Sentences with phrase «whole life books»

You haven't heard much about it yet, but the interest rates of today are bringing the big insurance companies to their knees, especially those with huge whole life books.

Not exact matches

While there's sometimes no substitute for lived experience, there are also plenty of books that can save you a whole lot of heartache by teaching you basic skills that lots of young people end up learning way later than they should.
It won't replace a real book, but the reader in your life will thank you when they realize the convenience of having a whole shelf's worth of titles in their bag.
The whole book is full of things you can do and say to make your work life easier.
How - to writer Jerry Buchanan once said, «When you sell a man a how - to book, you are not selling him paper and ink; you are selling him a whole new life
That's why the company acted as publisher for Brazier's first book, The Thrive Diet: The Whole Food Way to Losing Weight, Reducing Stress, and Staying Healthy for Life, and gave it the marketing push to help turn it into a bestseller.
The book, «Conscious Finance: Uncover Your Hidden Money Beliefs and Transform the Role of Money in Your Life,» written by Rick Kahler and Kathleen Fox, has a whole chapter dedicated to finding and working with advisors.
And thats simply because the book they live by, they have never read even a whole page on.
Let's not forget what and how America was suposedly started as a place of relgious freedom by the pilgrams (according to so called american history books) these religious people proceeded to rob & kill the Indians who saved their lives, take & kill Mexicans for land & gold & oil enslave a whole group of people as property for financial gain all under the guise of being good «Christians» (WHITE) and now perceive all «Muslims» (NON-WHITE) are evil unless proven otherwise.
In his introduction to that book, physicist John Wheeler writes that «a life - giving factor lies at the center of the whole machinery and design of the world.»
The Book of Bokonon has a whole bunch of cool tid bits to live by AND a creation story and since I'm a Bokononist, you have to take me seriously, now will you wait here why I go touch my feet with another bokononist, its a holy ritual.
I can now read all these other books, because my faith is anchored in this longing, this prayer that is made of the sum of my whole life's breaths.
As Eugene Peterson writes in Run With the Horses: The Quest for Life at Its Best: «We don't become whole persons by merely wanting to become whole, by consulting the right prophets, by reading the right book.
There are what appears to some, verses that appear to support Calvinistic doctrine, however, when the book is read as a whole (John) the overwhelming impression is «believe and live».
Even a cursory reading of the book of Acts demonstrates that a commitment to Jesus (in that day) was an introduction into a whole new way of life.
I already feel a little far away from the things that once took over my whole life, I remember it as if it were a life I lived once upon a time but I've lost touch with that person — remember when I was pregnant with our third and I had two little babies under four and I wrote that first book?
The whole book of Job shows God making life miserable for Job.
Hornbacker has now written a book about being bipolar (Madness: A Bipolar Life), a book about having anorexia (Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia (P.S.)-RRB-, a book that... I don't know... this one was last year, and you REALLY would've thought that this one should have summed the whole thing up (Sane: Mental Illness, Addiction, and the 12 Steps), and now this.
Scores of people, some of them among the brightest minds of the world, devoted their whole lives to study the religion books in the smallest details and they still didn't say they master it all.
His books include: God and the Celebration of Life; A Whole Person in A Whole World; and Loneliness: Understanding and Dealing with It.
I probably wouldn't now give his books to a brand - new believer, seeking to find a starting place in discipleship, for fear the new brother or sister might embrace the whole package — as some of us did with whomever it was that was influential in our early Christian lives, whether C. S. Lewis or J. I. Packer or John Stott or John Piper...
Second: to say that this particular book is true is to say that we can trust it, trust it as a guide to faith and life which provides not only specific claims about God's faithfulness and how we ought to live our lives in response to it, but also a way of understanding the whole world and a language in which to speak about that world.
I feel like I could live for the rest of my life on what we experienced that day — that, or write a whole «Love looks like» book about it!
He's written a whole book about it called Life Itself.
In my little book As I Lay Dying — the title is more indebted to Donne than to Faulkner, who may also be indebted to Donne — I write of Donne's embrace of life as a whole, an embrace that precludes the religious / secular dichotomy of what Mr. Kirsch persists in believing is «our secular age.»
If someone was born in Saudi Arabia, they would be Muslim and if they were born in the US, they would be Christian... It's up to them to figure out that religion is a crock before they waste their whole life worshiping a non-existent friend in the sky and believing in a book full of fairy tales... My favorite fairy tale is about the guy who was told not to look behind and was turned into a block of salt when he disobeyed the command and took a peak... lol... I was raised christian but I had too many doubts and questions especially after our scandalous pastor took the money that was raised to build a new church building and disappeared into thin air with the loot... lol... After I ditched religion, I had a peace of mind and I am still at peace...
Best swallow the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth — because he who adds or takes away one word from the Book of Life won't be in the Book of Life.
It is the whole life of a man from beginning to end, as written in the book of his life, which rises to God for judgment.
Some recount the things they've seen in life, some fill it with lies (there was this whole controversy accusing one book of being completely false I forget which one).
