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#Vraeyda Literary
peterwestergaard · 3 years
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Watch My Warning Light Calling YouTube Interview
Watch My Warning Light Calling YouTube Interview
Warning Light Calling is a science fiction poetry collection in the dissident soviet style. See my live YouTube with with Vraeyda CEO Lis Goryniuk-Ratajczak About Warning Light Calling: Dissident Soviet literature, it feels, has been living a reclusive life away from the literary mainstream. Warning Light Calling borrows ideas from dissident Soviet literature in order to understand…
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saphaburnell · 10 years
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The King: An Exegesis
The Preacher paces in a cafe. ”The Christ! The Christ!” The Preacher throws his hands around a paper cup, the Christ hanging lifeless on his crucifix had vanished. Gold nails laid haphazard on the altar, yanked from the polish of a cedar wood cross. The King appears in Sapha Burnell’s inaugural poetry collection Usurper Kings, published by Vræyda Literary. Buy it now on Google Play, and soon for Kindle, Kobo, Nook, iBooks and print. Follow Sapha on Twitter
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saphaburnell · 10 years
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Wellsprings: An Exegesis
The first rain. What was it like, when hydrogen molecules first teamed up with an oxygen molecule, like twins on a man’s arm and bonded? What was it like when the newly formed water molecule condensed into a liquid and grew heavy, joined by myriad others until finally oh finally the pressure was off and water fell from the sky? What outcropping of rock and mineral did that first rain splatter and kiss? How relieving, how wondrous, how refreshing would it have been to dance in that first spring shower? Wellsprings appears in Sapha Burnell’s inaugural poetry collection Usurper Kings, published by Vræyda Literary. Buy it now on Google Play, and soon for Kindle, Kobo, Nook, iBooks and print. Follow Sapha on Twitter
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West African Author Publishes Book on Humanitarianism & Faith
Can You Hear the Angels Sing? begins in 2010, when a gang of armed robbers attacked Rev. Prof. Seth Ayettey and his family in their home. Through the emotional retelling of his bullet wound and miraculous recovery and stories of his career as an Anatomist and Humanitarian, Seth gives an in depth view of healing West Africa and bringing wholeness to the Third World. 
Langley, BC – Vraeyda Media Incorporated announces today the release of Rev. Prof. Seth Ayettey’s first book, Can You Hear the Angels Sing?. More than a memoir on grace, faith and healing in West Africa, it’s a glimpse into the breath of the miraculous, and the heart of a modern day humanitarian who has given everything for his country. In October 2010, Professor and Pastor Seth Ayettey was assaulted in his home. Shot and left for dead, he and his family experienced a series of miracles that culminated in a choir of angels. Now you can read his memoir on experiencing the best and worst of mankind, and how he knows grace will save lives. The hymns of Can You Hear the Angels Sing? are coming to a concert hall in Fall 2013, in preparation for the release of The Angels Sing Choral album.
About Rev. Prof Seth Ayettey
A retired Professor of Anatomy on contract at the College of Health Sciences of the University of Ghana.  His PhD was acquired at the University of Cambridge in England in 1978, after degrees in Anatomy (1971) and in Medicine (1974) at the University of Ghana.   He has served as a teacher at the University for 34 years in the training of over 2000 doctors and several medical specialists for Ghana. He has published widely on fine structure of the heart. He contributed to the founding of the Anatomical Society of West Africa, serving as its President for 7 years and contributing to the development of its journal, the West Africa Journal of Anatomy.
For more information, please visit: Vraeyda Media: Can You Hear The Angels Sing?
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My friend Alhaji Bature, a Muslim and publisher of the Al Hajj newspaper in Ghana, once said to me that good ultimately prevails over evil. He used movies as moral lessons. At the beginning of a movie, evil appears to rein. Our hero struggles through the gateway of a journey both physical and emotional. The search before him seems mountainous, looming desperately over his every decision and step. One stumble may shove him over the ragged edge of an eternal precipice. At times, all seems lost. Almost always, the end of the movie teaches a different lesson. Good ultimately triumphs over evil. It is a law of the universe written in Scripture that good shall inevitably triumph and overcome. The miracles that reveal the handiwork and the presence and the power of God often occur in unpleasant circumstances of pain, suffering, distress, doubt, despair and hopelessness. At the beginning of the painful experiences, we may wonder where God is, or if God exists at all. It is often much later we realize how God has worked quietly but powerfully and beautifully to give a wondrous outcome of the terrible circumstances we had found ourselves in. Only at the movie's final scene can the beauty and elegance of victory blossom and flower.
Can You Hear The Angels Sing?
by Rev. Prof Seth Ayettey
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As a scientist, I have been brought up to critically observe the facts that are before me and to carefully study them to determine their relevance. There is no conflict at all for me in this as a scientist with my faith as a Christian who believes in God and in Jesus Christ as my personal saviour and Lord. As a pastor and student of the Scriptures, I behold a rational God who has acted and is still acting in most rational ways with determined ends. His creation reveals Him and His rational works and actions. He communicates His presence and His will through nature as well as through special revelations of Himself to us. He has also equipped us with a mind capable of observing events, thinking through them rationally and exploring our environment to discover what is already there. Besides, He reveals Himself to us in unexpected ways to lead us to faith in Him. Faith in God is not blind but rational. It has roots in the many actions of God to call our attention to Him. The most striking of these events is that of the resurrection of Christ.
Can You Hear The Angels Sing?
by Rev. Prof. Seth Ayettey
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