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Today on the show: Allison Pecorin from ABC News on the vote for Senate Majority Leader. CBS News Radio Military Analyst Col. Jeff McCausland breaks down Trump's pick for Sec. of Defense. Bloomberg's Bill Allison updates the new Department of Government Efficiency. Sophia Choi from WSB-TV joins us live. Plus, Correspondent Rory O'Neill on the House Oversight Committee holding a hearing on government suppression of UFO data! 9am-noon on 95.5 WSB.
Today on the show: Allison Pecorin from ABC News on the vote for Senate Majority Leader. CBS News Radio Military Analyst Col. Jeff McCausland breaks down Trump's pick for Sec. of Defense. Bloomberg's Bill Allison updates the new Department of Government Efficiency. Sophia Choi from WSB-TV joins us live. Plus, Correspondent Rory O'Neill on the House Oversight Committee holding a hearing on government suppression of UFO data! 9am-noon on 95.5 WSB.
Today on the show: Allison Pecorin from ABC News on the vote for Senate Majority Leader. CBS News Radio Military Analyst Col. Jeff McCausland breaks down Trump's pick for Sec. of Defense. Bloomberg's Bill Allison updates the new Department of Government Efficiency. Sophia Choi from WSB-TV joins us live. Plus, Correspondent Rory O'Neill on the House Oversight Committee holding a hearing on government suppression of UFO data! 9am-noon on 95.5 WSB.
Today on the show: The latest on the Biolab plume with Christina Edwards. #HeleneRecovery update from ABC News reporter Jim Ryan. Bill Allison from Bloomberg News on #Campaign2024. Monitoring the Mid East. Talking tech with Kim Komando. Plus, we'll chat with Kumail Nanjiani! 9am-noon on 95.5 WSB.
Today on the show: the latest on the future of the Biden campaign. Team coverage from Molly Nagle and Nathaniel Rakish from ABC News. Bloomberg reporter Bill Allison on Trump's election war chest. Atlanta Blight Tax??? Plus, comedian Joe Pera joins us live! 9am-noon on 95.5 WSB.
Brent, Nate, and Kate get hit in the back of the head with the epic crime film Casino (1995) directed by Martin Scorsese and starring: Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, Joe Pesci, Don Rickles, Alan King, Kevin Pollak, L.Q. Jones, Dick Smothers, Frank Vincent, John Bloom, Pasquale Cajano, Melissa Prophet, Bill Allison, and Vinny Vella. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Bill Allison, Bloomberg Campaign Finance Reporter, discusses how Donald Trump will likely drain his war chest for legal fees this summer. Caroline Grace Brothers, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, discusses an upcoming Supreme Court oral arguments in a case over accountability for a retaliatory arrest. June Grasso hosts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bill Allison, Bloomberg Campaign Finance Reporter, discusses how Donald Trump will likely drain his war chest for legal fees this summer. Caroline Grace Brothers, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, discusses an upcoming Supreme Court oral arguments in a case over accountability for a retaliatory arrest. June Grasso hosts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today on the show: Beer available next season at Sanford Stadium! Fani not stepping down. Updating Mid-East unrest. Bloomberg reporter Bill Allison on former President Trump's rising legal bills. Anti-Semitism legislation passes in Georgia. Plus, the rising cost of child care. 9am-noon on 95.5 WSB.
Evangelical Free Church of Canton
Military Historians are People, Too! A Podcast with Brian & Bill
As we prepare to kick off Season 4, by popular demand and return of the favor today Brian interviews Bill! Bill Allison is Professor of History and former chair of the Department of History at Georgia Southern University. He started his academic career as an assistant professor at the University of St. Francis (Indiana) and then spent several years at Weber State University. Bill earned a BA and MA in History at East Texas State University and took his PhD at Bowling Green State University, where he started as a diplomatic historian before embracing military history. He has done several stints in professional military education, first as a Visiting Professor in the Department of Strategy and International Security at the USAF Air War Colle,ge followed by a Distinguished Professorship in Military History at the USAF School for Advanced Air and Space Studies. From 2012-2014, he was General Harold K. Johnson Visiting Chair in Military History at the US Army War College. Bill is the author of several books, including My Lai: An American Atrocity in the Vietnam War (Johns Hopkins), Military Justice in Vietnam: The Rule of Law in an American War (University Press of Kansas), and The Gulf War, 1990-1991 (Palgrave). His first book, American Diplomats in Russia: Case Studies in Orphan Diplomacy, 1916-1919 (Praeger) was published in 1997. He is co-author with Janet Valentine and the late Jeffrey Grey of American Military History: A Survey from Colonial Times to the Present (Routledge), which is now in its third edition. Bill's professional service is a sign of his dedication to our profession. He is a former Trustee and Vice-President of the Society for Military History and was awarded the Society's Edwin Simmons Award for Distinguished Service in 2019. He has served on the editorial board of the Journal of Military History and is series editor for Routledge's Critical Moments in American History Series and Modern War Studies at the University Press of Kansas. In 2014, he was awarded the Department of the Army's Meritorious Public Service Medal. In June 2023, Bill served as the Program Director at the Society for Military History Summer Seminar in Military History, held at the National WWII Museum in New Orleans, and he is a current member of the Department of the Army's Historical Advisory Subcommittee. Join us for a fun and interesting chat with one of the co-hosts of Military Historians are People, Too! We'll talk growing up in East Texas, Vietnam, music, guitars, blocked algebra memories, reinventing yourself, and Rudy's BBQ in Texas! Rec.: 08/18/2023
Earlier this year I attended to annual Society for Military History academic conference in San Diego. I was invited to participate in a panel on podcasting, aptly named Making Airwaves. Fellow podcaster Philip Shackelford not only organized the panel, but recorded the discussion live - which I am releasing today. My sincerest gratitude goes to Philip who has his own show, The Modern Scholar Podcast, as well as Bill Allison from Military Historians are People Too, Kelly DeVries with Bow and Blade, and Ron Granieri with the War Room for welcoming me and being some of the best co-panelists a girl could ask for. If you want to learn more about their shows, head over to the website at www.civicsandcoffee.com or look them up wherever you get your podcasts. Support the show
Amy Glaser, Senior VP at Adecco, joins the program to discuss the labor market and jobs day. Jonathan Hirtle, Executive Chairman at Hirtle Callghan & Co., joins us in studio to talk market reaction to the latest Fed rate hike and jobs day. Michael Sonnenfeldt, founder and chairman at TIGER 21, joins the program to preview Berkshire this weekend, discuss investing for the ultra-wealthy and gives his market and economic outlook. David Papadopoulos, Managing Editor with Bloomberg News, joins to preview the Kentucky Derby. Bill Allison, corporate finance reporter with Bloomberg News, discusses a potential move to strip Warren Buffett of his Chair at Berkshire Hathaway. Brian Egger, Senior Gaming & Lodging Analyst, joins the show to discuss gaming, cruises, and hotels and some of the company's he's been researching. Hosted by Paul Sweeney and Matt Miller.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In March 2023, the Society for Military History held its annual meeting in San Diego. During the conference, Phil Shackleford, librarian, military historian and host of The Modern Scholar Podcast, moderated a roundtable titled Making Airwaves – The Profession of History and the World of Podcasting. Phil was kind enough to share the live recording of the roundtable and we want to share it with you, our listeners. The panel included the hosts of multiple podcast hosts in the military history sphere: Bill Allison, Georgia Southern University, Co-Host, Military Historians are People, Too! https://www.mhptpodcast.com/ Alycia Asai, Sonoma State University, Host, Civics & Coffee https://www.civicsandcoffee.com/ Kelly DeVries, Loyola University Maryland, Co-Host, Bow and Blade https://bowandblade.libsyn.com/website Ron Granieri, Army War College, Host, A Better Peace: The War Room Podcast https://warroom.armywarcollege.edu/category/podcasts/ Philip C. Shackelford, South Arkansas Community College, Host, The Modern Scholar Podcast https://modernscholarpodcast.com/ Be sure to check out the fascinating podcasts from the other panel participants. *This episode was recorded live during a conference session, so please excuse any irregularities in audio quality. It originally aired on The Modern Scholar Podcast on 1 April 2023.
In March 2023, the Society for Military History held its annual meeting in San Diego. During the conference, Phil Shackleford, librarian, military historian and host of The Modern Scholar Podcast, moderated a roundtable titled Making Airwaves – The Profession of History and the World of Podcasting. Phil was kind enough to share the live recording of the roundtable and we want to share it with you, our listeners. The panel included the hosts of multiple podcast hosts in the military history sphere: Bill Allison, Georgia Southern University, Co-Host, Military Historians are People, Too! https://www.mhptpodcast.com/ Alycia Asai, Sonoma State University, Host, Civics & Coffee https://www.civicsandcoffee.com/ Kelly DeVries, Loyola University Maryland, Co-Host, Bow and Blade https://bowandblade.libsyn.com/website Ron Granieri, Army War College, Host, A Better Peace: The War Room Podcast https://warroom.armywarcollege.edu/category/podcasts/ Philip C. Shackelford, South Arkansas Community College, Host, The Modern Scholar Podcast https://modernscholarpodcast.com/ Be sure to check out the fascinating podcasts from the other panel participants. *This episode was recorded live during a conference session, so please excuse any irregularities in audio quality. It originally aired on The Modern Scholar Podcast on 1 April 2023.
In this episode of Bridge Radio we are joined by Bill Allison, executive director of Cadre Missionaries, to discuss his book The Disciplemaking Genius of Jesus. In this podcast, Bill and Abe talk about what discipling should look like in our lives and some of the common mistakes and misconceptions concerning disciplemaking.
The Year of 2022 was supposed to be one of crypto regulation. Multiple CEOs, venture capitalists and trade groups for the industry globally had hired lawyers and lobbyists and prepared policy papers and blog posts. Over and over, they said the refrain: “we're hoping for regulatory clarity.”In the US, the Biden administration announced an Executive Order, [Ensuring Responsible Development of Digital Assets] calling for a national policy on digital assets. It required federal agencies to get their digital asset policies in order, but it lacked either teeth or specifics. Individual US lawmakers across the political spectrum proposed their own bills on crypto asset regulation, some of which competed with or even contradicted each other. Against this backdrop, things were going poorly for investors and the industry. Token prices plunged in value. One buzzy crypto company after another filed for bankruptcy - including FTX, which had sought to position itself as exceptional in every way. It's now-former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried has since been arrested and is facing allegations of fraud and other crimes. So: will 2023 be the year that crypto gets regulated? Bloomberg reporters Allyson Versprille and Bill Allison join to sort out where we are with regulation, and look ahead to what we're likely to see in 2023.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The interplay of money and politics in the US is real, and well established. And that includes when that money is either in the form of crypto, or comes from people who made their fortunes in digital assets. The recently concluded US Midterm Elections featured several candidates - including winning ones - whose campaigns were financed in part by crypto-related donors and donations. Among those donors: Sam Bankman-Fried and Ryan Salame of FTX, who supported candidates on opposite ends of the political spectrum. The collapse of FTX has led to some politicians and lawmakers who received from these donations now attempting to distance themselves entirely from their benefactors. For more on the state of crypto money and politics in the US, Bloomberg reporters Bill Allison and Allyson Versprille join this episode. Subscribe to the Bloomberg Crypto Newsletter at https://bloom.bg/cryptonewsletter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Heather welcomes back fellow Bears fan, Bill Allison to the First-Century Youth Ministry podcast. On this episode, Bill and Heather have a practical conversation about how you can start applying some Jesus's secret sauce methods of friendship discipleship to your ministry. To connect with Bill, buy his book or support his ministry go to www.cadremissionaries.orgJoin us at www.firstcenturyyouthministry.com
Bill Allison, founder and director of Cadre Missionaries joins Heather for a super practical, simple and applicable conversation about the disciple-making friendships of Jesus. Listen in because Bill drops so many good truths here that will challenge and inspire you in your faith journey as you love teens for the glory of God. These methods are deeply rooted in the first century way of life that produced our Messiah Jesus. To buy Bill's book or donate to his ministry go to, https://www.cadremissionaries.comJoin us for a FREE Zoom Roundtable Q and A with James Whitman on Maleness and Femaleness in the Hebrew Bible on Nov. 8th at 8 PM CST.
Wealthy crypto investors are dumping a bunch of money into US politics, especially ahead of November's congressional elections. Over the past 15 or so months, crypto-affiliated donors have sent roughly $70 million to political causes - topping what traditional players like defense and big pharma are spending. One of the most prolific donors in the space is Sam Bankman-Fried, the billionaire co-founder of FTX. Bankman-Fried has said that he could spend up to $1 billion on the 2024 presidential election. Zach Cohen from Bloomberg Government and Bloomberg campaign finance reporter Bill Allison join this episode to discuss how crypto is shaping the political landscape.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The post “The Life God Has Always Wanted You to Have” – Bill Allison appeared first on Grace Baptist Church | Pekin, IL.
K.A. Owens interviews retired attorney and former Louisville, KY Board Of Aldermen member Bill Allison. Topic: Bill has organized an annual tribute in Paris , KY, to African American Trumpet player Bill Coleman (born and raised in Paris, KY). Bill Allison's original hometown is Paris, KY. Recorded Thursday July 21, 2022.
Welcome to the Modern Scholar podcast! I'm glad you're here, and thank you for joining me today! Why was I inspired to create this series? Listen on and find out! My guests today are Dr. Bill Allison and Dr. Brian Feltman, both from Georgia Southern University, and co-hosts of the wonderful podcast, Military Historians Are People, Too! Dr. Bill Allison is a scholar of American military history, specifically the Vietnam War. He is a Professor of History at Georgia Southern University, joining the faculty there as Chair of the Department of History in 2008. After earning a BA and MA in History at East Texas State University in 1989 and 1991, he completed his Ph.D. in history at Bowling Green State University in 1995. He then taught at the University of Saint Francis (Indiana) before joining the History Department at Weber State University from 1999-2008. During the 2002-2003 academic year, he was Visiting Professor in the Department Strategy and International Security at the USAF Air War College and later served as Distinguished Professor of Military History at the USAF School for Advanced Air and Space Studies from 2010-2011. He also served two years as the General Harold K. Johnson Visiting Chair in Military History at the US Army War College (2012-2014). He is a former Trustee and Vice-President of the Society for Military History and has served on the editorial board of the Journal of Military History as well as editor for Routledge's Critical Moments in American History series. He has also served on the Department of the Army Historical Advisory Committee and was awarded the Army's Outstanding Civilian Service Medal in 2014. Since 2019, he is the series editor for the Modern War Studies series at the University Press of Kansas. His numerous books include The Gulf War, 1990-1991 from Palgrave MacMillan, My Lai: An American Atrocity in the Vietnam War from Johns Hopkins, and Military Justice in Vietnam: The Rule of Law in an American War from Kansas. Dr. Brian Feltman is an Associate Professor of History and Assistant Chair of the Department of History at Georgia Southern University, where he joined the faculty in 2012. He completed his BA and MA at Clemson University and his PhD at the Ohio State University. As a specialist in Modern Germany, Dr. Feltman completed a post-doctorate fellowship at the University of Cologne in Germany, and has received multiple research grants from German institutions. His first book, The Stigma of Surrender: German Prisoners, British Captors, and Manhood in the Great War and Beyond from the University of North Carolina Press received the Edward M. Coffman Dissertation Prize from the Society for Military History, which is awarded annually to recognize the best dissertation in military history. Dr. Feltman has since served on the Coffman Prize Committee. Additional works include chapters in edited volumes – most recently a contribution to Useful Captives: The Role of POWs in American Military Conflicts from Kansas, edited by Daniel Krebs and Lorien Foote, as well as Finding Common Ground: New Directions in First World War Studies from Brill in 2010 and edited by Michael Neiberg and Jennifer Keene.
Message from Bill Allison on January 2, 2022
Aaron talks with Bill Allison of Allison Ramsey Architect about what urbanists have to learn from third world slums, his long running relationship with Habitat for Humanity, and how builders and developers use his massive stock plan catalogue of traditional architecture to create better places.
S2 EP.17 – Bill Allison is the Executive Director of Cadre Ministries—a ministry whose obsession is to encourage and equip people to love God, love people, and make disciplemakers. You will find out from the get-go that Bill is extremely passionate about the disciplemaking genius of Jesus. He loves good coffee, Apple computers, motorcycles, chocolate, learning, volunteers, the Church, Gibson Les Paul guitars, the blues, Motown, the Bears, the Cubs, laughing at himself, training, coaching, mentoring, equipping, encouraging, and being a husband and father to his 7 kids. Grab your favorite drink and buckle up for this high-energy episode of Revival Town Podcast.
Bill Allison is serious about answering the question, “What does a first century Jesus-like disciple making way of life look like in a 21st century western world?” In this conversation, Bill, Terry and Alan explore how the complexity of modern ministry may help us add attenders while at the same time keep us from multiplying disciples. Bill challenges us to consider that our desire to be efficient in ministry might be making us less effective in making disciples.
