I am an avowed Kindle user... who is ALSO one of the library -
book loving people.
Not exact matches
«As a first - time, young female founder who quickly grew from three
people on a couch to a team of ten, we
love how this
book clearly outlines so many tactical approaches to communication, being a good leader, and building trust on the team.»
In her
book, The Myth of the Nice Girl: Achieving a Career You
Love Without Becoming a
Person You Hate, Hauser tells Jessica Abo why being nice matters in the workplace and how it's possible to be both kind and successful.
«I
love books about
people coming into their vocations, and this haunting memoir by musician Patti Smith brilliantly evokes a time and place in New York City, as she and Robert Mapplethorpe began to build artistic lives for themselves,» says Rubin of this one.
I have a personal deep
love for
books and invested my entire life in building a platform for
people who
love books or write
books called Reader's Legacy.
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.
But according to interviews with more than a dozen
people, Mr. Houston — a private man with a
love of 1990s rock and business
books — built his company with an easygoing management style and a dry sense of humor, which helped him deal with the bumps along the way.
GR: Many
books about startups focus on technology companies; by contrast, you focus on small businesses started by
people creating companies around something they
love to do.
If I wrote a
book,
people probably would not believe what I have experienced and how I was blessed by things that might have destroyed me because I had a praying aunt who was everything a Christian is supposed to be — and because God
loves me.
And, I wish
people who have never studied the bible and the qu «ran to stop and learn the truth... both
books are telling the same story of God's
love and they both have been used to kill and enslave
people.
Whenever
people try and turn that
book into a law
book, I have to remind them of the other side... the payoff side... the rescue story side... the
love story side.
Of course the
book will also be bought by, and greatly enjoyed by, the
people who
love GKC.
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.
A lot of
people are almost shocked that someone who's part of a church that really does
love and leverage technology would write this
book.
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.
At the time of death, there are no
books or philosophy, or even religious teachings... It's just you and your
loved ones, alive or dead, but only the closest
people in your life.
I am not the most religious of
people, but I do believe in God, and Jesus... but many
people seem to forget that God's SON sacrificied himself for our sins... in my
book, a SON is part of a FAMILY... God put us on this earth to be of free will and to make our own way...
Love being the biggest part of that way... we love God and we love Jesus... but we are also all part of his FAMILY... He made us all to be part of a unit that has hope and faith and love... we were meant to procreate... so what does it matter if a person who is dying does not automatically think of God, but of their loved o
Love being the biggest part of that way... we
love God and we love Jesus... but we are also all part of his FAMILY... He made us all to be part of a unit that has hope and faith and love... we were meant to procreate... so what does it matter if a person who is dying does not automatically think of God, but of their loved o
love God and we
love Jesus... but we are also all part of his FAMILY... He made us all to be part of a unit that has hope and faith and love... we were meant to procreate... so what does it matter if a person who is dying does not automatically think of God, but of their loved o
love Jesus... but we are also all part of his FAMILY... He made us all to be part of a unit that has hope and faith and
love... we were meant to procreate... so what does it matter if a person who is dying does not automatically think of God, but of their loved o
love... we were meant to procreate... so what does it matter if a
person who is dying does not automatically think of God, but of their
loved ones?
Check out the popularity of Rob Bell's
book Love Wins: A Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person WhoEver Lived as an exam
book Love Wins: A
Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person WhoEver Lived as an exam
Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every
Person WhoEver Lived as an example.
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).
This
book sounds like the ideal read for
people with curious minds, I would
love to receive that autographed copy, but I think maybe George Porter should have it as he does have a curiouser mind than I do.
Holding hands with a special someone, getting a hug, giving a hug, taking a nap, reading a good
book, working out, knitting something, taking a good picture, baking something for someone, sitting and talking with
people I
love — all of these things bring me joy and leave me feeling content.
The other
book (Who Walk Alone, by Margaret Evening, 1974) speaks of the gifts, sensitivity and
loving natures characterizing many homosexual
persons and includes this statement:
In his powerful
book The Non-Violent Cross James Douglass makes a great deal of the resurrection, but for him the resurrection is only a symbol of oppressed
people's awakening to the power of nonviolence: «Man becomes God when
Love and Truth enter into man, not by man's power but by raising him to Power, so that revolution in love is revealed finally as the Power of resurrection» (pp. 23 -
Love and Truth enter into man, not by man's power but by raising him to Power, so that revolution in
love is revealed finally as the Power of resurrection» (pp. 23 -
love is revealed finally as the Power of resurrection» (pp. 23 - 24).
Or is this one of those forums for
people who merely
love to discuss religion, sort of like
people who
love to discuss carpentry, read
books on carpentry, and argue carpentry, but have never made anything in their lives?
The official publication of the Christian Booksellers» Association recently carried an article on trends in religious publishing which predicted more
books on homosexuality «down the road (maybe five years or so)» and noted that just as there has been evidence of more compassion toward divorced
persons, «Christians in the future will be saying homosexuality is still wrong but God
loves homosexuals and values them as
persons» (Bookstore Journal, January 1976).
