Sentences with phrase «about everything in his books»

Not exact matches

Most authors think the purpose of the introduction is to lay out and explain everything the author will talk about in the book.
About 100,000 copies of Get Smarter — a book for 20 - to -40-year-olds that's full of life and business lessons on everything from corporate governance to sex — have been sold since its publication in 2007.
When a corrections officer informs you, «you're on the draft,» you have about 30 minutes to pack up everything you've accumulated (letters, books, family photos) while in prison.
I'm living it right now, and I may even write a book about it soon because it's something I really believe in with everything in me, so much so that I'm living and breathing it weekly.
In addition to wearing their writer's hat, self - published authors need to do just about everything that goes into packaging, marketing, and selling books, like building an author platform.
The NYT piece — along with other reporting about Amazon by people like author Brad Stone, in his book «The Everything Store,» — describes people sleeping in their cars in the company parking lot, or not sleeping at all for days.
«There really is a best time to do just about anything and everything, and that's especially true when it comes to buying things,» writes Mark Di Vincenzo in his book, «Buy Ketchup in May and Fly at Noon»
If you're ready to learn everything you need to know about successfully using Pinterest, then read and absorb the strategies in this brilliant book by Karen Leland!
Besides it being written in a book, and I don't see how guys writting a book equals an infallible deity, but how does one go about proving a deity created everything?
Modern science is the cornerstone of your belief system, as ancient writings that I consider to be God given, holy inspired and very relevant to modern times (as well as every society that ever was and will be) is the cornerstone of my belief system, because everything about this book has been accurate in every way, unlike modern science.
``... as ancient writings that I consider to be God given, holy inspired and very relevant to modern times (as well as every society that ever was and will be) is the cornerstone of my belief system, because everything about this book has been accurate in every way, unlike modern science.»
As in, «Admittedly, William F. Buckley wasn't always right about everything, segregation for example,» or, «Obviously Aaron Sorkin is a colossal misogynist, but let us set that to one side,» or, «I enjoyed John Derbyshire's book on the Riemann Hypothesis, despite his despicable views on race.»
You mean that plagiarized retelling of Joseph from the Old Testament, which along with the story of Moses and creation and just about everything else in both books were lifted directly from Egyptian and Sumerian mythology, that New Testament?
Sometimes we love our people in the name of Christ, enduring just about everything with them, and sometimes we love them by throwing the Book at them.
Walker - Barnes seamlessly weaves together the academic and pastoral in this book that has me rethinking everything I thought I knew about race, womanhood, and even the Trinity.
One of the earliest books written in the Bible is about a good man named Job who loses everything — his children, his business, his possessions — to the sort of tragedies insurance companies call «acts of God.»
Then they'll work you up to tell you about the great rewards that god is teasing us with if we do a good job in doing everything men wrote in a book 2000 years ago.
If I can recall, basically everything we know about History either comes from books, artwork, or in some other written form.
What really impressed me about the Bible, when I compared it with the other holy books, is that it's the only one that commanded objective testing: «test everything; hold fast what is good» Paul says in 1 Thessalonians 5:21 (ESV), and actually you see how the Bible not only tells you to test, it shows you how to do it.
I don't agree with everything in the book, but one thing it does is make you think about who Jesus really was and what He really did.
If you can get past that, this book will challenge everything you think you know about the violence in Scripture, the role of the church in the world, and how you view your enemies.
So, as has happened frequently in the process of writing Close Your Church for G00d, I'm cutting almost everything I have written so far about baptism in the book of Acts, and am summarizing it with the following:
but thats not what i'm talking about... i am discussing the god you claim to worship... even if you believe jesus was god on earth it doesn't matter for if you take what he had to say as law then you should take with equal fervor words and commands given from god itself... it stands as logical to do this and i am confused since most only do what jesus said... the dude was only here for 30 years and god has been here for the whole time — he has added, taken away, and revised everything he has set previous to jesus and after his death... thru the prophets — i base my argument on the book itself, so if you have a counter argument i believe you haven't a full understanding of the book — and that would be my overall point... belief without full understanding of or consideration to real life or consequences for the hereafter is equal to a childs belief in santa which is why we atheists feel it is an equal comparision... and santa is clearly a bs story... based on real events from a real historical person but not a magical being by any means!
