

The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton PDF
The Last Prophet, by Jeff W Horton PDF

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar