Sentences with phrase «book is about love»

This book is about love, betrayal, lust, friendships, and families.

Not exact matches

Schultz talks affectionately about his father in his book, «Pour Your Heart Into It: How Starbucks Built a Company One Cup at a Time,» saying that Fred was an honest man who worked hard, played ball with his kids on the weekend and loved the Yankees.
What I loved most about the book is J.D.'s raw honesty about his childhood.
What I particularly love about this book is that it contains a wide range of perspectives — anthropologists, marketers, designers, psychologist, CEOs of large companies, and more.
In today's divided world, this book brings readers a fundamental message to show more love to those we lead, deliver compassion, develop people in a more intentional way (think about how Jesus built up his followers over a deeply committed three - year period), and finally, be willing to forgive.
Her new book, «Love Rules,» is about navigating romantic relationships in today's climate, and ahead of a panel on the subject at the Women in the World Summit, we asked how her thoughts on #MeToo apply to the workplace.
«Nature's goal is to get you addicted to the baby,» Maia Szalavitz, a science journalist who co-authored a book about the science of bonding, called «Born for Love», told Business Insider.
When Steve Case, the billionaire co-founder of AOL, first met J. D. Vance, author of «Hillbilly Elegy,» the best - selling book about the industrial decline of the Midwest, Mr. Case told him, «I really love the book but there is a part of it I don't love
Sure, I love to read books about automation and new ways to segment and target an audience, but if it doesn't lead to a behavior change in that audience, it's all for nothing.
«This book helped me realize that being authentic would help me find my customers... I began to get more customers I really loved to work with, I began to feel better about my personal brand and my positioning, and I felt confident that I could make any sort of adjustment that I needed to in the future.»
What I love the most about this book is that it doesn't just focus on linking but forming relationships with businesses in your industry.
It was his love for comedy which brought him to write a book called Get Rich Cheating, about how money makes us do unethical things.
Follow Jeff at @jeffersonbethke, learn more about his resources at http://jeffandalyssa.com and check out his new book «Love That Lasts: How We Discovered God's Better Way for Love, Dating, Marriage, and Sex» wherever books are sold.
I wish Kerry would write a short book to be given to all who are about to lose a loved one, maybe, for those who never showed love or understanding, it just might change them, hopefully, and make them a different person with much more understanding.
But to then derive from their conversations that to learn about God we shouldn't read any books or learn any theology but love each other is ridiculous.
I loved King's book about a society that becomes so backward, they elect a community organizer with no experience to run the country.I can't recall the name of it but it was a scary book.In the end, the same crazy people vote for him again while chanting» yes we can» like rabid wolves.
I was never one for reading books Boston, but I have watched many a television show about the Grrek and Roman God lineages and was downright in love with their televised nuptuals.
So here you quote a single verse that makes four claims about me, three of which I know to be flat - out lies and the fourth condemning a practice that is lauded repeatedly elsewhere in the same book (loving people).
With endorsements like the ones you have I am not worried about your success... and I love the cartoon on the book cover... soooooooooo perfect....
The book is really about the One God, the primordial necessity that explains our existence, reasoning, and loving.
So let's say this movie is about a woman whose life was shaped by love of her father; the making of the film Mary Poppins (as well as the writing of the book) is about her coming to terms with the truth about personal love and death and all that.
(I'm currently reading a book about the Reformation so your comments were right up my street) Mind you, Martin Luther King Junior was no saint either in his personal life, but we love that «I have a dream» freedon speech of his, don't we, and rightly so.
Given that time after time the discussion of priestly celibacy in the media and in many Catholic journals and books begins and ends with statements about the marriages of the apostles and the attempts to impose celibacy in the 12th centurymotivated by a desire to protect the Church's property and by a dualist denigration of marriage, it was definitely good news to link priestly celibacy with Christ and his loving.
But Love evinced a tough side also, recording a number of remarkably angry songs: the garage - punk classic «My Flash on You,» one the fastest versions of «Hey Joe,» a cover of «My Little Red Book» that ditches the lost - love vibe of the original, and finally «7 and 7 Is,» a breath - taking hardcore punk prototype from early» 67, complete with a nuclear explosion finale and lyrics about throwing one's Bible in the fireplLove evinced a tough side also, recording a number of remarkably angry songs: the garage - punk classic «My Flash on You,» one the fastest versions of «Hey Joe,» a cover of «My Little Red Book» that ditches the lost - love vibe of the original, and finally «7 and 7 Is,» a breath - taking hardcore punk prototype from early» 67, complete with a nuclear explosion finale and lyrics about throwing one's Bible in the firepllove vibe of the original, and finally «7 and 7 Is,» a breath - taking hardcore punk prototype from early» 67, complete with a nuclear explosion finale and lyrics about throwing one's Bible in the fireplace.
One of my greatest delights of parenting is holding a title out to a child with the words, «I remember loving these books when I was about your age.»
I've been hinting about the book on social media, but today I get to reveal the title and cover, both of which I love.