In this episode we sit down with our long time disciple making friend, Bill Allison, to talk about what discipleship looks like at home with our families!Resources:What Does It Look Like to Follow Jesus Together as a Family… http://bit.ly/2kKhZNMThe Disciplemaking Dad… http://bit.ly/KnTHS7Just for Fun: A Parenting Strategy NOT Endorsed by Focus on the Family… http://bit.ly/14Zg8WSBill Allison's Blog: www.CupOJoewithBill.comCadre Missionaries: www.CadreMissionaries.comBill's book: The Disciplemaking Genius of Jesus… http://bit.ly/2BfV6Jg
The authors of a new book - Humanocracy - suggest that actually there's no such thing as a 'Low Skilled' job. What these jobs really are is 'Low Opportunity' jobs. The organisational structure has effectively dumbed down these jobs and as a result they often become the monotonous, mind-numbing roles that we refer to as Low Skilled. But if we instead give the workers in these roles more freedom and autonomy to make decisions and solve problems, we will probably find out that these people are not Low Capability employees. Here's the link to the book - https://bit.ly/3nM1jmh NB: Thanks to Bill Allison for the inspiration. #futureofwork #employeeengagement #employeeempowerment
Bill Allison, Executive Director of Cadre Missionaries shares stories about a barmaid missionary, the Church of Goofy Ridge, and pearls of wisdom about how any follower of Jesus Christ can help people grow in their faith. Co-hosts Dan Hennenfent and Shari Tvrdik of Cup of Cold Water Ministries engage Bill in the art of discipleship.
January 5th, 2020 - Epiphany - Matthew 2:1-12 - Bill Allison by Saratoga Federated Church
December 29th, 2019 - Putting Away Christmas - Mark 8:27 - Bill Allison by Saratoga Federated Church
May 26th, 2019 - Taking Communion Seriously - I Corinthians 11:20-26 - Bill Allison by Saratoga Federated Church
November 4th, 2018 - The Outsider - Mark 10 - Bill Allison by Saratoga Federated Church
Bill Allison of Cadre Missionaries and Derrick Smothers of The E3 Connection have reunited once again to tour churches with seminars on discipleship. Stopping in at our Key Radio studio, they explain to us just what it means to make disciples. Great stuff!
George Schultze, head of Schultze Asset Management, discusses the distressed equities and debt markets, and outlook for Tesla. Larry Noble, Senior Director and General Counsel for the Campaign Legal Center, and Bill Allison, campaign finance reporter for Bloomberg, on the gray area of backdoor lobbying to Trump by AT&T, Novartis, and others. Hugh Bromley, Solar market analyst for Bloomberg New Energy Finance, on California requiring solar panels be installed on all new homes starting in 2020. Toby Harshaw, Bloomberg Opinion columnist, discusses the situation in Iran, the military escalation in Israel, and the Korea summit.
Bio Dr. Desmond Upton Patton (@SAFELab) is an assistant professor at the Columbia School of Social Work and a Faculty Affiliate of the Social Intervention Group (SIG) and the Data Science Institute. His research utilizes qualitative and computational data collection methods to examine how and why youth and gang violence, trauma, grief and identity are expressed on social media and the real world impact they have on well-being for low-income youth of color. His current research projects examine: How gang involved youth conceptualize threats on social media The extent to which social media shapes and facilitates youth and gang violence Developing an online tool for detecting aggression in social media posts in partnership with the Data Science Institute at Columbia. Dr. Patton's research on Internet Banging has been discussed on several media outlets, including the Chicago Tribune, USA Today, NPR, Boston Magazine, ABC News, and Vice; it was most recently cited in an Amici Curae Brief submitted to the United States Supreme Court in the Elonis v. United States case which examined the issues of interpreting threats on social media. Before coming to Columbia in July of 2015, Dr. Patton was an assistant professor at the University of Michigan School of Social Work and School of Information. He received a BA in Anthropology and Political Science, with honors, from the University of North Carolina- Greensboro, an MSW from the University of Michigan School of Social Work, and a PhD in Social Service Administration from the University of Chicago. Resources SAFELab at Columbia University's School of Social Work The Last Black Unicorn by Tiffany Haddish News Roundup Mueller indicts 13 Russians in '16 election hacking You have undoubtedly heard by now about FBI special counsel Robert S. Mueller III's indictment of 13 Russians who allegedly maintained a vast network of content creators in order to sway the 2016 election in favor of Donald Trump. The defendants used social media by amplifying primarily mainstream news content, according to a new Columbia University study. The network stole