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SPIRITUAL BOOKS

Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Francene Hart. By Bear & Company. The regular list price is $35.00. Sells new for $19.70. There are some available for $19.99.
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No comments about Sacred Geometry Cards for the Visionary Path.



Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Karyn D. Kedar. By Jewish Lights Publishing. The regular list price is $19.99. Sells new for $12.57. There are some available for $8.42.
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4 comments about The Bridge to Forgiveness: Stories and Prayers for Finding God and Restoring Wholeness.
  1. Forgiveness is a concept that, until now, I never really thought too much about. Sometimes I forgive, sometimes I don't, but I never really thought about the implications of that choice. This book was therefore a real treat that took me on a tour through the steps of forgiveness. With anecdotes, prayer, and her personal thoughts on the subject, Karyn Kedar has helped me understand that forgiving does not equate to weakness. In fact, forgiving demonstrates an inner strength that would otherwise go unnoticed. Thanks for a great, thought provoking book on this topic!


  2. "Forgiveness is an intricate dance through pain and anger and loss. Let hope be your partner. Let joy take the lead." Karyn Kedar's Bridge to Forgiveness contains so many gems like this that you will never see forgiveness in the same way. Her bridge is a guide to finding peace after pain, and, like her previous two books, is very inspirational. I highly recommend the book.


  3. This perceptive book is about more than forgiveness, it shares life affirming lessons, insights and inspirations. As you journey across the bridge to forgiveness, its thought provoking teachings will motivate the reader to feel, to assess and to act. The poetic and succinct writing makes this challenging subject both approachable and an enjoyable reading experience.


  4. I found this title in the Judaica section of my local bookstore and was immediately enthralled... and no, I am not Jewish.

    I am, however, a writer - and Karyn Kedar shares her call to write this book when she says, "Write. About forgiveness. Write. A subtle echo of new life. Write." and I think every writer who has experienced a spiritual call will know, will understand, will nod alongside these words.

    YES! Write, we say, enthusiatically.

    This impressive book is about forgiveness without forgetting. It is about healing and wholeness. It shares its message through a combination of instructive prose, poetry (almost like songs or psalms) and a memoir style of writing.

    I couldn't help but write quotes as I read along - for example.... "Acceptance is the compassionate embrace of yourself and your place in the world: without judment, without fear, without regret. You are who you are. You are not who you are not."

    Simple, yes. Strong? Indeed!

    This universal message will (I hope and pray) find its way into the hands and hearts of readers of all faiths. Read it, embrace it, live it.


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Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Marianne Williamson. By Hay House. The regular list price is $23.95. Sells new for $14.53. There are some available for $13.78.
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3 comments about Spiritual Principles.
  1. This collection of Marianne Williamson's lectures on spirituality and personal development. Some of the lectures include:
    All Things Are Lessons/I Am As God Created Me
    Celebrating Yourself/Spiritual Practice
    Basic ACIM Principles/Only the Love Is Real
    Choose Once Again/How the Holy Spirit Works
    Williamson is bestselling author and well-known lecturer who has also used her resources for social change and charity.


  2. This has been a fantastic tool that has helped me gain some universal insight. Insight we all have, but may have forgotten. Insight as to why we are really here. Unknown to us but not to God, (the one power in the universe, truth, love, light, whatever name you give to an unexplainable force.)
    These tapes have helped me tremendously to deal with my own shortcomings, and some of the challenges that I face, as well as the hatred, and evil in the world.
    It doesn't hold all the answers for me, but there is an abundance of knowledge here.


  3. I love this CD, but it takes her a while before she really connects with me. If I could get rid of her beginning of each "sermon" I would be happy, you go through each one that begins--there is a little golden light and so on. Despite that, this was the best CD of hers I listened to so far. I listened to the last part of it, maybe 20 times. It was the bit about the crucifixion is nothing about the resurrection that really caught me. You have to be willing to accept that without the crucifixion and that there is no resurrection and if you see that road you are will always be on the road of crucifixion.


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Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Diana Cooper. By Findhorn Press. The regular list price is $15.95. Sells new for $10.22. There are some available for $12.17.
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2 comments about Angel Answers.
  1. An excellent answer book to many question we ask about life and clarify why certain situations happened in a way that left us puzzled
    or make us to judge life as unfair. Reading the Angel Answers brings one to accept life and treasure it knowing whatever we search is within us and
    also affirm that whenever we need it help is available from the Angels.


