Christian | literature | Hans Christian Andersen | Nobel Prize in Literature | English literature | Christian Dior | Literature | German literature | Christian music | Christian cross | Christian Brothers | French literature | Congregation of Christian Brothers | Christian IV of Denmark | Contemporary Christian music | Christian Slater | Italian literature | Christian rock | Children's literature | Christian metal | Christian Broadcasting Network | The Christian Science Monitor | Travel literature | children's literature | Southern Christian Leadership Conference | Persian literature | Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools | Christian Church | Union of Christian and Centre Democrats | Christian V of Denmark |
Kingdoms in Conflict: An Insider's Challenging View of Politics, Power and the Pulpit is a work of Christian literature by former US President Richard Nixon's chief counsel, Charles Colson, published in 1987 in the United States by Zondervan and in 1988 in the United Kingdom by Hodder & Stoughton.
He explained that within the past year he had been challenged by the African-American professor and theologian Anthony Bradley to move away from Christian literature and theology and read more sociology.
After two years, the Chin Christian Literature Society changed its name to Chin Association for Christian Communication (CACC).
He was a debater and conference speaker, publisher and a prolific writer of Christian literature and theological works including Studies in Baptist Doctrine and History.
After a few translations from the French (van Hemen, de Ravignan, and Lacordaire) he began his independent literary career with small works on the history of early Christian literature in the first centuries and the Middle Ages, among them: "Ægidius von Rom"