If the omniscience of God were limited, most
of everything in the books of Daniel and Revelation would be mere talk, mere guesses that may or may not be fulfilled; they would not be prophecies.
It is the «hole of being,» right in the middle
of everything in his book.
I don't write a ton of pork recipes, but I really wanted to make sure I included a little bit
of everything in this book.
Not exact matches
Brad Stone describes an early version
of Amazon's flywheel
in The
Everything Store (one
of my best
books of 2013):
Most authors think the purpose
of the introduction is to lay out and explain
everything the author will talk about
in the
book.
The organizations that do the best job
of encouraging a culture
of mastery are the ones with leaders humble enough to admit they don't know
everything and constantly pursue growth — the ones who openly discuss the
books they're reading, the classes they're taking and the areas
in which they seek to better themselves.
This
book goes way beyond this sort
of tactical application and explains what happens
in customers» minds when they're exposed to media, visuals, textual content... and virtually
everything that goes into making a brand successful.
«
Everything important depends on timing, but
in a sea
of how - to
books there's almost nothing on when - to,» Grant notes.
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.
The contrast she drew between American and Nordic attitudes toward life related to many themes
in her 2016 book, «The Nordic Theory of Everything: In Search of a Better Life.&raqu
in her 2016
book, «The Nordic Theory
of Everything:
In Search of a Better Life.&raqu
In Search
of a Better Life.»
It is the full text
of an article excerpted
in Tap Dancing to Work: Warren Buffett on Practically
Everything, 1966 - 2012, a Fortune Magazine
book,...
But I'm reading
everything but I read
books a lot and Mystic River you mentioned, I read that as a... I read a review
of it
in the paper and I thought that sounds good and I went out to Costco and got a quick copy
of it.
I recently had the privilege
of interviewing Adams, who is preparing for the softcover release
of his
book How to Fail at Almost
Everything and Still Win Big, which is currently available
in hardcover.
«Personality is
everything with a model,» says Paulette Ellison, a manager
in the model -
booking side
of Ford's business.
It's a
book that I revisit from time to time simply for its goldmine
of wisdom on life, writing, and
everything in between.
«Anyone who uses a bunch
of oil and has invested a lot
of money
in their equipment is a potential customer,» explains president Heather Hunt, a 22 - year veteran
of the company who has done
everything from answering the phones to managing the
books to running daily operations.
His
book not only helped answer those questions for my teenage self, but also instilled
in me new curiosities, such as «Is there a theory
of everything?»
The
book's short chapters address the economic underpinnings and challenges
of everything from climate change to global governance to the imbalance between savings and investment
in China.
His name is Hedley Bull, and the name
of the
book is «The Anarchical Society,» and,
in that title, it tells you
everything I needed to know.
Simon Sinek
in his golden circle and Start with Why
book says that once you know why you're doing business,
everything you do is just a demonstration
of that why.
She's also the host
of the Content Marketing Podcast and author
of the
book The Content Marketing Coach:
Everything You Need to Get
in the Game... and WIN!
Covering
everything from branding to bravado, there's bound to be something bankable
in this bundle
of business
books.
As I say
in my
book,
in a globalized world anything that affects the relationship between savings and investment
in one country — and nearly
everything affects that relationship — must have the opposite effect on the rest
of the world.
In addition to his own
book, he regularly writes for the Huffington Post and the Financial Times, provides commentary for other news outlets, does television appearances, speaking engagements, consultations with politicians and
everything else that comes from increasingly sharing a role as the «face»
of the company with founder Bill Gross.
That was no surprise given that Amazon is known for ushering
in sweeping changes whenever it steps into a new retail category — just ask traditional sellers
of everything from
books to clothes to kitchenware.
Colm O'Shea «As the
book states very early on, there is nothing new under the sun
in the art
of speculation, and
everything that was said then completely applies to the markets
of today.
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.»
im glad no - one believes
in demons - the devil or god — and they try to rationalise
everything — and discredit the bible — just shows me where we are at
in the holy
book — see if i remember, the end times come when «scorners and scoffers abound» when — wrong is called right and right is called wrong — and people would be married and given
in marriage as
in the daysd
of noah --- sodom and gammorah had gay issues badly - im just gonna laugh and alaugh and laugh when ya «ll burn - do me a favor — at least read the bible once — see what it says before you — go against it.
As we were reading the Hagaddah, Ludlow would stop intermittenly and try to tie
everything in it to the
Book of Mormon.
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?
Beyond the obvious fallacies
in Genesis, the first
book of the Bible,
everything else is open to interpretation by those who need it to say whatever they're supporting.
They are discrediting bible through their wit, intellectual, articulate, scientific and logical but sly arguments to convince every people here on earth that it's a 2000 year old hoax and
everything written
in it which includes the prophecies
in Revelations and the
book of Apocalypses that had prophecized their comming.
They are discrediting bible through their wit, intellectual, articulate, scientific and logical arguments to convince every people here on earth that it's a 2000 year old hoax and
everything written
in it which includes the prophecies
in Revelations and the
book of Apocalypses that had prophecized their comming.