  2. All Diana Cooper's books are excellent!!! The newest, Angel Answers helps a reader better to understand the spiritual world around us.


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Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Harish Johari. By Destiny Books. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $2.37. There are some available for $2.37.
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1 comments about The Yoga of Snakes and Arrows: The Leela of Self-Knowledge.
  1. I absolutely love this game. It is so awesome to be able to play a game that teaches me something so profound at the same time. I love the relationships that it gives insight into, the spontaneous meditation, and I am sure there are endless insights that will come as I play over longer periods of time. I heartily recommend it for parents to play with their children. This way kids can intuitively grasp what could otherwise be a boring lecture, years of study, or lifetimes of experiences. And it's fun!
    By the way, it comes with a beautiful board, except it's made of thick paper and folded up in a plastic pocket on the back cover of the book. I would recommend affixing it to a piece of decorative wood so that it can be properly displayed and maintained. However, being able to fold it up into the book makes for easy travel to a friend's house for some good old fashioned spiritual fun :)


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Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Os Guinness. By WaterBrook Press. The regular list price is $13.99. Sells new for $3.91. There are some available for $2.82.
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5 comments about Long Journey Home: A Guide to Your Search for the Meaning of Life.
  1. This book is a very fine distillation of wisdom applied to the "big questions" of life's meaning and purpose. Os Guinness takes the reader on a tour of how the world's major religions and some of its greatest thinkers have wrestled with questions of ultimate significance. How does death and human suffering affect our sense of hope and longing for purpose and meaning for our lives? What is the place of gratitude for life's goodness? What principles are worth living and dying for? There are no prepackaged answers to these questions, of course. But whether or not we are to believe there is an answer and what road we take to lead us there are crucial steps in the journey upon which we are all embarked. Whether we conscious of it or not, life is taking us somewhere. When we get to the end, will we look back on our journey with satisfaction and fulfillment or with a sense of shame and loss? For those who feel that an unexamined life is not worth living, this book is provides much to consider. Philosophy and Religion are not an intellectual game we can play with detachment and control over the outcome. The questions are bigger than we are and the Answer must be bigger still. The implications of the search for your life's meaning, if you follow it honestly enough, will end up handling you rather than you handling them. Are you ready? Then read on...


  2. The search for the meaning of life--now talk about a topic for a book.

    Guinness knows what he's writing about. Not just his search for the meaning to life, but in his search his reading of philosophy, literature, art and biography and other seekers is included herein.

    This is profound and chock full of wonderful, deep statements of seekers.

    He carefully, philosophically goes through each step of seeking. His background of being born in Buddhist China to his time with Hinduism, then his education under classical secular humanism at Oxford well qualify him as such a guide.

    Just one salinet quote from this marvelous read is: "The secret of the search is not our 'great ascent' but 'the great descent'--of God toward us. Instead of the seeker finding love, love seeks out the seeker."

    Highly recommended for thoughtful seekers, to be given ones we know and for those of us whom God has already sought out and now on the way to serve Him eternally.



  3. Os Guinness states in the introductory chapters of this book that it is written "for those who are asking enduring questions" such as "How do we unriddle the mystery of life and make the most of it?" Or "What does it mean to find ourselves guests on a tiny, spinning blue ball in a vast universe?" He endeavors to guide the seeker through four stages in the quest for meaning: A Time For Questions, A Time For Answers, A Time For Evidence, and A Time For Commitment. These four stages also make up the four section of the book.

    He does a decent job of telling how others have made the journey through skepticism to faith, and of explaining the process and the potential rewards and dangers. He is great at dropping the memorable quote or anecdote to illustrate a point. He is obviously quite widely read but I sometimes wondered how deep his knowledge goes.

    Unfortunately, the book was not all that I had hoped it would be. I was looking forward to an objective look at the process of being a "seeker." While the book does explain that process it became quickly apparent that the author also had another objective--to steer the seeker towards a particular "meaning of life," that of the Christian faith.

    At the beginning of Part Two, Guinness states that there are three leading families of faith in the modern world: the Eastern family (including Hinduism, Buddhism and New Age), the Western family (including naturalism, atheism and secular humanism), and the Biblical family (Judaism, Christianity and Islam). He then writes a chapter on each of the families in which he "endeavored to portray them straightforwardly and accurately."

    I found the chapter on eastern faith (Buddhism & Hinduism) to be woefully inadequate. The author's childhood in China and his studies under a Hindu guru (length of time studying not mentioned) are trotted out as if they make him an authority on eastern religion. However, he only gives a cursory and in my opinion inaccurate picture of Buddhism and Hinduism today.

