Panentheism: The Other God of the Philosophers--From Plato to the Present Review

Panentheism: The Other God of the Philosophers--From Plato to the Present
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is easily the finest work to-date concerning panentheism, its philosophical roots (and amazing pedigree, though often missed), and its appropriation into numerous Christian theologies over the past hundred years. I have no doubt that Cooper's work will become a staple volume on the bookshelves of specialists in Theology Proper and that his efforts will be drawn upon for years to come. This is the best addition to my own theological library in a long time. Though Cooper is a theological classicalist (and Reformed), he is entirely fair and thorough with the many works and ideas of the panentheists. Panentheists themselves will find the notable architects and differing versions of the view fairly and thoroughly presented. Toward the end, Cooper offers some concluding, though relatively brief, thoughts concerning why he rejects the panentheistic construct. His diligent work and perspicacious style are to be highly commended. My only regret is that the work was not released while I was engaged in doctoral work concerning 'open theism' and its quasi panentheistic substrata!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Panentheism: The Other God of the Philosophers--From Plato to the Present



Buy NowGet 37% OFF

Click here for more information about Panentheism: The Other God of the Philosophers--From Plato to the Present

Read More...

Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself Review

Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Instead of spending hours of your time, expressing how anxious and depressed I was, and for so many years, I'd share a few things that might tell my story of recovery in a more concise mode.
I had everything but had nothing. I had been Senior Class President, Top 2% in the Country during College, successful in modeling and acting, selected as Volunteer of the Year for the State of Iowa and the list of "stuff" could go on an on. I was so empty inside myself that I didn't any longer know how I felt inside. I was losing any sense of who I was.
I'd become someone that functioned to serve, protect, nurture, encourage, forgive and love someone that couldn't love back. I was with the same person, in a marriage, for almost 5 years, and woke up one morning and realized that the person next to me was a stranger who didn't know the real me. The person that my life revolved around, the person that I chose to take care of and "cover" for, just liked having me around so I could pick up the pieces and paint a picture of a relationship and a family that was like "Ozzie and Harriet" so that others would think that everything was just fine. I can't stand the word "fine" anymore. Nothing in my life was fine and it wasn't until I hit bottom and read "Codependent No More:How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself", that my life began to change. The book answered all of my questions and caused me to look deeply at myself and my situation and evalute how sick I was. Yes, I was the sick one in the relationship too.
I thought that I was doing everything right or doing what was right for my relationship. But I didn't ever consider that my own personal cup was empty and the only person who could fill it with healthy things was me. I didn't know that I was controlling others as I only saw myself as a caring and loving person. What had happened is that I went overboard-WAY overboard to the point that I had stopped eating, started using pills to medicate my pain and refused to make changes in my life.
I was scared. I didn't want to be alone in life. What I didn't realize is that I was already alone. I wanted to love and be loved. After reading this incredible book, I realized that I wasn't being loved. I was being used and abused and I needed to hit this emotional bottom before I would accept help. My therapist advised me to purchase "Codependent No More", by Melody Beattie AND to read it. I almost felt odd going into the self-help are of the book store. Little did I know that the healthiest place in any book store is the aisle that reads "Self Help"!
I owe my life to this book and I thank all of the wonderful people who contributed to the stories in this book, that allowed me to move out of my relationship and to enter a long recovery period. I am still in the care of a therapist. Sometimes I act in a codependent fashion. The difference, however, is that I now see red flags that prevent me from getting too deep into relationships that I reach a point where I lose myself.
I offer this review to you as a gift. May this book help you, no matter what your circumstance, and may you take hold of your life again. You deserve to learn how to care for yourself. You deserve to be loved and to learn how to accept the beauty that comes with a healthy relationship.
My Warmest Regards to ALL!
Peter Cannice
Scottsdale, Arizona
Email: Horsepete@aol.com


Click Here to see more reviews about: Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself

Is someone else's problem your problem? If, like so many others, you've lost sight of your own life in the drama of tending to someone else's, you may be codependent--and you may find yourself in this book.
The healing touchstone of millions, this modern classic by one of America's best-loved and most inspirational authors holds the key to understanding codependency and to unlocking its stultifying hold on your life.
With instructive life stories, personal reflections, exercises, and self-tests, Codependent No More is a simple, straightforward, readable map of the perplexing world of codependency--charting the path to freedom and a lifetime of healing, hope, and happiness.
Melody Beattie is the author of Beyond Codependency, The Language of Letting Go, Stop Being Mean to Yourself, and Playing It by Heart.


