Strong and Courageous Blue Space Fashion Bible Cover - Joshua 1:9
SKU: 95395057963

Strong and Courageous Blue Space Fashion Bible Cover - Joshua 1:9

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Description

Strong and Courageous Blue Space Fashion Bible Cover - Joshua 1:9Ignite your son or grandson's sense of adventure with the Strong and Courageous Blue Space Fashion Bible Cover. With a backdrop of stars, planets, spaceships, and astronauts, this Bible cover will protect his Bible while reminding him that God is with him wherever his adventures might take him. The dark blue polyester Bible case is covered in an exciting space adventure decal that features stars, planets, a spaceship, and an astronaut. A tan rubber

Ignite your son or grandson's sense of adventure with the Strong and Courageous Blue Space Fashion Bible Cover. With a backdrop of stars, planets, spaceships, and astronauts, this Bible cover will protect his Bible while reminding him that God is with him wherever his adventures might take him.

 

The dark blue polyester Bible case is covered in an exciting space adventure decal that features stars, planets, a spaceship, and an astronaut. A tan rubber patch is appliqued to the center of the design, and it is embossed with raised tan letters and red, blue, and yellow accents. The Scripture reference is printed as part of the cover design right below it.

 

Be strong and courageous

 Joshua 1:9

 

 

Brown binding sandwiches a bright blue zippered pocket on the front of the Bible cover. Knotted blue cords act as zipper pulls for the pocket and the blue zipper that closes the cover. On the spine, a lay-flat handle folds away to let the Bible pages open all the way. Polyester is the perfect fabric for boys; it's lightweight, durable, and water-resistant and holds up to any adventure!

 

The back of the Bible case for boys has a slip pocket where he can store small toys or notes, and two elastic pen loops on the case's interior are perfect for keeping pencils, markers, or crayons close at hand.

 

The Strong and Courageous Blue Space Fashion Bible Cover is part of the Be Brave Boy Space Collection, designed to remind boys that God is with them every step of the way! This collection includes a fashion Bible cover, a stainless steel water bottle, a second stainless steel water bottle with a set of stickers, a set of lunchbox notes, a gift bag, a 140-piece puzzle, a silicone pencil case, an assorted sticker set, a sticker roll, a retractable pen set, a large notebook, a secret diary, a medium planner pad, a cardstock bookmark set, a magnetic bookmark set and a premium cardstock bookmark.

 

This Bible cover is available in two sizes: small and medium. Please refer to the last image in the image carousel on the left for the Bible Cover Sizing Chart before selecting.

 

 

Give your son a protective Bible case that combines his sense of adventure and a bold message from the Bible when you give the Strong and Courageous Blue Space Fashion Bible Cover as a birthday or back-to-school gift.

 

  • Multi-colored space design 
  • Dark blue polyester 
  • Rubberized tan rectangle patch 
  • Raised tan text with red, blue, and yellow accents 
  • Be strong and courageous 
  • Joshua 1:9 
  • Be Brave Boy Space Collection
  • Fashion Bible cover  
  • Blue zippers with blue rope zipper pulls  
  • Zippered pocket on front panel 
  • Slip pocket on back panel 
  • Lay-flat carry handle  
  • Two interior pen loops  
  • Available in small and medium
  • Refer to Image Carousel for Bible Cover Sizing Chart

 