    The same can be said for his chapter on secular humanism. He highlights two writers, Bertrand Russell and Albert Camus, as the archetypal secular humanists. Both Russell and Camus were relatively bleak about mankind's future, so Guinness paints secularism as a pessimistic philosophy. Apparently for him there is no such thing as an optimistic humanist.

    He then writes of the biblical family as being that family of faith that most closely mirrors the truth. Note that in this chapter he excludes any discussion of Islam (the second-largest religion in the world behind Christianity). The rest of the book (Parts Three & Four) is basically Christian apologetics. Not that there is anything wrong with apologetics, but I feel that some people will be mislead into buying this book because they think it may be an impartial guide in their search for meaning. Nowhere on the jacket or in the introduction is it stated that this book is meant to be a guide towards Christianity.

    That being said, "Long Journey Home" is still a good book that asks penetrating questions and offers some useful insights for the seeker who needs some direction for starting his or her quest.



  4. Author of numerous works of theology, religious sociology and cultural apologetics, Os Guinness is one of today's most perceptive and engaging writers. This, his latest book, is an exceptional work that deserves to be read widely and disseminated eagerly.

    Written as a seeker's road map to the quest for meaning, and presented as an exploration of the road toward meaning as taken by countless thoughtful seekers over the centuries (p.8), Long Journey Home offers insight into how such meaning can be found today. Beginning with the dictum that the unexamined life is not worth living (p.12) and concluding with the realization that the untransformed life is not worth finding (p.204), Guinness invites the reader to join him, and to recognize with him, that the humanness of life as a journey is something we should all care enough about to want to make sense of (p.9). Winsomely written, replete with stories and choice quotations, I believe this volume and its approach will resonate with significant numbers of people.

    Structured around four major sections, with each section highlighting a particular stage of the journey, this work offers no `keys' to happiness, no `short cuts' to success and no `techniques' to master. Avoiding both simplism and stereotype, Guinness offers the thoughtful seeker only a well-beaten path to follow. The stages of the journey mapped out by Guinness are: (1) The asking of questions, (2) Actively seeking out answers to the questions, (3) Evaluating the evidence for the answers, and (4) Commitment to what is discovered, realizing that all stages of the journey ought to culminate in responsible action.

    In the first section, Guinness introduces the journey by pointing to the human desire to know meaning beyond the meaning we know. Building on sociologist Peter Berger's identification of "signals of transcendence" (those catalytic experiences in everyday life that point to a higher reality), Guinness illustrates the impetus deep within us all to search for more. Pointing to G.K.Chesterton's experience of gratitude, W.H.Auden's absolute sense of justice and the impossibility of not condemning evil, as well as C.S.Lewis' deep sense of joy, Guinness articulates how such experiences raise questions and creates seekers.

    With the second stage of the journey characterized by actively seeking answers to the specific questions raised the focus of this volume now falls on truth-claims and the nature of the search for answers (p.68f). Showing his practical genius in narrowing down what could potentially be an overwhelming search, Guinness counters two frequently voiced objections. First, that the search for answers is unnecessary (because all beliefs at their core are the same), and second, that the search for answers is impossible (because there are too many beliefs to investigate). Guinness then shows how the truth lies somewhere in between and in so doing introduces the idea of `families of faith' (p.69). By addressing the vexed question of evil, suffering and death among the Eastern, Secular Western and Biblical `families of faith' that Guinness exemplifies how the search for answers can proceed.

    Building on the answers gleaned in the previous stage, the third stage of the journey commences when the answers arrived at are evaluated. In short, this stage asks: Are the answers uncovered true? Acknowledging the controversial nature of truth-claims today, Guinness attempts to clear away some of the fog (p.120ff) and to shed light on the notion of truth. (Following in the footsteps of Francis Schaeffer, he talks about truth in terms of its correspondence to reality and its livability). Managing to avoid a complicated and protracted discussion of all things epistemological, the argument of this section is propelled forward by exposing two common roadblocks: the skepticism of old wounds and the skepticism of bad experiences inflicted by people of faith (p.132). Leading ultimately to a consideration of the identity of Jesus Christ, Guinness shows his dissatisfaction with those who dismiss the evidence for truth and shows up two equal and opposite mistakes: The setting up of impossible standards of truth, and the attempt to bypass the question of truth altogether (p.145). In contrast, two positive means of assessing evidence are advocated. One, the examination of particular beliefs "up close and in detail' (illustrated, in this instance, by Phillipe Haille and Eleanor Stump). And two, seeing the `big-picture' or assessing large webs of interwoven truth claims (i.e. worldviews).