Buy NowGet 40% OFF

Click here for more information about Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself

Read More...

Preaching from the Old Testament Review

Preaching from the Old Testament
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The author of these thirty-two short chapters begins and ends with the assumption that problems we experience with the Old Testament are our problem, not the Bible's. This subordinating of the Bible reader to the well-weathered book he holds in his hand opens doors, not to forced harmonisations of problematic passages, but to fresh reappraisal of difficult texts on their own terms.
A clue to the author's approach to preaching is found at the start, for in between her introduction and the difficult texts she selects from 'Narratives and Law', 'Writings', and 'Prophets and Lamentations' comes a first chapter entitled 'The Holy One of God'. It contains the programmatic statement that the essential thing to be said about great preachers is that they 'talk mostly about God and not about human problems'. This statement then gives way to some of Achtemeier's own 'talk about God'. This comes in the form of a brief definition of and apology for the God of the Old Testament, who turns out to be somewhat different than the nasty-minded death-dealer of some popular belief. The Holy One of Israel is, in the end, the God who saves. Here, Achtemeier is framing the more atomistic discussions of particular texts which follow in a meta-narrative that will provide sense to and context to each one of them.
Having prepared the frame, Achtemeier plunges into her chosen texts, beginning with 'He shall rule over you', of Genesis 3.16. This first example is instructive for her approach to other texts. Each chapter has two parts, 'Plumbing the Text' and 'Shaping the Sermon'. This pattern becomes helpfully familiar to the reader as one moves through the book. It signals the author's methodology for moving from text to sermon. For Achtemeier, one begins with the text, allowing it to define and address its own concerns.
Her two-part presentation works like this: first, she locates the difficulty within its context, which by itself dissolves some of its scandal ('That such domination over the female was not the Creator God's intention in the beginning is clear from Gen. 2.') Second, she engages with her supposed audience, bringing contemporary issues under the light of the biblical text she analyses. Following this, she sometimes ventures outside the 'Plumbing/Shaping' format and into New Testament passages which attend to the same issues raised by her Old Testament text. Occasionally, she has recourse to moderately critical stances which illustrate how scholars deal with matters that she treats in this book at an intentionally more popular level. In the case of Genesis 3 and gender roles, she offers that the Pastoral Epistles are 'recognized by all but conservative scholars to be Pauline pseudepigrapha' and are concerned with intensely local issues. Achtemeier allows herself to be understood to mean, though she does not explicitly say so, that a pseudepigraphic New Testament text is less determinative for modern readers than an authentically Pauline one might have been. However, she has no time to parse the details of her occasionally broad-brush sketchings of the critical landscape. It is not her intention to do so, and readers who expect more on this count will be disappointed.
Her main point is usually contextual. If apostolic instruction in the Pastoral Epistles appears to contradict this point, further information will help lower the profile of that tension. The local leaders behind the rudely subordinationist texts in I-II Timothy and Titus were dealing with women who had been seduced by Gnostic heretics. Those shepherds would certainly not want such individuals teaching in the church. What is more, they were no hardened misogynists, for 'we also would not!'.
In this way, Achtemeier weaves text and context into a whole which adds greater depth to each and repeatedly draws the reader and his generation into the picture. If this also resolves some of the perceived difficulty of the text itself, then that passage has become more amenable to productive preaching. This the objective of her book.
An example in addition to Genesis 3 is suggestive. If there is a text with more a more compelling history in Jewish and Christian reflection than Genesis 22, is difficult to say which one that might be. The Akedah, or 'Binding of Isaac' is rich with pathos and ripe for dissent. The divine request for human sacrifice, the willingness of a father to murder (or 'offer', as the text might prefer to say it) his own son, and the absence of Sarah at such a family-shaping moment practically beg for comment and/or complaint.
Achtemeier is methodologically explicit in a way that will endear her to her more cautious readers and disillusion those who would deconstruct a text along just such seams and silences: 'We should not speculate about what the text does not say.' She also draws her reader into the passages rather remote personae: 'In short, Abraham and Sarah are spasmodic believers, who do a lot of questioning of God, as we ourselves often do.' There is also a reserved theological and pastoral reflection: 'We must not think, however, that God's test of our trust is behind every single affliction that we suffer. In the Scriptures, God tests his servants when his purpose is at stake.' And then once more, Achtemeier follows the resonances that make up what theologians with some hesitation still call 'typology' into the New Testament. Her phrasing alludes to her prior discussion of the Genesis text's intimacies and echoes the cadence of the Hebrew narrative itself: 'Surely, in the story of Jesus we have the picture of a Father and a Son, a Son and Father, going both of them together to Moriah.'
The collecting and explanation of difficult biblical texts constitutes a genre, of which this book is just one exemplar. One thinks, for example, of the various entries of Walter Kaiser, Jr., who must certainly be the modern dean of the discipline and the master of making the rough places smooth. Practitioners of the task sometimes employ assumptions and methodologies that are more conservative than those of Achtemeier, as do both Kaiser and Gleason Archer. It is essentially a commitment to the Bible's coherence that generates a concern to explain its difficulties. The result is that this genre has little representation on the more critical extreme of the interpretative spectrum.
Reading through Elizabeth Achtemeier's PREACHING HARD TEXTS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT, this reviewer is left with two unfulfilled wishes. First, to converse with her, for her hints and allusions leave so much unsaid, yet her turn of a phrase leaves this reviewer with no doubt regarding her mastery of the critical discussion surrounding her chosen texts, a conversation that she summarises but will not detail. Second, to hear her preach, for her sections on 'Forming the Sermon' are evocative of real sermons well preached and of a sensitivity to the soul of her listener, now turned reader. Sadly, neither of these options is possible, for Dr. Achtemeier died during the preparation of this review.
For those wishing quick resolution of biblical difficulties, this book will disappoint, as it must. But for those wishing that their reading of those texts knew further depth and texture, as for those wanting to know how to nudge a fascinating biblical text in the direction of productive proclamation, it will be a treasure. It is not, one hastens to say, a treasure of secret manoeuvres for cutting the Gordian knot, but rather an inventory of models for preaching through, in spite of, and sometimes by means of the very difficulties which the Bible unsparingly presents us.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Preaching from the Old Testament



