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Angels that Gather: Empowerment for End-of-the-Age Harvest

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God's Word emphasizes great spiritual activity in the latter-days. Jesus Himself said, "The end-of-the-age is the harvest," and promised to send an angelic host to co-labor with us in the mandate to see Him receive the full measure of His reward. There will be a harvest of promises, commissions, mantles, and a harvest of souls. This book provides a prophetic outline to help access this inheritance.

We have now crossed a threshold in Heavens timeline to apprehend "great grace," launching us into this long foretold battle between the Kingdom of light and the kingdom of darkness. Our greatest invitation is to know God intimately and walk with Him like Enoch and other notable saints of the past. The Heavens are opened and a voice is beckoning us higher into our destiny in God and into the greater works.

239 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2007

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Paul Keith Davis

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Author 2 books169 followers
May 29, 2011
Typical of its genre, Angels that Gather: Empowerment for End-of-the-Age Harvest takes an obscure phrase from the Bible, in this case from the Parable of the Weeds (Matthew 13:24-30 and 37-43) and expands it into a key to understanding the whole of scripture. (It's a convention used by many preachers every Sunday morning.)

And like a good sermon, there's a fair sprinkling of encouragement for the listener or reader to take the message in and apply it to living in the present and for the future. As the subtitle indicates, Davis writes from the viewpoint that the end times as upon us, adding urgency to his message. (Folks have been saying that for two thousand years, one day they'll be correct. But in a practical view, each of usis living in our last days now. So Davis' sense of urgency is appropriate.)

That said (and this is why the rating is only three stars), along the way Davis tosses in an embarrassing number of "The Lord told me" references to special insight only Davis had been given to unravel the otherwise hidden meanings of scripture, like some modern day gnostic, which is also typical of these "hidden manna" type books. It's not necessary and even detracts from the otherwise good Biblical scholarship and exegesis.

Overall, Davis delivers the goods. If you were only to buy one book of this sort, this would be the one to buy. However, if you already own several, don't waste your money on another of the same.
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