Pamela Cooper-White, the author of Tamar's song, took up the theme of violence against women and churches, and in a way that avoids stimulating the military's defense awareness that mistakenly committed such a crime I transformed it. Putting on the spectrum may seem completely irrelevant. Cooper-White took up the multifaceted and complex problem formed in the society and culture of thousands of years. Identify the most important problems and fundamental causes of violence against women.
Two Voices: Efforts are being made to solve the discrepancy between violence and love message coexisting in the Bible. As Pamela Cooper White pointed out, a man known as "following God's own soul" (David) stood with his rapist son and expressed concern for his daughter, rapists. . Looking at the Bible by supporting abuser lenses ignoring trauma makes cryptologically and irrelevant theology obtained from the Bible. This member has a relationship with the Holy Spirit and God known only for contaminated text.
Without his just previous "gold eyeball" justice, David's house was bad news because her brother, the eldest son, raped David's daughter Tamah. Tim Mar came to pretend to be a sick brother (Amnon) When she approached, he grabbed her and harassed her. Unlike the villain Shechem (Genesis 33:19, chapter 34), after rape, I felt a moral obligation to marry Dacia's daughter Diana, Amnon despised Tamil and even insulted him. She
Among the best-selling historical romance of her, Tamar and White Feathers, Deborah Challinor has energetic Tamar Deane, who became the owner of the most successful brothel in Auckland, and a handsome son of him and rangatira Kepa to introduce. That scandal led her unlawful son, Joseph. In the context of the First World War, Bayou continued the story of Tammer and her children, and ended up death by her beloved husband, Andrew. In the third and last volume of the Tamar trilogy, Tamar is now a wealthy widow with a wealthy wealth in Hawke's Bay and her children are integrated into their relationship. Happier than others. Deborah Challinor explores the influence of war on passionate and hot New Zealand's 3 generations of families