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Preaching from the Old Testament

Read More...

The Winning Investment Habits of Warren Buffett & George Soros Review

The Winning Investment Habits of Warren Buffett and George Soros
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I am surprised that this book doesn't get the attention that it so rightly deserved. This is indeed a hidden gem! I have read dozens of investment books over the years and this book definitely belongs to my all-time top 5 must read. The writing is simply amazing with investment advices that are clear, succint and easily applicable to our own investment situations.
The book caters to a broad audience with investment advices that will prove beneficial to even the most seasoned investors. Beginners will love the book's approach detailing a step-by-step mental checklist to go through when making investment decisons. I am truly impressed by the author's careful research of coming out with 23 winning habits employed by the world's most successful investors including Warren Buffett and George Soros. I always thought that Warren is a true long-term investor and business owner whereas George is a amazing speculator taking advantages of current market conditions. Their investment philosophies must be worlds apart. Boy, was I wrong. As the author points out, they both have the same 23 winning investment habits as they go thru the same mental checklist when making investment decisions! This book is indeed a revelation.
I won't spoil the party by telling you what the 23 winning habits are. But I promise that each page is a head-turner and you will learn so much and improve your investment record up a notch for every habit that you acquired and practiced. It is one of those rare investment books that I have read cover-to-cover for a great many times and still find the urge to refer back to it. I am sure you will too!