    In the fourth and culminating stage of the journey, Guinness focuses on individual responsibility and the full embrace of responsible faith. Emphasizing commitment in light of the conclusions the search has led to, this final section does what too few books of this genre do. It warns against the intrusion of techniques and the simplification of faith. It embraces the diversity of ways in which individuals come to faith. It highlights the holistic nature of faith, recognizing that people are far more than walking minds. It celebrates the often forgotten reality that we are never more ourselves than when we come to faith. And it wonderfully plays up the truth (illustrated by the story of Simone Weil) that we find God because He first finds us; that the secret of our quest for purpose and meaning lies not in our brilliance but in His grace.

    As a reviewer, I've not rushed my description of the contents of this book because I believe the ebb and flow of its argument deserves to be highlighted. On the whole, this book deserves to be read as much by pastors and preachers as by the `seekers' it was penned for. It is an excellent volume that draws upon classical and contemporary sources (often juxtaposed in fascinating ways), which is informed by a sound biblical anthropology (cf. p.198ff), and which dares to rely upon the diverse integrity of human beings and the sovereign freedom of God. Long Journey Home is a book whose themes and approach ought to shape evangelism, inform preaching and dissuade anyone from dependence upon, generic, pre-packaged, `one size fits all' forms of witnessing.


  5. I was hoping that this book would help me to find a process to answer issues wround finding meaning and signifcance in life-it didn't. Seemed to be just a bunch of quotes from other authors that didn't inspire me.


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Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Helen Palmer. By Tarcher. The regular list price is $15.95. Sells new for $8.88. There are some available for $0.34.
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1 comments about Inner Knowing (New Consciousness Reader).
  1. This is by far one of my favorite books. Its condition certainly shows it!

    Under the "stewardship" of Helen Palmer, this book covers a wide variety of readings on the topic of Higher Consciousness... .digging into not only what our life is about also how to be your own life anthropologist, so to speak.

    It includes readings by some preeminent names in the study of Spirituality, Psychology, Anthropology and other related fields all collected and categorized so that you can simply go to the table of contents and choose what suits you for that particular day.

    Included are Jack Kornfield, Sylvia Boornsteain, Mihaly Csikzentmihalyi and Abraham Maslow just to give you a taste.... And hopefully a hunger for more.

    With the selections from this book, you simply can't go wrong.



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Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Howard W. Stone. By Augsburg Fortress Publishers. The regular list price is $17.99. Sells new for $11.74. There are some available for $12.92.
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1 comments about Defeating Depression: Real Help for You and Those Who Love You.
  1. This is one of the most helpful books on managing and overcoming depression that I've come across. It's fast-paced and easy to read, and I really like the emphasis on finding practical ways to minimize the symptoms. The author has a very "take action" approach, which I've found to be very useful. I would definitely recommend it to individuals struggling with depression and to those who might have a friend or family member experiencing depression. (Every chapter includes a "take action" section written specifically for family members.)


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Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Marianne Williamson. By Rayo. The regular list price is $13.95. Sells new for $4.98. There are some available for $3.69.
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No comments about Don del Cambio, El: Una Guia Espiritual para Transformar Su Vida Radicalmente.



Posted in Spiritual (Friday, December 5, 2008)

Written by Stan Toler. By Wesleyan Publishing House. The regular list price is $19.99. Sells new for $14.99. There are some available for $15.00.
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No comments about ReThink Your Life: A Unique Diet to Renew Your Mind (Total Quality Life).



Page 46 of 222
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Sacred Geometry Cards for the Visionary Path
The Bridge to Forgiveness: Stories and Prayers for Finding God and Restoring Wholeness
Spiritual Principles
Angel Answers
The Yoga of Snakes and Arrows: The Leela of Self-Knowledge
Long Journey Home: A Guide to Your Search for the Meaning of Life
Inner Knowing (New Consciousness Reader)
Defeating Depression: Real Help for You and Those Who Love You
Don del Cambio, El: Una Guia Espiritual para Transformar Su Vida Radicalmente
ReThink Your Life: A Unique Diet to Renew Your Mind (Total Quality Life)

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Last updated: Fri Dec 5 10:48:25 EST 2008