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Not exact matches
«Jack Stack [president of Springfield Remanufacturing Corp. and an
early proponent of open -
book management] has this
great motto of sharing his kingdom with everyone,» says Grossman.
I've been using Shel's techniques, with
great results, since his
earlier book, Principled Profit And if it works for me, it will work for anyone!
Touchstone provides a forum where Christians of various backgrounds — Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox — can speak candidly with one another on the basis of a shared commitment to the
Great Tradition of Christian faith as revealed in the Holy Scriptures and set forth in the classic creeds of the
early church.The term «mere Christianity,» of course, was made famous by C. S. Lewis, whose
book of that title is among the most influential religious volumes of the past one hundred years.
A
book called Disinformation, co-written by General Pacepa and the American professor of law Ronald Rychlak (best known for his
book Hitler, the War and the Pope, a well - researched defence of Pius XII's record during the Second World War), which spells out these revelations at
greater length, is «dubious at best» — or at least, the bits written by Pacepa are: the reviewer NCR admits that «what Rychlak contributes, drawn from his
earlier work on Pope Pius, appears solid».
Now, I'm happy to admit that
early in our marriage Dan and I benefited from many of these
books and found
great, applicable advice within their pages.
All in all this is a remarkable and valuable
book, not only for the illustrations it offers of ancient rites, but also for the accurate accounts it offers of the way in which baptism was addressed by
early Christian writers from the New Testament to the fourth century, making
great use of Cyril of Jerusalem and John Chrysostom in the east and Ambrose and Augustine in the west.
Mormons accept the Bible as inspired (particularly the King James Version), yet they also claim that The
Book of Mormon is the Word of God, along with other writings from
early Mormonism such as The Pearl of
Great Price and Doctrines and Covenants.
As
early as the third century Clement of Alexandria spoke of this
book as a «spiritual gospel,» and this it has been through the centuries as Christians have loved it and been moved by it to
greater inward depths.
The
greatest interest of Wills's
book lies in his efforts to dismantle the «fake history» of the
early republic that he believes informs antigovernmentalism.
Religion surfaces in Blankenhorn's
book mostly to support his views, for example, that a main theme of the Hebrew scriptures is the establishment of patriarchal fatherhood or that the world's
great religions share a common marriage heritage that dates back to
early Egyptian and Mesopotamian society.
However, in the Postscript to the second edition (1970) of his
book and in other recent essays, Kuhn has clarified and in some respects altered his
earlier position; he now gives
greater attention to the control of theory by experiment and the role of criteria independent of particular paradigms.
Also outstanding in the trash department have been long articles by David Remnick, who had
earlier written a fine
book about the collapse of Soviet Communism in which he evidenced
great insight and respect for Jews and Judaism.
How It Worked: The Story of Clarence H Snyder and the
Early Days of Alcoholics Anonymous in Cleveland Ohio (NY: AA Big
Book Study Group, 1997), pp. 6, 71, 138, 157, 235; and the «
Great Physician» reference to Jesus Christ was in common use among other Pioneer AAs, by their New York mentor Dr. Silkworth, and their Oxford Group friends.
It has been characterized as a late
book, but as containing a
great deal of very ancient material, reflecting the folk religion of the
early Aryans, and as carried along, it represents the cultural lag of the Vedic people.
I had
great problems with that idea from Girard's
earlier books, and I am glad to see that he has backtracked.
If you want to familiarize yourself with what exact ways the
early Christians did church, this a
great place to start — right after the
book of Acts.
Bergson's
early books involved other serious mistakes; he tried hard to contribute to biology, whereas his
greatest talents were in psychology and anthropology.
What Brox has to say is accurate and up - to - date, but because the
book is arranged topically (church life and organization; conflicts, heresies, schisms; theological literature) the
great story and the vigorous personalities that make up
early Christian history remain on the periphery.
In his
book, Principles of Geology, 1830, Charles Lyell (1797 - 1875) burst through the preconceived opinions that had hindered
earlier geologists, and from the evidence he had amassed he showed that the earth had been in existence for a far
greater period than the Bible allowed for.
• Jesus After 2000 Years: What He Really Said and Did (Prometheus
Books 2001) • The
Great Deception: And What Jesus Really Said and Did (Prometheus
Books 1999) • Vi - rgin Birth: The Real Story of Mary and Her Son Jesus (Trinity Pr Intl 1998) • What Really Happened to Jesus: A Historical Approach to the Resurrection (Westminster John Knox Pr 1996) • Heretics: The Other Side of
Early Christianity (Westminster John Knox Pr 1996) • Resurrection of Jesus: History, Experience, Theology (Fortress Pr 1995) • Gerd Lüdemann on the Secular Web (online) • Gerd Lüdemann's Homepage (online)
The
books concerned were Augustine's on The Trinity, on God as threefold, and on The City of God, written in the
early years of the fifth century when the city of man, notably Rome, was looking to be shaky, texts still of
great interest to historians and theologians in the twentieth century.
And there was another element too, especially necessary; there was the Christian community, compounded (as Professor Knox himself has shown us in his notable
book The
Early Church and the Coming
Great Church) of «memory» and «the Spirit,» remembering the Lord and living in the new energy which his coming had released into the world.