Then I read Donald MIller's
book «Blue Like Jazz» and it flipped my trajectionary around from trying to know and debate a perfect arguement and win
people over through theological submission, to wow, God not only
Loves me, but He likes me?
But instead of being devastated, Goff laughed at the thought of the thief receiving a hundred phone calls a day from
people who read his first
book,
Love Does (in which he encouraged readers to call him).
In the graciousness of the
book (something often lacking when
people engage Emergent, no names but...), in its passionate for the Scriptures, in its understanding that true faith shows itself in
love, in its acceptance of the many things postmodernism has going for it without capitulating to todays culture, and especially in the willingness to both take on and unite both sides, Wittmer has written something here to be commended for, and something that all believers no matter what side they lean toward would do well to read.
1) This is not a particularly hospitable place for agnostics 2) Nothing would crush my parents more than learning that their daughter has walked away from the faith 3) I have a
book deal with a Christian publisher 4) I want to keep my Christian friends 5) My doubts come and go, so there's no reason to unnecessarily drag the
people I
love through my drama 6) If I fake it maybe I can convince myself that everything's okay
This is why I would sooner recommend The 5
Love Languages to prospective couples than one of the myriad of Christian
books that attempt to prepare
people for marriage by basing advice on gender stereotypes.
The boxes are filled with food, candles, cookies, some of our favorite Christmas
books, Christmas ornaments, and numerous other items which we hope will help this lady and her daughter have a slightly better Christmas, and to know that there are
people around her who
love her and want to help care for her.
Consider starting a
book club or hosting a dinner party in which you can discuss the ideas in
Love Wins with a variety of
people coming from a variety of different perspectives.
Bread & Wine: A
Love Letter to Life Around the Table with Recipes by Shauna Niequist — This is an advanced copy as the
book hasn't released yet but
people.
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.
Love Wins (Collins), a
book in which Bell made a defence of the view that all
people would one day be saved through Christ, sold hundreds of thousands of copies.
His
books make clear that even when the ailing
person has no preferences left, the family that
loves her still might.
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.
For these reasons and more, I highly recommend this
book not only for
people experiencing a crisis of faith but for
people who
love and care for someone experiencing a crisis of faith and don't know how to respond.
With this in mind, I recently requested an advance review copy of Rob Bell's new
book Love Wins: Heaven, Hell and the Fate of Every
Person Who Has Ever Lived.
Please for the
love of whatever God you believe in stop playing victim like CNN is out to get your religion and convert
people away, you just sound like a lunatic waiving a
book.
It was the
book, taken as a whole, held up against history, held up against decency and hope, held up to the
person I desired to be... I had to choose to cling to belief despite all of that and continue to fail to be a
person of compassion and
love or to begin to let go of that belief and make room in my heart for compassion and
love.
Through a series of brief questions at the end of his
book, Sigmund invites liberation theologians to seek ways of fusing capitalist market «efficiency» with the «preferential
love for the poor,» to consider how private property is not always oppression but may in fact free
people from it, to develop liberalism's ideal of «equal treatment under the law,» to nurture the «fragile new democracies» in Latin America, and, finally, to develop «a spirituality of socially concerned democracy, whether capitalist or socialist in its economic form,» rather than «denouncing dependency, imperialism, and capitalist exploitation.»
Doomsdayers aren't hurting Christianity, Mr Jeffres, as much as
people like you are; you stole
books from the Wichita Falls public library because they were trying to teach the children of gay
people that their parents might be normal,
loving human beings, and you accompanied it with a media campaign that raised $ 1 million that same year for your church through bigoted, close - minded sermons.
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.
In her latest
book, How to Fix a Broken Record, she shares a variety of stories from her own life like learning her worth, learning to
love herself to learning to say no to
people and growing in her relationship with God.
For us (the
people of the Western World) the Bible is a
book of
love: In his
love God sent his eternal Son Jesus Christ to deliver us.
Actually Brehvik does not consider himself a christian in his words, «in the strictest sense», so the first part of your point is moot... Secondly I think a fairer statement would be that not «all» muslims are violent extremists, as many who don't live in western countries are, as their
book does instruct them to kill any and all who do not procalim allah as the one god and mohammed as his prophet... As far as having extreme passion for one's beliefs, if someone was truly to be an «extreme» christian that
person would be completely
loving as this was Jesus» command to
love both God and everyone... to take that to the extreme would mean «extreme»
loving, like the radical kind of
love that caused Jesus to endure the cross for the sins of us all... includinig the man who committed this atrocity and yes any and all of the muslim's who have committed similar things.
You said in the article that
people were mean and that Jesus
loved everyone and this led to you reading
books by
people branded heretics and it changed your view on CHristianity and how you read the Bible..
Elhanan Rosenbaum's «farewell» to his son at the end of the
book makes the point: «A man like you, Malkiel, can
love his
people without hating others.