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Welcome to the racheljoyscott.net store.
I have hand picked out several products that are about Rachel and
the Columbine tragedy. These books will give you a greater
knowledge and understanding about Rachel, her life, and her walk
with God. I'm sure they will bless your life and help you to
grow in God, as they have done with mine. To purchase a title simply click on the link "Buy
Now/More Info." This will take you to a page with pricing
information and more information on the product. Simply follow
the instructions to complete the order.
This store is in association with
Amazon.Com. Which basically means, each time a visitor
purchases a product, part of the earnings comes to me. This is
beneficial for the website and ministry that I have though
racheljoyscott.net. ALL earnings will go back into this site and ministry
to continue to help keep Rachel's dream alive in "reaching the
un-reached."
The following products are available:
Books |
Videos |
CDs |
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Cover Image and Title and
Author |
Description of Product |
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Buy Now/More Info
Rachel's Tears: The Spiritual Journey of Columbine Martyr Rachel
Scott
by Darrell Scott, Beth Nimmo, Steve Rabey
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The Columbine
tragedy in April 1999 pierced the heart of our country. In December
1999, we learned that the teenage killers specifically targeted
Rachel Scott and mocked her Christian faith on their chilling,
homemade videotapes. Rachel Scott died for her faith. Now her
parents talk about Rachel's life and how they have found meaning in
their daughter's martyrdom in the aftermath of the school shooting.
Rachel's Tears comes from a heartfelt need to celebrate this
young girl's life, to work through the grief and the questions of a
nation, and to comfort those who have been touched by violence in
our schools today. Using excerpts and drawings from Rachel's own
journals, her parents offer a spiritual perspective on the Columbine
tragedy and provide a vision of hope for preventing youth violence
across the nation. |
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Buy Now/More Info
Rachel Smiles: The
Spiritual Legacy of Columbine Martyr Rachel Scott
by Darrell Scott, Steve
Rabey |
When Rachel Scott's
life was tragically cut short in the Columbine High School shooting,
she left behind a group of grieving friends and family. But as
stories of Rachel's faith and courage have surfaced, her legacy has
grown to include hundreds of people who have been stirred by her
example and are now impacting their world for God's kingdom. In this
moving book, readers will cherish the encouraging stories of those
who are still passing on Rachel's spiritual legacy. Her father,
Darrell Scott, shares his own reflections, which are deeply personal
and poignant. Never-before-published writings and drawings from
Rachel's journal are also included, along with photos of Rachel and
her family and the people whose stories are featured. |
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Buy Now/More Info
Chain Reaction A
Call To Compassionate Revolution
by Darrell Scott, Steve Rabey
(Contributor)
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Rachel Scott and her killer Eric Harris
both talked about starting a "chain reaction." Eric used violence to
kill and destroy at Columbine High School. But Rachel chose another
path. In a personal creed she wrote one month before her death in
the Columbine tragedy, she explained her conviction that if one
person goes out of his or her way to show compassion, it will start
a world-changing chain reaction of kindness. For Rachel, this was
a solemn calling. And now her father, Darrell Scott, is carrying on
her crusade by challenging people of all ages to commit themselves
to creating a revolution of compassion that can make a real
difference in our troubled world. Chain Reaction spells out this
challenge in compelling detail, providing moving examples of
practical compassion and giving illustrations from Rachel's life and
journals. |
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Buy Now/More Info
The Journals Of
Rachel Scott A Journey Of Faith At Columbine High
Beth Nimmo, Debra K. Klingsporn, Rachel
Scott
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This biography of
the first student killed at Columbine High School on April 20, 1999,
was adapted by her mother and Klingsporn from the teen's writing and
diaries. Scott emphasizes her relationship with God and her
commitment to Christian living, and the book provides spaces for
readers to do their own journaling, prompted by questions and headed
"Just Between God and Me." The text is illustrated with facsimiles
of the young woman's journals, poems, songs, and drawings. Chapter
11 offers her unedited writings, to provide an ending more upbeat
than Chapter 10, which is her chilling journal entries for the
morning of April 20, followed by her mother's essay on her own
journey toward forgiveness. It is clear that the teen had some
talent for writing and sketching. She was serious about her faith
and her search for God. The problem with the book lies in the
adaptation and fictionalizing of her journals. When she talks about
Anne Frank or how she believes that she'll never marry, one must
wonder if this is actually what Rachel wrote, or if it has been
elaborated on by the editors to increase the effect of
foreshadowing. The first-person narrative makes it more readable,
but also begs the question-is this Rachel as she was, or as her
mother remembers her? Probably a little of each. Buy where student
writing, Christian witnessing, and Misty Bernall's She Said Yes: The
Unlikely Martyrdom of Cassie Bernall (Plough, 1999) are popular, or
for a comprehensive collection on the events at Columbine. |
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Buy Now/More Info
The Martyrs' Torch
Bruce Porter, Beth Nimmo
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At Rachel Scott's
funeral, Bruce Porter delivered a powerful and appropriate message
to all of America. The essence of that message is carried out in
this book. Bruce challenges us to take up the torch the Columbine
victims carried and to dedicate our lives to Kingdom purposes |
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Buy Now/More Info
Silence Shattered:
An Eyewitness Account of the Columbine Tragedy
Heidi Johnson
* note: she was
a good friend of Rachel Scott * |
Writing a book must be a hard thing to
do, and for a 19 year old girl to write about something so
horrifying must be even harder. I picked up Heidi's book from our
church, and couldn't put it down. I've read alot of books on
Columbine and all are good. This is no exception. Although it is
short, I like that, as it doesn't take long to read and doesn't
overstate things twice. I like how Heidi has it set up, with her
life before Columbine, the shootings themselves, and her life now
afterwards. It is a personal account, and perhaps can help some
people who are still dealing with it come to terms with it, or at
least make it more of a reality. It gets one inside the head of a
survivor who was there and makes all that we heard on the news and
saw in the papers come alive. You should read this book if you were
at all affected by Columbine! |
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Buy Now/More Info
Untold Stories of
Columbine (1999)
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I first saw this
video at a youth group outreach and I must say, there was not a dry
eye in the house! It moved me deeply and I have not been the same
since watching it.
In this video, Darrell Scott (Rachel's father) discusses Rachel's
life and shows us brief excerpts from her private journals. If you
have read the moving book, Rachel's Tears, you will already be
familiar with alot of what Darrell discusses on the video.
The video also includes excerpts from Rachel's funeral as
broadcast on CNN, which are also very moving, yet encouraging as we
hear from her family and friends about the brief, yet inspiring life
of this young lady who was incredibly passionate about living her
life for God.
By the end of this video, you will be motivated to take a stand
for Jesus and to pick up the torch!
Reviewed by
Lisa Wheildon (see more about me) |
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Buy Now/More Info
Lullaby for
Columbine
Various Artists - Pop |
This
commemorative CD is designed to "bring unity [and] emotional and
spiritual healing through music to the families and to the hurting
Denver community and beyond." Featuring performances by local
artists, Columbine students (including Jonathan and Stephen Cohen,
whose "Friend of Mine" became an unofficial anthem for survivors),
and even King Crimson's Adrian Belew, the album's heartfelt and
earnest songs partake of one of music's basic functions: solace.
--Rickey Wright
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