We now know that there has been a
great deal of editing and re-editing of these
books, until it is not now always possible to say with certainty what is
early and what is late.
This being said, however, I must in all seriousness bemoan one very important omission, which seems to me to open the doors to those perplexing questions I referred to
earlier: there is no
greater and more moving passage about friendship than Augustine's description, in
Book IV of the Confessions, of his «very dear» (but unnamed) friend, an acquaintance from childhood, a fellow student and then fellow teacher of rhetoric.
Saturday 25th November is a yoga market, hosted by our friends at Indaba yoga studio in Marylebone, featuring yoga clothing & equipment, plus jewellery,
books & more —
great for some
early festive shopping!
I have been cooking up some plans to visit the bay area in
early / mid April to visit a
great friend, celebrate my birthday, and hopefully catch one of your
book signings.
Anyway,
great idea on the
early - bird / reader discount... Have to try to figure out how to do that in the
book launch!!
It's never too
early to read, and textured board
books are
great fun for your tactile baby.
She gains a
great deal of comfort and insight by reading Emily Rapp's
book, The Still Point of the Turning World, about parenting her son Ronan, afflicted with Tay - Sachs disease and fated to die in
early childhood.
They are especially
great for
early readers because they're made of cardboard and much sturdier than regular
books.
In this
book you'll find: Simple ways to
great family communication even when you're busy Easy ways to help kids cope when life throws them curve balls The secrets to working from the same page with your partner How to build a strong family culture so your family stays together How to get cooperation from your kids without tears, fears and bribery Why you must develop independence in kids from an
early age
Recommended to: This
book is
great for parents who want to start making memories
early on in their child's life.
Reading to your unborn baby also helps you slow down, relax, and experience the fun moments of
early parenting... all while enjoying the sweetness and simple lessons (which can be
great at grounding adults in times of stress) of a good picture
book.
A few of the problems with these dairy proteins are the high incidence of bovine protein intolerance associated with intestinal inflammation, bleeding, and diarrhea; the slow breakdown of these large proteins in the tiny system, preventing additional formula feedings as
early as they are needed for proper caloric intake; and the increased risk of developing childhood diabetes — the risk being
greater the
earlier cow's milk proteins are introduced (all of these topics are addressed elsewhere in the
book).
They are a
great choice for parents who are keen to introduce their baby to some educational
books from an
early age.
Children in
early ages enjoy a
book because they nibble on it, but starting a familiarity with
books early is a
great idea.
So why not start as
early as possible, and make it fun with some
great books to introduce babies and toddlers to food pictures, vocabulary and healthy choices?
Dedicated to protecting and nurturing the
early years of childhood, Before Five in a Row opens up the world of learning through
great books and creative play, and builds a solid foundation for more formal education to come.
«The
book offers readers of every political allegiance non-partisan ways to pull together in response to the
greatest crisis in a generation and prevent disaster,» stated publisher the Bodley Head
earlier this year.
Craig Covault, an aerospace journalist who has «covered every U.S. space launch since Apollo,» according to a statement from the
book's publisher, wrote an essay about Launch Complexes 40 and 41, two locations that had
great significance in the
early days of human spaceflight and that have been repurposed for new phases of human spaceflight.
Earlier this week I had the very
great pleasure of catching up with Lee Billings, the author of Five Billion Years of Solitude, a beautifully written and provocative new
book about the quest to find other Earths, other life in the universe.
But Bell also read in Born's
book that another
great of the interwar generation, the Hungarian mathematician and physicist John von Neumann, had published a proof as
early as 1932 demonstrating that hidden variables could not be made compatible with quantum mechanics.
Fischetti: The
early [assertion] in the
book about, I think it's being proved [out], [that] the earth really can't substantiate the resources that we're extracting from it or the waste that we're producing; and there's more studies that are coming out very recently even that are proving starting to put numbers on all of that, so the assertion is I think is that continued growth is not possible without
greater resource consumption and [waste creation].
Still going through the
book so may take a little time to get the balance right but feeling
great otherwise, psoriasis not flaming at the moment but too
early to say yet if its going into remission.
Another
early writing about internal cleansing with water is recommended and described in
great detail in The Essene Gospel of Peace (
Book 1, p 15 - 16).
This is a
GREAT time to work in specialty exercises like the ones Nick puts forward in his
book (it also goes back to the assistance work I was talking about
earlier).
The reality is that we're a busy bunch of people, and if we're truly serious about maximizing our quality of life, slamming down a quick protein shake so we can get to the office a little
earlier might mean we can leave
earlier, too, and get home in time for a date with the significant other, a hike at dusk, or an extra couple chapters on that
great book we've been meaning to read.
For those of you that follow her, you may recall her visit
earlier in the year at Tootsies where she was signing her new
book, Pret - a-Porter:
Great Ideas for Good Times and Creative Entertaining.
In a summer during the
early - to - mid sixties, I surreptitiously acquired a copy of a specific issue of Playboy — not for the pictures, though those were nice, but for an essay on The
Great Comic
Book Heroes, by Jules Feiffer.