Click Here to see more reviews about: The Winning Investment Habits of Warren Buffett & George Soros

Warren Buffett, Carl Icahn, and George Soros all started with nothing---and made billion-dollar fortunes solely by investing. But their investment strategies are so widely divergent, what could they possibly have in common?As Mark Tier demonstrates in this insightful book, the secrets that made Buffet, Icahn, and Soros the world's three richest investors are the same mental habits and strategies they all practice religiously. However, these are mental habits and strategies that fly in the face of Wall Street's conventional mindset. For example:-Buffett, Icahn, and Soros do not diversify. When they buy, they buy as much as they can.-They're not focused on the profits they expect to make. Going in, they're not investing for the money at all.-They don't believe that big profits involve big risks. In fact, they're far more focused on not losing money than making it.-Wall Street research reports? They never read them. They're not interested in what other people think. Indeed, Buffett says he only reads analyst reports when he needs a laugh.In The Winning Investment Habits of Warren Buffett & George Soros you can discover how the mental habits that guided your last investment decision stack up against those of Buffett, Icahn, and Soros. Then learn exactly how you can apply the wealth-building secrets of the world's richest investors to transform your own investment results.

Buy NowGet 33% OFF

Click here for more information about The Winning Investment Habits of Warren Buffett & George Soros

Read More...

Mastering the World of Marketing: The Ultimate Training Resource from the Biggest Names in Marketing Review

Mastering the World of Marketing: The Ultimate Training Resource from the Biggest Names in Marketing
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The winning streak continues.
Since everyone sells, the first book - Mastering the World of Selling: The Ultimate Training Resource from the Biggest Names in Sales - in the ongoing (I expect) Mastering The World Of ... series was across-the-board valuable.

Hot on its heels, Mastering the World of Marketing: The Ultimate Training Resource from the Biggest Names in Marketing broadens the business knowledge base for everyone who markets. And that's everyone as well, right?
It puts the best 21st Century thinking of over 50 of the sharpest marketing minds out there today at your fingertips.

You get scores and scores of read-`em-and-reap secrets & strategies, easy-to-implement tips & tactics such as:

... 7 specific gratitude-as-a-marketing-strategy ideas to adopt (page 69)
... The A-B-Ts of great marketing (page 201)
... Master marketer Jack Trout channeling the legendary Rosser Reeves to reveal how you can differentiate ANYTHING (page 210)
... Dreadful marketing ideas to avoid (page 142)
... What makes things go viral (page 107)
... The 5 most important words on your website (page 213)
... The fascinating Guy Kawasaki's four methods to be fascinating (page 65)
... Twitter for business: A Newbie's field guide (page 46)
... 21 creative ways to increase your Facebook fan base (page 164).
And, as the brilliant infomercial marketers have taught us all, there's more.
Much more.
Look, it's a classic marketing observation. But when it's true, it's true:
Just one idea from one single item will pay for Mastering the World of Marketing: The Ultimate Training Resource from the Biggest Names in Marketing many times over.
No doubt Mastering the World of Marketing: The Ultimate Training Resource from the Biggest Names in Marketing and the companion volume Mastering the World of Selling: The Ultimate Training Resource from the Biggest Names in Sales belong in every business and personal library.
Bonus memorable-marketing strategy: Order copies of each book to share with everyone you work and do business with (except your competition, of course) and they'll thank you, too.
Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Marketing
8 Depot Square
Englewood, NJ 07631
[...]

Click Here to see more reviews about: Mastering the World of Marketing: The Ultimate Training Resource from the Biggest Names in Marketing



Buy NowGet 38% OFF

Click here for more information about Mastering the World of Marketing: The Ultimate Training Resource from the Biggest Names in Marketing

Read More...

ProBlogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income Review

ProBlogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I picked upProBlogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income after blogging for a litle over two years. I've been doing it as a hobby because I love writing and photography, but admittedly haven't thought much about monetizing it.
For me, this book served as a good introduction to how to make money from blogging, both directly and indirectly. However, its focus is a little more broad. It coves everything from choosing a topic to write about, to setting up your blog, to making money. It mixes information and examples with exercises that challenge the reader to apply what they are talking about and use it to inform their own blog.
Because of its broad focus, I think it would be the most useful to someone who is brand new to blogging. I still found it very informative as someone who has been blogging for awhile. However, I did find myself skimming through the pages on setting up your blog because mine has long been set up. However, I thought their instructions were very straight foward and clear and definitely would have been helpful to me if I had stumbled upon them when first starting my blog. They also provide some great tips on deciding what to write about and choosing a domain name.
The content specific to monitization is good but should really be used as a primer. As others have mentioned, much of this content can be found on the ProBlogger blog or elsewhere on the internet. However, the beauty of this book is that it is condensed and all available in one place. No reason to go digging. That said, it is really just the tip of the iceberg so if you are looking for one book to cover everything you will wind up disapointed. I still don't believe I know everything about monitization, nor did I expect to when reading this, and expect to still read more on SEO as a follow up. There are also no secret, magic strategies here. If you are looking for a get rich quick solution this is not it.
Overall, I enjoyed this book and it met my expectations. It was a great first read on how to monetize my blog, but I'm still planning on reading other resources to continue to get smart.

Click Here to see more reviews about: ProBlogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income

A complete how-to from two of the world's top bloggers
Thousands of aspiring bloggers launch new blogs every day, hoping to boost their income. Without solid advice from experts, most will fail. This bestselling guide, now fully revised with new and updated tips and tricks from two of the world's most successful bloggers, provides the step-by-step information bloggers need to turn their hobby into an income source or a fulltime career.
Earning a solid income from blogging is possible, but tricky; this book details proven techniques and gives aspiring bloggers the tools to succeed
Even novices will learn to choose a blog topic, analyze the market, set up a blog, promote it, and earn revenue
Offers solid, step-by-step instruction on how bloggers make money, why niches matter, how to use essential blogging tools and take advantage of social media and content aggregators, what a successful blog post should include, how to optimize advertising, and much more

Written by two fulltime professional bloggers, the updated edition of ProBlogger tells you exactly how to launch and maintain a blog that makes money.

Buy NowGet 45% OFF

Click here for more information about ProBlogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income

Read More...

The Imperfectionists: A Novel (Random House Reader's Circle) Review

The Imperfectionists: A Novel (Random House Reader's Circle)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The Imperfectionists is flat-out one of the most enjoyable debut books I've read. This book has it all: writing that's so brilliant and astute that it's hard to believe this is Mr. Rachman's freshman effort, highly original and authentic characters, and a very timely theme: the demise of the printed newspaper.
The novel -- set in Rome -- is focused on the personal lives of various news reporters, executives, copy editors, and (in one case) a reader. Each chapter focuses on one individual and is a story all its own (think: Olive Kitteridge or In Other Rooms, Other Wonders); together, the whole is greater than the part of its sums and represents the trials, tribulations, and occasional rewards of those involved with an international English language newspaper.
All of these multi-faceted, interwoven stories sparkle in different ways. There is Lloyd, the down-on-his-luck Paris correspondent who is willing to play his own son for a byline. There's Arthur, the obituary writer and son of a famous journalist who sits on his laurels before his life is transformed by a heart-rendering tragedy. There's Abby -- aka Accounts Payable -- the financial officer who finds that one of her firings comes back to "bite" her in a most unexpected way. There's Herman, the overly hefty pussycat of a corrections editor with an 18,000-plus style guide he calls "The Bible"; woe is the unwitting writer who violates it! And Kathleen, the imperious and workaholic editor-in-chief who learns things about herself from a past lover that she would rather have not. And, in one of the most laugh-out-loud humorous of the stories, there's Winston, the naive Cairo stringer who is manipulated by his competitor Snyder, a middle-aged man with an over-the-top ego.
These and other "imperfect" characters come alive for the reader, often in unexpected ways. The situations portrayed are as real as life itself; it's obvious that Mr. Rachman cares about his characters and never sets them up as straw men to make a point or for comic relief. Between each chapter, the back-story of the newspaper is established, along with the everyday gripes of the employee -- a pitch-perfect backdrop for current events. The Imperfectionists is, in turn, poignant, strongly imagined, and endearing. I can't imagine it not being a winner.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Imperfectionists: A Novel (Random House Reader's Circle)



Buy NowGet 40% OFF

Click here for more information about The Imperfectionists: A Novel (Random House Reader's Circle)

Read More...