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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian life & practice > Christian religious instruction
Spiritual masters through the ages have devised methods different
than those of science for investigating the great mystery of nature
by, for example, immersing themselves in it, making use of silence,
stillness, and solitude. The scientific and spiritual quests have
been the two great quests of humanity, but somehow a feeling has
developed that science is antagonistic to spirituality. Since the
whole of reality is built up of both matter and consciousness, why
should the quest for the understanding of order in the external
world be antagonistic to the quest for the understanding of order
in the inner world of our consciousness? Science and Spirituality
for a Sustainable World brings together theories, methodologies,
new ideas, experiences, and applications emphasizing the importance
of both spirituality and skill for leadership and sustainable
management, sensitizing leaders and management practitioners toward
the spirituality-skill paradigm, skill-based leadership, and
highlighting the role of spiritual values for environmental
sustainability. Featuring a wide range of topics that focus on the
relationship between spirituality and science such as spiritual
education, management practices, and traditional wisdom, this book
is essential for researchers, academicians, administrators,
managers, professionals, policymakers, and students.
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Out on Waters
(Hardcover)
James Michael Nagle
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R1,035
R837
Discovery Miles 8 370
Save R198 (19%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Sir Robert Anderson uses his investigative gifts to uncover and
explain several of the most misunderstood verses in the Biblical
New Testament. By employing a close and detailed reading of the
holy text in its proper context, Anderson is able to clarify and
expound upon the true meanings expressed. Several of the New
Testament Gospel teachings are often misconstrued or
oversimplified; their overall meaning, or simply the depth of the
passages, are neglected. The author could not stand for such
deficient scholarship of the Bible, and so published this informed
commentary. Several of the passages isolated concern comments made
by Biblical figures such as the Apostles John, Matthew and Paul.
How their words are misread, downplayed or simply ignored in the
schema of the New Testament lore is first identified, then
dismissed by the author. Often, Anderson cites other passages in
the Old and New Testament books which carry relevance or support
the truth of the verse concerned.
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