That he would write about his brush with death was to be expected, for he wrote about everything: in books and magazine articles» not to mention his collection of observations and arguments published in the back of this magazine each month.
I was tempted at first to give maybe a 10 point list of advice for parents going through deconstruction in front of their kids... things like let them see the books you read and answer their curiosities about them; teach your kids how to think, not how to believe; tell them everything you're going through and let them deal with what it means for them; ask them what they believe and listen objectively and engage in conversation about it; openly share your struggles with what you're going through with the church and let them process it themselves, and so on.
Perhaps the internet is doing all of the above and more: encouraging and unifying small religious and other movements; further facilitating scientific unification across geographic proximity, if not also creating new scientific theories and concepts; fostering the rise of new forms of spiritual irrationalism such as those discussed in Wendy Kaminer's wild book, Sleeping with Extra-Terrestrials; focusing the public even more on particular public personas in news, sports and everything else; creating new classes of investors who are willing to publish online just about anything, regardless of whether or not they agree with it; germinating new technological ideas that are luring capitalists who hold unreasonable expectations of financial bonanzas.
In the midst of booths selling everything from schmaltzy Christian greeting cards to tacky Christian pillows to memberships in Christian health resorts to healing handkerchiefs — and even some books — was a small cadre of scholars huddled in a back room with newspaper reporters, trying to discuss serious questions about JesuIn the midst of booths selling everything from schmaltzy Christian greeting cards to tacky Christian pillows to memberships in Christian health resorts to healing handkerchiefs — and even some books — was a small cadre of scholars huddled in a back room with newspaper reporters, trying to discuss serious questions about Jesuin Christian health resorts to healing handkerchiefs — and even some books — was a small cadre of scholars huddled in a back room with newspaper reporters, trying to discuss serious questions about Jesuin a back room with newspaper reporters, trying to discuss serious questions about Jesus.
The Bible should not be considered as a infaillible book giving us information about everything but as a collection of human experiences and relections about God, in the same way one views the Christian books having been written since 300 AC.
He wrote, «From the most essential and most fundamental about oneself to every single thing or affair in the world, even the meaning of one word or half a word, everything should be investigated to the utmost, and none of it is unworthy of attention... There is no other way to investigate principle to the utmost than to pay attention to everything in our daily reading of books and handling of affairs....
This is new territory for me, doing a book - length study of Jesus and the origins of Christianity, but I have read everything I could get my hands on, weighed all the scholarly debates, and hope my book will be useful to the book - reading public in explaining what we can really know, historically, about Jesus.
Commandeering an address book, we called every Manhattan listing only to be told over and over again by former friends that the man we were calling about was a drunk, a bully, spoiled and abusive — in short, everything we had discovered about him on our own.
Find everything your library has to say about a book of the Bible in one place.
I've never even met this guy and he's pretending to know everything about me because he read it in a book
I'll feel like I'm supposed to feel at this point, when everything is going my way, when people are talking about my book, when readers stand in line to get my name scrawled across a page, when I am a very.
So whenever someone sends me a review copy of their book, I try my absolute hardest to write about everything good in the book, while downplaying or ignoring anything I didn't like.
If there was any other book claiming to be the authority on everything that you kept having to make excuses for like «Well, that part is ment as an allegory» or «God years are different than man years» or «Well, its says to not eat shelfish or pork in the hebrew scriptures, but apparently God changed his mind later, but that part about ga y's stays» I don't think anyone would have given it a second look had it not been at the point of a sword.
Although it's pretty, politically correct and cliche» to say: «Jesus LOVES EVERYONE AND EVERYTHING», the truth of the matter is that the book of Revelation talks about a time when Jesus will spill a LOT of blood on the earth and will do so in order to establish peace and order and to return the planet to its original, paradise form.
