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author - "Kevin Mckay"

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This is the Book of James paraphrased as a comic book. It's radical dude!
Using a modern Australian context and slang, this powerful twenty two page comic book will challenge and perhaps offend some, and it may even change your life!

The first twelve chapters of the Gospel of Luke are beautifully illustrated in this 48-page comic book. From modern applications (a teller’s window through which Matthew does his tax-collecting) to a bit of tongue-in-cheek (the angel Gabriel dressed as Superman), readers are challenged to consider passage after passage in an entirely new light. This is the first of two volumes which cover the entire Gospel. Across the bottom of each page are the relevant passages from the King James Version, so readers can compare for themselves, to decide if the illustrations and modern text are a fair interpretation of the original.

This is a comic book paraphrase of the book of Galatians. It uses modern situations (e.g. a church building instead of a synagogue, and reference to baptism instead of circumcision) to bring Paul's message forward into a 21st Century context.

The story continues. Follow the final twelve chapters of the Gospel of Luke in this radical 48-page comic book. Everything from McDonald’s Restaurants to a modern tractor and chain saw come into the illustrations as readers are challenged to consider this ancient manuscript in a modern setting.

This is the Book of James paraphrased as a comic book. It's radical dude!
Using a modern Australian context and slang, this powerful twenty two page comic book will challenge and perhaps offend some, and it may even change your life!

The first twelve chapters of the Gospel of Luke are beautifully illustrated in this 48-page comic book. From modern applications (a teller’s window through which Matthew does his tax-collecting) to a bit of tongue-in-cheek (the angel Gabriel dressed as Superman), readers are challenged to consider passage after passage in an entirely new light. This is the first of two volumes which cover the entire Gospel. Across the bottom of each page are the relevant passages from the King James Version, so readers can compare for themselves, to decide if the illustrations and modern text are a fair interpretation of the original.

This is a comic book paraphrase of the book of Galatians. It uses modern situations (e.g. a church building instead of a synagogue, and reference to baptism instead of circumcision) to bring Paul's message forward into a 21st Century context.

The story continues. Follow the final twelve chapters of the Gospel of Luke in this radical 48-page comic book. Everything from McDonald’s Restaurants to a modern tractor and chain saw come into the illustrations as readers are challenged to consider this ancient manuscript in a modern setting.