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SKU: 95395057963

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erika
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 4
They are good
They were really good with nice flavor just not sour
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Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2023
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paige alexander
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★★★★★ 5
Tasty
Yummy.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2026
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slimwriter
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 2
Not sour
Not really sour at all so it’s a pretty disappointing candy.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2026
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Moon Riley
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Sugar free
Tastes great
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Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2026
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Mr. Paul A. Ackermann
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Dude, it's not just a horror novel
Format: Paperback
This is to the previous reviewer (C. Scanlan). If this is just a horror novel, it failed miserably. It is not exactly a blood ’n gore thriller. Compared to Stephen King, it is pretty tame. What puts the horror in this book is that it is social commentary. Mary Shelly is not just trying to scare us. It is more than just a “Friday the 13th” movie. Mary Shelly is delivering a message. It seems that everyone understands this except this reviewer. There have been several different interpretations of the novel (see [...] for 10 different meanings of the novel). ICE takes the interpretation that Shelly is saying science can go too far. This is a perfectly valid interpretation. One can disagree with this interpretation but let’s not resort to name calling and personal attacks – that those who hold such an interpretation are doing a “low level attempt to cash in on home schooling Christian paranoia and fear of health care” or believe that “AIDS [is] the fruit of sin”. My wife and I are Catholic parents and we sent our children to public schools He mocks the idea of a secular fundamentalist but then demonstrates what that is. A religious fundamentalist sees anyone who disagrees with him as being of the devil. A secular fundamentalist sees anyone who disagrees with him as guilty of “brainwashing” others. In both cases, true dialogue is impossible. Another thing that a fundamentalist does is that he sees things in opposite extremes. If you are warning of the dangers of trusting too much in science then you must be against science. There is no middle ground for the fundamentalist. If you see that science can sometimes go too far then that means you are against health care. But this is a non-sequitur. Nielson writes “Frankenstein’s placing of the creation of life within the scientific method first destroys the unrepeatability and systematically eliminates the other elements [of hope, love, beauty, creativity and sacrifice]”. Nielson is not criticizing the scientific method in total. He is only criticizing it in the creation of life. The reviewer writes “He thereby easily and explicitly condemns the whole process and philosophy of the scientific method”. But Nielson is not condemning the whole process of the scientific method. He is only condemning it in the creation of life. The reviewer then mocks the credentials of the critics in the book - “So who are these essayists superior to Norton's and Oxfords and free of deconstructionist feminist secular fundamentalism, experts so august Ignatius should want them mentioned on their product page yet are nowhere to be seen?” But this game can be played both ways. What are the credentials of this reviewer? Is this reviewer so august as to challenge these essayists? Again, this is merely an ad-hominem attack. I really do not care who has the best credentials. What matters is who makes sense. Sometimes intellectuals can make the dumbest claims. Read Paul Johnson’s book, “Intellectuals” (http://www.amazon.com/Intellectuals-Marx-Tolstoy-Sartre-Chomsky/dp/0061253170/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1421862888&sr=8-1&keywords=intellectuals). He compares the essayists unfavorably to “good solid Roman Catholic moral theology” from the likes of Richard A. McCormick S.J., who “is the renowned leader of Roman Catholic Moral Theology in the field of bioethics in the USA.” He overlooks the fact that A. McCormick S.J. has dissented from teachings of the Popes Paul VI, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI over contraception. The “renowned leader” in the Catholic Church in morality is first and foremost the pope. Since Richard A. McCormick has contradicted the popes, he cannot be a good solid Catholic theologian. Mary Shelly lived right after the Enlightenment – man is the measure of all things. She lived at a time when people believed that science will solve all our problems. This is called scientism. ICE contends that Shelly is saying that we may be expecting too much from science. It does not mean that Shelly was saying that we should reject science. And it does not mean that Shelly believes that we should go back to the Catholic faith. In fact, ICE acknowledges that Shelly was an anti-Catholic. But the Church believes that the kernel of truth can be found in others, even in anti-Catholics. This is part of the Catholic tradition. St Augustine learned from Plato and St Aquinas learned from Aristotle. ICE would take that kernel of truth and expound that with the fullness of the Catholic faith. You may disagree with the Catholic faith, or with ICE looking at Shelly’s book from a Catholic perspective. But this is at least as a legitimate an interpretation as any other. In fact, this interpretation seems closer to the truth than the others. This interpretation is the traditional interpretation, which means that it goes back further to Shelly’s time than the modern interpretations, and is therefore less likely to be in error. BTW, the reviewer wrote that “Opus Dei right wing publishing (or reprint) house is selling this novel is to milk the home school market and to support its own bizarre bio-ethical ideology”. This is factually wrong. The company that publishes Opus Dei’s books is Sceptre. But the publisher of ICE is Ignatius Press.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2015

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