All Year: The Bible (There are many translations available at biblegateway.com)- Anchor Bible Commentary Series - The Women's Bible Commentary, Edited by Carol A. Newsom and Sharon H. Ringe - Living Judaism: The Guide to Jewish Belief, Tradition, and Practice by Wayne D. Dosick - Women in Scripture: A Dictionary of Named and Unnamed Women in the Hebrew Bible, the Apocryphal / Deuterocanonical books, and the New Testament, Edited by Carol Meyers, Toni Cravien, and Ross Shepard Kraemer - Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, Edited by John Piper and Wayne Grudem - Discovering Biblical Equality: Complementarity Without Hierarchy, Edited by Ronald W. Pierce, Rebecca Merrill Groothuis and Gordon D. Fee - Women in the World of the Earliest Christians: Illuminating Ancient Ways of Life by Lynn Cohick - God's Word to Women by Katharine C. Bushnell - Don't Know Much About the Bible: Everything You Need to Know About the Good Book but Never Learned by Kenneth C. Davis - «On The Dignity and Vocation of Women» by Pope John Paul II - The Year of Living Biblically by A.J. Jacobs
by Dave DeWitt and Nancy Gerlach Part 1: The Evolution of Chili con Carne Recipes: Mole de Olla (Kettle Stew) Pork in Adobo Sauce Caldillo de Duranguense Original San Antonio Chili U. S. Army Chili Mrs. Owen's Cook Book Chili The Great Chili con Carne Project Index Everything about chili con carne generates some sort of controversy — the spelling...
Everything you need to know about fruitcakes - their history and amazing legacy and a guide to some of my famous fruitcake recipes including Black Cake and Apricot Brandy Fruitcake, in A Passion for Baking, Oxmoor House, 2007 and The New Best of BetterBaking.com, Whitecap Books 2009, respectively.
Everything I love about eating, about cooking, about living, she sums up perfectly in this book of beautiful brilliance.
In The Great Vegan Bean Book, author Kathy Hester primes you on everything you need to know about the best way to cook — and eat!
These apple cider caramels are my love letter autumn in my city, my attempt, as I wrote in the book, to «pack everything I love about New York City in October — the carpet of fiery leaves on the ground from the trees I didn't even know we had; the sky, impossibly blue; the air, drinkably crisp; the temperature finally delicious enough that it implores you to spend hours wandering around, sipping warm spiced apple cider from the Greenmarkets — into one tiny square.»
While I can't show you everything in the book just yet (although there will, of course, be a preview recipe or two on the blog closer to the big day), I can tell you these 10 things that I think you should know right now about gluten free bread right now.
Aside from the gorgeous and rustically - styled photography, the collection of recipes in this book represent everything I've ever loved about cultural cuisine.
I have a question about one of the recipes in the book, I purchased the US version and I have loved everything I have tried so far, but one of the recipes was very salty and I was wondering if it was suppose to be that salty or if there was a miss - print.
In the excellent book The Numbers Game: Why Everything You Know About Football Is Wrong, authors Chris Anderson and David Sally outline these reasons but have also gone one further in analysing the phenomenoIn the excellent book The Numbers Game: Why Everything You Know About Football Is Wrong, authors Chris Anderson and David Sally outline these reasons but have also gone one further in analysing the phenomenoin analysing the phenomenon.
Hamilton later made another reference to a potential future book in which he reveals everything: «I get excited about the thought that, one day, I can talk about this year,» Hamilton said last week.
The authors of The Breastfeeding Book: Everything You Need to Know About Nursing Your Child from Birth Through Weaning say women who have not breastfed are four times more likely to develop osteoporosis later in life.
In 1996, he published a book for couples called the Dr. Richard Marrs» Fertility Book: America's Leading Infertility Expert Tells You Everything You Need to Know About Getting Pregnbook for couples called the Dr. Richard Marrs» Fertility Book: America's Leading Infertility Expert Tells You Everything You Need to Know About Getting PregnBook: America's Leading Infertility Expert Tells You Everything You Need to Know About Getting Pregnant.
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