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Albert Younas

    Minority Church, Majority Church, Church of Immigrants
    Put Out Into the Deep
    Resilience, Faith, and Transformation: Put Out into the Deep
    • This book offers a voguish intense model of lost and found faith in Auschwitz. It is about the struggle of fighting the darkness within. It chronicles the effort to forgive people who have done you wrong, the tireless struggles of women trying to find their status in religion and society, and the continuous battle for actual self. Fighting the darkness within helps people discern and fight for their homes, beliefs, and society. This struggle makes them stronger and transforms them to a people who have achieved and changed the lives of those around them through stronger faith. Moreover, it gives a glimpse of the life of an ordinary woman who trusted the words of Jesus to put out into the deep to raise her family alone through lost and found faith and becoming resilient to daily challenges towards new transformation. Spiritual and religious struggles emerge when existence is questioned, has been modified or is challenged. Resilience has been addressed in phrases of mental, social, emotional, and bodily struggles associated with conflict.

      Resilience, Faith, and Transformation: Put Out into the Deep
    • Put Out Into the Deep

      A Journey of Faith

      • 52 pages
      • 2 hours of reading

      The narrative follows Josephine Younas, an uneducated woman from a small Pakistani village, who embarks on a remarkable journey of faith and resilience. Faced with the challenge of single-handedly raising her family, she draws strength from her belief in Jesus, embodying the message of stepping into the unknown. Her story illustrates the transformative power of faith and the courage required to navigate life's challenges, highlighting the extraordinary within the ordinary.

      Put Out Into the Deep
    • This book provides an overview from a sociological perspective of the historical and current interaction between the Church and Society; with the inclusion of the specific contributions of the Catholic Churches in Pakistan, the Philippines and Immigrant Filipino Catholic in Germany. The book is not destined to be a comprehensive listing and critical critique of all possible areas of contributions, conflicts and interactions, but instead represents the macro aspects of distinct generations of studies.

      Minority Church, Majority Church, Church of Immigrants