Sentences with phrase «readers of today»

Readers of today want connection to the content that goes deeper than a bookstore telling them what to read!
1500 - 2500 words seem to be the maximum readers of today prefer.
One for his team of MPs who, as observant readers of today's Guardian will have noticed, generated three of the first four stories on pages one and two.
My humble request is that each reader of today's market update does one thing today to help somebody else.

Not exact matches

He's become a contributor to publications including Forbes, USA TODAY, and Entrepreneur, and his content have been read by millions of readers.
In Jon Acuff's Do Over: Make Today the First Day of Your New Career, Acuff seeks to help his readers develop four important areas of their lives: relationships, skills, character and hustle.
Today, it's mostly credit and debit cards and the act of swiping or inserting cards into a chip reader.
Today, Canadian Business connects with its readers in ways the original Canadian Chamber of Commerce membership could never have dreamed, reinterpreting the magazine's original goals for each new generation, forever evolving in step with the always interesting, never dull world of Canadian business.
Graham — today the lead director of Facebook's board — benefited from the relationship too, learning from Zuckerberg about online initiatives that would engage Washington Post readers.
However, instead of furniture and interior design, the candidates offer readers the party's take on political challenges facing Spain today.
The Senate's epic fail surprises no one as interest rates on Stafford student loans double today, the end of Google Reader is nigh, Independence Day is predicted to be a legendary travel bonanza, acco...
But readers of this newsletter know that today's startups are tomorrow's Fortune 500 companies.
Authors today are turning to self - publishing to get their work into the hands of readers.
I should probably note at this point that I have been a staunch (and somewhat lonely) supporter of comments and the value of reader engagement since the days when I was the «communities editor,» or social media editor, at a major national daily newspaper in Canada in 2008, when anti-comment opinions and emotions in the newsroom were just as heated as they are today.
Readers of USA TODAY are affluent professionals who actively engage in conversations about products and the brands they like.
To my readers, I wanted to give you the most extensive and detailed guide of advanced SEO techniques that exists today.
A reader of my blog emailed that someone had bought 15,000 January 2016, 80 - strike put options on HYG today (Wed, 9/23).
Today Google has retired Google Reader joining a long list of other Google products that have been discontinued.
Today, the search giant includes mobile friendliness as part of its ranking algorithm, so to give readers what they want, content has to provide a better experience for mobile users.
In an «Ask Me Anything» session on Reddit Monday evening (Jan. 5), Musk told readers that the details of his Mars Colonial Transporter would be unveiled by the end of the year, and that the plan would be different from the Dragon capsules and Falcon 9 rockets SpaceX is flying today.
Extending its rich tradition of design leadership to the Web, nationalpost.com & financialpost.com, it delivers a more immediate, in - depth, and customizable news experience, with all the content and functionality today's online readers demand.
Zweig gives the readers a good understanding of how to apply Graham's principles to today's markets (and it seems that some things really do never change).
FLORIDA TODAY's Hurricane Irma coverage will be free for all readers, regardless of subscription status
There's been a noticeable influx of readers from forums like these, so I though I'd take some time today to talk about the writing and publishing process.
As modern, Western readers, we tend to think that when Peter and Paul reference «wives,» they must be thinking of «wife» as we understand that role / position today (we think Claire from «Modern Family») or that when they reference «children,» they must be thinking of little kids or teenagers (we think Haley, Alex, and Luke).
I've been a longtime reader of Caleb's blog and am thrilled to introduce him to you again today.
I was describing nakedpastor to someone today, and it helped me clarify a little more what it is about: I realize that some of its readers are people curious about the crazies like me...
Although he claims that Jesus is still relevant to us today, Cox devotes much of his book to convincing readers that Jesus» teachings were fully true only for his contemporaries.
Cox has written a theological manifesto that urges readers to see Jesus and his moral teachings in the way that Cox does» disconnected from the trappings and truth - claims of traditional Christianity and therefore relevant to our search for answers today.
But readers need to be cautious about the book jacket's claim that Ellis is «one of today's foremost Jewish theologians.»
Today Rachel Held Evans is kind to give away to one of my readers who wins the draw a free copy of her book Evolving in Monkey Town.
The reader today must come to his own decision on this matter, and it will have to be based very largely on his over-all picture of Christ in the gospels.
Likewise, Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique (1963) was important and influential in its day, but today's reader is more likely to notice such eccentricities as an astonishing chapter arguing that the postwar suburban home was «a comfortable concentration camp» that aimed at the «progressive dehumanization» of women.
The reader can easily see where the recurring theme of syneisactism and the attendant characterizations of the Catholic hierarchy eventually will lead as the account reaches the modern era and today's Church.
The clinical and officious formatting of many Bibles today does precisely the opposite, dampening any imaginative engagement with the biblical text and quickly exhausting the reader.
His discussion of several theological points is more assured than nuanced, and any biographer today owes his readers some insight into claims of the late Kathryn Lindskoog that a few of Lewis's posthumously published essays and fragments are inauthentic (and, not to put too fine a point upon it, forgeries).
Still, there are practical applications for followers of Jesus and readers of Scripture today:
Rollins instead advocates a more pre-modern approach to the biblical text, which requires a type of voluntary «second naïvete» on the part of today's devotional reader.
I'm not sure what exactly you're saying regarding the waffle, but, yes, all of scripture is in fact «cultural» — it is placed first and foremost within the cultural context of the readers (the original, intended recipients) and any proper understanding of it and interpretation of it in our culture today must first understand how it would have been received and interpreted by those it was written to.
Our task as readers is to remember and serve the intentions of those communities of faith who preserved these documents, to nourish the conviction that they are authoritative in our lives today, and most important, to communicate their worth as resources for our lives.
Perhaps most poignantly, one reader who read the book in light of the pedophilia scandals and the church's early secrecy about them says, tentatively but tellingly: «With all that is going on in the Catholic Church today, it makes you wonder if some of the fiction is actually true.»
In those latter comments, Rusty says he feels chastened by a reader's letter to the effect that, contrary to what Rusty may have suggested in the initial column, it is «indeed the case today that free market libertarians are the most likely people to dismiss the role of authority in human flourishing.»
News being what it is, even a conscientious reader of the New York Times can get only scraps of information about the state of mental health services today.
Personal attacks such as these — by today's standards a clear breach of civility — can strike the reader as harsh and perhaps contribute to Calvin's reputation as a «cold» thinker.
They reflect great insights into the Greco - Roman Mediterranean world and Jewish backgrounds of Jesus so that modern readers can better understand the biblical text, and what it means for today.
This book is about the major theological themes in the Book of Revelation and how modern readers can understand and apply this difficult book to our lives today.
My goal was to provide overviews that walk readers through the most important expressions and denials of Christian faith — not with a dry focus on dates and places, but with an emphasis on the living tradition of Christian belief and why it matters for our lives today.
One senses that today readers are confronting the world of the Old Testament (that is, the world presented by the text in its present form) for the first time and not being altogether sure they like what they see; or, if they like what they see, not being sure what all the historical - critical commotion is about to begin with.
This will not be the first time that First Thoughts readers have heard from me on the virtues of Mr. Lionel Trilling, but readers interested in learning more about one of America's greatest critics and intellectuals can check out my piece in today's Wall Street Journal....
I thought Evangel readers would appreciate knowing about my Christianity Today interview with James Davison Hunter, Professor of Religion, Culture, and Social Theory at the University of Virginia and author of To Change the World: The Irony, Tragedy and Possibility of Christianity in the Late Modern World (Oxford, 2010), which promises to be the most important book written on Christian cultural engagement in the last 50 years.
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