Theists believe in a supernatural, invisable being with no plausible or credible proof that he exists, they govern their whole lives around a book written in the 1st century by unreliable sources who probably wern't eevn their at the time, thus its all hearsay.Theists believe in fairytales and base their lives on wish thinking.Come on!
And if we review the book as a whole, we must judge that this excessive emphasis on the future has the effect of relegating to a secondary place just those elements in the original Gospel which are most distinctive of Christianity — the faith that in the finished work of Christ God has already acted for the salvation of man, and the blessed sense of living in the divine presence here and now.
«As I tore through the pages in this book, I realized I'd been waiting my whole life for Searching for Sunday.
They are basic to the whole movement, and far more important in their bearing upon the organisational life of the Mormons than either the Bible or The Book of Mormon, for it was in these successive revelations of the prophet that the growing movement took shape, and their most characteristic beliefs and practices were determined.
A book about the one commandment Jesus gave, by which we live and love like Jesus and fulfill the whole commandment.
but thats not what i'm talking about... i am discussing the god you claim to worship... even if you believe jesus was god on earth it doesn't matter for if you take what he had to say as law then you should take with equal fervor words and commands given from god itself... it stands as logical to do this and i am confused since most only do what jesus said... the dude was only here for 30 years and god has been here for the whole time — he has added, taken away, and revised everything he has set previous to jesus and after his death... thru the prophets — i base my argument on the book itself, so if you have a counter argument i believe you haven't a full understanding of the book — and that would be my overall point... belief without full understanding of or consideration to real life or consequences for the hereafter is equal to a childs belief in santa which is why we atheists feel it is an equal comparision... and santa is clearly a bs story... based on real events from a real historical person but not a magical being by any means!
I haven't gone near that book, I already know it's not my cup of tea... and your insight into it is exactly why... well, minus the God part... I don't subscrbe to our societal God but have been on a deep spiritual path my whole life.
«If this book is true,» he said, «then my whole life has to change.»
Nevertheless, it also alters the nature of the book, which becomes a tribute to the Franciscan life rather than a balanced presentation of religious life as a whole.
Their confidence in his continued life turned their dismay at Calvary into triumph, and without it some of the most characteristic elements in the New Testament — the radiant hope and joy of the whole Book, the Christ - mysticism of Paul, the shining reality of the eternal world in the Epistle to the Hebrews, and the enthusiastic acceptance of sacrificial hardship exhibited by the early church — are inexplicable.
Sometimes in the book, sinners, idolaters, and murderers live long and healthy lives, apparently with God's blessing, while at other times, one little mess - up causes God's wrath to fall upon whole generations of people.
With the approach of Updike's 50th birthday, and with the publication of this his 25th book, it is time to offer an assessment of his work as a whole: to trace his natively Lutheran vision of life as cast by God into an indissoluble ambiguity, to examine his treatment of death and sex as the two phenomena wherein the human contradiction is most sharply focused, to set this new novel in relation to the earlier «Rabbit» books, and to determine what is religiously troubling and compelling about Updike's art.
We will read the whole book of Genesis in the context of the faith of the people of Israel — a people who, as we have seen, deem their life to be the gift of Yahweh and their destiny the subject of his Word.
This is my favorite quote of the chapter... maybe even the whole book: «If we're more opposed, for instance, to what we take to be «bad language» and nude scenes and films about gay people than we are to people being blown up, starved to death, deprived of life - saving medicine, or tortured, our offendedness is out of whack.»
Initially, the people were skeptical, but over time, more and more people believed, until eventually, the whole town was convinced that this man and his book were from God and had the right to rule and control every element of their lives.
In his appreciative Foreword, the National Director of «Aid to the Church in Need», Neville Kyrke - Smith, calls the book fascinating and goes to the central issue in saying that Pope John Paul II's whole life and witness could be said to be like that of Our Lord Himself, often in the Garden of Gethsemane but translucent with the hope of the resurrection.
I assume that they come from privileged Christian homes, that they've been sheltered their whole lives, that they believe whatever their professors and pastors tell them to believe, and that they would judge me the second they knew what books were on my bookshelf.
In 1981, Crick published Life Itself, a whole book about that theory (7).
In his book The Hills Beyond, Thomas Wolfe declared: «The whole conviction of my life now rests upon the belief that loneliness, far from being a rare and curious phenomenon, peculiar to myself and to a few other solitary men, is the central and inevitable fact of human existence.»
Rich is also the author of two acclaimed books — The Hole in Our Gospel and Unfinished — that address the vocation of Christ - followers to live out the whole gospel, bringing the good news to a hurting world in not only word but also deed.
On the whole, 19th - century (German) Protestant scholarship, no longer able to affirm inherited christological doctrines such as atonement and parousia, preferred «the Jesus of history» before he became «the Christ of faith» (to use the title of D. F.Strauss's book - length review of Schleiermacher's Life of Jesus).
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