Freedom’S Tree

Fiction & Literature, Religious, Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality
Cover of the book Freedom’S Tree by Kenneth Lippincott, WestBow Press
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Author: Kenneth Lippincott ISBN: 9781490858128
Publisher: WestBow Press Publication: December 12, 2014
Imprint: WestBow Press Language: English
Author: Kenneth Lippincott
ISBN: 9781490858128
Publisher: WestBow Press
Publication: December 12, 2014
Imprint: WestBow Press
Language: English

Have you ever desired to escape and live simply? Have you ever fantasized about moving to a small town? Having spent half of my forty-three year career as a high school principal and volunteer pastor in small towns and counties with less than five thousand people, I learned that bliss was superficial. No matter how positive, people resisted change, especially with a newcomer serving as the agent of change. Kinfolk mattered more than issues. To survive, newcomers walked a fine line and had to learn who controlled and who was related to whom. Relationships mattered more than issues. Good versus evil became obvious.

In Freedoms Tree, Rock Creek Valley resembled Canaanite cities with heavily fortified bulwarks. Interstate highway construction had decimated the economy and school reorganization altered valley culture. Perceived as invaders, newcomers arrived in Rock Creek at Gods direction, while a murderer escaped detection and residents presumed anothers guilt.

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Have you ever desired to escape and live simply? Have you ever fantasized about moving to a small town? Having spent half of my forty-three year career as a high school principal and volunteer pastor in small towns and counties with less than five thousand people, I learned that bliss was superficial. No matter how positive, people resisted change, especially with a newcomer serving as the agent of change. Kinfolk mattered more than issues. To survive, newcomers walked a fine line and had to learn who controlled and who was related to whom. Relationships mattered more than issues. Good versus evil became obvious.

In Freedoms Tree, Rock Creek Valley resembled Canaanite cities with heavily fortified bulwarks. Interstate highway construction had decimated the economy and school reorganization altered valley culture. Perceived as invaders, newcomers arrived in Rock Creek at Gods direction, while a murderer escaped detection and residents presumed anothers guilt.

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