The theist, on the other hand, it quite smugly certain that he has all teh answers to life, the universe and
everything explained neatly
in a single
book and reacts with hostility and derision when anyone refutes the contents
of said
book.
You don't have to believe
in the
Book of Mormon, but to believe that
everything is contained
in the Bible is not what the Bible itself even says.
• Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis, The Posthumous Memoirs
of Brás Cubas: Speaking
of books in Portuguese, one might as well add one by the towering genius
of Brazilian letters, who did
everything that would be attempted by «surrealist» or «magical realist» or absurdist writers a century later, and did it all much better; The Posthumous Memoirs is as fantastic and exuberant and hilarious as any
of his works, and is also surely the best novel written
in the voice
of a deceased narrator.
If there is a God and there is just as much for as against, But lets say there is a God and he made
everything Including you and He gets to make the rules because lets face it hes a lot bigger then you, So unfortunately he only wants those who believe
in him based on the information given, Lets look at the facts based on the
Book,, Some of his own angels turned on him and they see him every day... That had to hurt, So he decides With man he only wants those with the faith to believe based on His book and faith found thru the holy spirit, If you refuse to believe then he cant use you, cant trust you, so he will choose to toss you aside, Hey I understand It ai nt fair, Your important, Your Smart, But unfortunately hes bigger then you and he has the Juice, You either play by the rules or wait and see what not believing leads
Book,, Some
of his own angels turned on him and they see him every day... That had to hurt, So he decides With man he only wants those with the faith to believe based on His
book and faith found thru the holy spirit, If you refuse to believe then he cant use you, cant trust you, so he will choose to toss you aside, Hey I understand It ai nt fair, Your important, Your Smart, But unfortunately hes bigger then you and he has the Juice, You either play by the rules or wait and see what not believing leads
book and faith found thru the holy spirit, If you refuse to believe then he cant use you, cant trust you, so he will choose to toss you aside, Hey I understand It ai nt fair, Your important, Your Smart, But unfortunately hes bigger then you and he has the Juice, You either play by the rules or wait and see what not believing leads too.
After the meeting, Switchfoot's Jon Foreman said: «I would not have dropped
everything and
booked a ticket at the last minute to hear a social worker discuss the problems
in Africa... I am a selfish, star - struck, rich, American, Anglo - Saxon fan
of Bono.
And yet,
in book after
book, Glancy also offends many
of her fellow Native writers — whose
books she reads, as they read hers — by insisting that this absurdity, this intrusion
of the Gospel, writ large
in the history
of Native Americans, is the experience
of every tribe and every nation,
everything and everyone human.
If you are
in the midst
of suffering, if you find your faith withering, if you are questioning whether God is at work — or even present — as you wait for something
in your life to become beautiful, this
book will be a welcome reminder that God never stops his redemptive work... and that there is a time for
everything under heaven.
Everything else is just control and manipulation from ancient men
in a decrepit
book of fairytales.
Igor Stravinsky,
in his Poetics
of Music
in the Form
of Six Lessons (New York: Random House, Vintage
Books, 1959), pp. 66 - 68, writes
of the terror he feels at the thought that perhaps
everything is permissible.
I want to add to this list my own expressions
of thanks to those who made what might have been a difficult undertaking a rewarding one instead: Ruth Hopewell, who gave me the privilege
of editing the
book and consistently aided me
in doing so; the Directors
of Auburn Seminary, who granted a generous leave for my work on the project
in Atlanta; Jim Waits and Elizabeth Smith, who anticipated
everything I would need for the work to be done comfortably and efficiently; Lurline and James Fowler, who provided housing and friendship; Channing Jeschke, Candler's librarian, who made available and helped to arrange Hopewell's
books and papers; Brooks Holifield, who worked with me on the last and knottiest problems
in the text; and David Kelsey, on whose encouragement and sagacity I relied heavily when my assignment seemed most formidable.
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.
«There could be single cases that can be justified, for instance when a prostitute uses a condom, and this can be a first step towards a moralization, a first assumption
of responsibility, to develop again the awareness
of the fact that not all is allowed and that one can not do
everything one wants,» Benedict says
in the
book, «Light
of the World: The Pope, the Church, and the Signs
of the Times.»
To see the world
in the Christian way — which, as I say
in the
book, requires the eye
of charity and a faith
in Easter — is
in some sense to venture
everything upon an absurd impracticality (I almost sound Kierkegaardian when I say it that way).
Everything in God's creation is interrelated, and one can not separate protection
of the environment from protection
of humanity: Again citing Benedict, Francis observes that «the world can not be analyzed by isolating only one
of its aspects, since «the
book of nature is one and indivisible,» and includes the environment, life, sexuality, the family, social relations, and so forth.»
While I haven't read
everything on the subject, I know
of no other
book like it on the market, and it really helped answer some
of my own questions and provide me some direction as I seek to follow Jesus by loving and serving others
in my community.
BibleWorks is an all
in one, exegetical research program that does almost
everything you are taught to do
in class, but at the touch
of a button rather than with all the
book pulling and page turning.