| |
|
Westward
Trek Wall Chart #CBTB517
Full color wall chart showing the western migration of the Cacausion
people from the middle east into Europe and America.
|
|
|
$10.95 |
|

|
Stories
Of Lost Israel In Folklore
#CBTB523
Author: James B. Haggart
The symbolism found in Grimm's Fairy Tales preserves racial heritage
which reaches back to the times of Abraham Isaac and Jacob/Israel. Will
cause you to take another look at those bedtime stories mother used to
read aloud.
With this book, Reverend James B. Haggart has accomplished an important
service as he takes each of the stories presented, and reveals its
hidden message to the reader. In his introduction he explains in detail
the careful work done by the Grimm brothers to preserve these fairy
tales for future generations so that they might not be lost, as the
identity of the Israel people has been lost, through the passage of
time. He explains:
Children for many generations will forever be grateful to the Grimm
brothers, Jacob and Wilhelm, for preserving the Fairy Stories for them
to enjoy. But not only the children are grateful. Men and women of
every clime and country are grateful. Except for the efforts of these
two men more than 200 stories might have been lost forever to
posterity. The Brothers Grimm have assured for these simple stories an
important niche in our cultural and our spiritual heritage. Yes, there
is a spiritual content which cannot be ignored. For many of the
stories tie in very closely with the stories in the Bible. They are
particularly valuable to us for their preservation of the racial
heritage which reaches back to the times of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
the Patriarchs of the Old Testament. They give evidence of the highly
Christian character of the Saxon people, as these stories are
saturated with Bible truths. The symbology of these tales can be
compared with the highest symbols of the Bible. Indeed, many of the
symbols of Revelation and Daniel are interchangeable. So immersed were
the Saxon people with the Bible content that every fairy tale is
flavored with the message that the Holy Word holds.
Many suppose that the Grimm Brothers were the authors of the Fairy
stories, termed The Household stories of the Brothers Grimm. They did
not create or originate the stories. They merely wrote down for
posterity the old folk tales that were passed on from house to house
and generation to generation at family gatherings around the open
hearth . . .
The brothers were quite aware of the tale's magic attraction for
children, but they suspicioned something in them of a far deeper
value. To Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm they were a strong and vital
narrative of the Anglo-Saxon half-forgotten past. They wanted to
rescue this, their racial heritage. To recover these precious gems and
restore them for posterity became their sacred task . . .
To add even more to the book's appeal he has included sketches in
pen-and-ink of several famous landmarks of the area as he made forays
into the Land of Once Upon a Time and visited the places in Hesse
associated with the stories, beginning in 1956. His sketches illustrate,
effectively, the quaintness and beauty of the old Post-and-Beam
structures along what is now called The Fairy Tale Street, that have
undergone a splendid program of preservation to the great delight of the
areas visitors.
The author has combined Scripture, Church history, and secular history
to unveil the hidden message so cleverly concealed within each of the
stories he has chosen for this presentation, which are:
 | SNOW WHITE
 | SLEEPING BEAUTY
 | CINDERELLA
 | HANSEL & GRETHEL
 | JACK & THE BEANSTALK
 | LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD
 | SNOW WHITE & ROSE RED
 | THE TWELVE BROTHERS
 | THE ENCHANTED STAG
 | THE FROG KING
 | THE SEVEN RAVENS |
| | | | | | | | | |
This book will give you a whole new concept of the fairy tales of
your childhood.
Paperback
144 pages
|
|
|
$ 6.00 |
|
Back Home
| | |