Voice of Prophecy - Voice of Prophecy Bible School

Voice of Prophecy Bible School

A key program of Voice of Prophecy is the Discover Bible School. Introduced on February 1, 1942 as The Bible School of the Air, it was one of the first correspondence Bible schools in North America.

Known today as the Discover Bible School it offers free Bible guides by mail or online and has affiliate schools in over 120 countries with lessons in over 80 languages and dialects.

Read more about this topic:  Voice Of Prophecy

Famous quotes containing the words voice of, voice, prophecy, bible and/or school:

    We all do no end of feeling, and we mistake it for thinking. And out of it we get an aggregation which we consider a Boon. Its name is Public Opinion. It is held in reverence. It settles everything. Some think it the Voice of God.
    Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens] (1835–1910)

    Sincerity and the correct use of the voice are the greatest things in the art of acting.
    Alla Nazimova (1879–1945)

    His hand will be against every man, and every man’s hand against him.
    Bible: Hebrew Genesis, 16:12.

    The prophecy spoken to Hagar, the hand-maiden of Abraham, of their unborn son Ishmael. He was banished into the desert, and is traditionally considered the father of the Arab nation.

    The only thing that was dispensed free to the old New Bedford whalemen was a Bible. A well-known owner of one of that city’s whaling fleets once described the Bible as the best cheap investment a shipowner could make.
    —For the State of Massachusetts, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    After school days are over, the girls ... find no natural connection between their school life and the new one on which they enter, and are apt to be aimless, if not listless, needing external stimulus, and finding it only prepared for them, it may be, in some form of social excitement. ...girls after leaving school need intellectual interests, well regulated and not encroaching on home duties.
    Ellen Henrietta Swallow Richards (1842–1911)