With all of this in mind, I'd love for you to try to tackle this question, which was asked of me in an interview for the Inspy Awards: Tell us about a book that epitomizes quality [Christian] faith - driven lit.
There are so many things that I love about this book and I know you will too.
He's the most talked about pastor this year, and he's finally having his say about Love Wins, the book which has seen him branded a hero in some quarters and a heretic in others...
When we finally acknowledge that books and lectures and sermons can not adequately contain what we want to say about God's love and God's mercy, we explode in doxology: «Now to him who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever.
Who's to say that he didn't write your Bible (and the Quran... and the Book of Mormon... and all of the rest of them), toss in a bit of sugar about love and kindness and eternal bliss, then set the hook, sit back and cackle about all of the perpetual fighting over it all.
Women from Latin America say the same: «The Bible is a book about life and liberation... The Gospels restore to women our human dignity as persons loved and cherished by God.
When the 5 - year - old asks you to tell her about what love is you can crack open an anatomy book and explain about the biochemical hormonal changes that happen in the brain when you fall in love (fact).
But the book is less than half - way finished... and if I can not prove the thesis to my satisfaction, I see no way out of the dilemma about how to reconcile the love of Jesus with the violence of Yahweh other than to say that in some way or another, the Old Testament is wrong in its portrayal of God.
My friend, if you'd read a book once in a while, you would know that Islam is about peace and love.
Reading all the books about 2012, and listening to all the doom and gloom sermons, attending all the prayer meetings about the end of the world, and watching the Discovery channel special about Mayan calendars and aliens from space and Egyptian pyramid tunnels, OR loving our neighbors, serving our spouses, teaching our children, working hard at our jobs, and helping where people are hurting?
The entire book of 1 John is engaged in this idea about good and evil, light and darkness, truth and error, and John is intent on showing his readers that based on who God is and what Jesus has done for all people, we can choose to live in love, light, and righteousness, rather than abide in hatred, darkness, and evil.
I read a great book about this subject... «Love is an Orientation» I do not agree 100 % with Marin, but I will tell you what..
Looks like it's going to be a good read I'm excited to be able to read this book I just recently read your book atonement of God and loved it I've also listen to your teachings on Genesis love that very much especially episode 43 when you talk about the voice of God in the garden that was so wonderful.
I don't know what your viewpoint is on someone being gay and a Christian, but let me suggest that you read his book before you talk about the «choice» Wesley Hill made to be gay (he didn't), or how his father was abusive or absent (he wasn't), or how Wesley should just «man up» and fall in love with a woman (he's tried), or get «cured» by reading the Bible and praying more (he probably reads the Bible and prays more than you or I).
In the book, I argue that it makes sense that if there's a God who loves and there's a God who created sex — which is an interesting idea in of itself — that what God has to say about this topic is important, and common sense actually supports the New Testament as it relates to sex.
In his new book, The New Rules for Love, Sex & Dating Stanley talks about why, in order to find the person we're going to spend the rest of our lives with, we should focus on being the person that our future spouse is looking for, as well.
On the other hand, W J. Fuerst writes: «It is fruitless to try to establish that this book teaches us about theology, or God's love, or even man's love.
One of the things I really appreciated about Jeff's book is that he points out through story after story that finding others to love and serve does not require us to go to a different country.
Below are some of the other contributors to this book, and what they have written today about The Practice of Love.
All this was over Bell's new book, «Love Wins: A Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived.&rabook, «Love Wins: A Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived.&raBook About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived.»
If we engage in the «de-mythologizing» of the Revelation to St. John the Divine, as we must also «de-mythologize» the creation stories in the book Genesis in the Old Testament, we realize that what is being said is that as human existence and the world in which that existence is set has its origin in the circumambient, everlasting, faithful Love that is nothing other than God — we recall Wesley's hymn, quoted a few paragraphs back, that «his nature and his Name is Love», and Dante's great closing line in The Divine Comedy about «the Love that moves the sun and the other stars» — so also the «end» toward which all creaturely existence moves is that very same Love.
Perhaps that's one of the reasons why I loved Rob Bell's book, What We Talk About When We Talk About God — the unabashed science of wonder particularly in quantum physics that he connects to the complexity and even ambiguity of God is so rare in non-academic religious publishing or thought.
I remembered Brennan Manning — the man who has translated the love of God in a way that I could receive it more than probably any other writer — was addicted to alcohol and I re-read up one of his last books before he died: «All is Grace: A Ragamuffin Memoir» where he vulnerably writes about what this battle has cost him, even as he experienced the unending and unconditional love of God in the midst of it, how he experienced regret and pain and loss alongside of the love and tenderness of God in this dependency.
My friend David — who many of you will recognize as the «cool and understated» philosopher who supplied one of the best quotes of my book on page 223 — loves Appalachia too and is passionate about protecting its natural beauty and its inhabitants.
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