Americans' identities, and created fake social media profiles to spread divisive content that favored Donald Trump. But the hacking began in 2014, prior to president Trump's announcement that he would be running for president. The defendants even promoted content that favored Bernie Sanders' primary campaign against Hillary Clinton. So the Trump administration is using this to try to illustrate that the Russians' primary effort was to subvert our entire political system, rather than support Donald Trump's election, specifically. Trump's opponents argue that Russian conspirators saw the seating of Donald Trump as President as a no-brainer, given his susceptibility to blackmail because of his alleged hiring of prostitutes in 2013 in Moscow and his real estate deals with Russians. Sharon Lafraniere and Matt Apuzzo report for the New York Times. Craig Timberg reports for the Washington Post. But you can find coverage everywhere. Meanwhile, Trump's Director of National Intelligence warns that there is “no doubt” that Russians are planning to hack this year's midterm elections. The consensus is that we're not prepared for that. In fact, the website Hamilton 68, reported that Russian bots flooded Twitter with pro-gun messaging following Wednesday's school shooting in Parkland Florida that left 17 dead. FCC is investigating its own Chairman Pai Cecilia Kang at the New York Times reported last week that the FCC's Inspector General is investigating FCC Chairman Ajit Pai for illegally paving the way for Sinclair Broadcasting. Pai led the agency in several efforts that, appearing to some, seemed timed to Sinclair's proposed $3.9 billion acquisition of Tribune Media, including the relaxation of the media ownership cap and newspaper broadcast cross-ownership rules. Amazon boosts lobbying spending Spencer Soper, Naomi Nix, Ben Brody and Bill Allison report for Bloomberg that Amazon has significantly increased its lobbying spending in Washington. A number of policy issues have taken center-stage for the company, as Amazon seeks to expand into different areas, including healthcare. The company's lobbying spending has grown by over 400% since 2012, according to Bloomberg. You can find the full report there. Federal Court: Grubhub drivers are contractors not employees In a major victory for on-demand takeout company Grubhub, the U.S. Dictrict Court for the Northern District of California ruled that Grubhub drivers are contractors not employees. The plaintiff sued Grubhub for paying subpar wages based on his classification as a contractor. The court ruled that Grubhub does not exercise a requisite amount of color over drivers' work to justify classifying them as employees. Dara Kerr reports in CNET. Google tests 911-caller locator system Google tested a new system that would improve the ability of 911 operators to locate emergency callers. Currently, 911 calls made via cell phone are difficult to pinpoint. Ryan Knutson has the story in the Wall Street Journal.
What a treat! Today Mike and Heather are joined by Derrick Smothers and Bill Allison who are sharing their hearts with us about DISCIPLESHIP! Want to know more about disciple making and how to do it the way Jesus did? Then listen and find out!
Message by: Bill Allison
Astute Facebook users might have known this all along, but apparently a lot of people were fooled by stuff posted by Russians. One response: Facebook is looking to hire people with federal security clearances, who would have access to classified information. Bloomberg reporter Bill Allison has been covering this. He spoke with Federal News Radio's Jared Serbu on Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
Guest speaker, Bill Allison, reminds us that life is short, and that we have to decide what will we do to make it count.
Guest speaker, Bill Allison, reminds us that life is short, and that we have to decide what will we do to make it count.
This morning our guest speaker, Bill Allison, explains how if we're truly going to understand what it looks like to Love One Another....we're going to have to learn how to Clean Up Messy Relationships.
This morning our guest speaker, Bill Allison, explains how if we're truly going to understand what it looks like to Love One Another....we're going to have to learn how to Clean Up Messy Relationships.
Bill Allison joins us this morning to teach on a subject that's close to his heart - Discipleship, and helping people become more like Jesus.
Bill Allison joins us this morning to teach on a subject that's close to his heart - Discipleship, and helping people become more like Jesus.
Bill Allison of Cadre Ministries is a disciple-making machine and he will be sharing what the apostolic gift in Eph 4:11 does. He will use stories from his own life to demonstrate apostolic gifting and have us understand why apostles still matter today. Powerful stuff from a man who's life call is to multiply disciples in an apostolic way.