|
Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian worship
Sacred Pathways reveals nine distinct spiritual temperaments--and
their strengths, weaknesses, and tendencies--to help you improve
your spiritual life and deepen your personal walk with God. It's
time to strip away the frustration of a one-size-fits-all
spirituality and discover a path of worship that frees you to be
you. Experienced spiritual directors, pastors, and church leaders
recognize that all of us engage with God differently, and it's
about time we do too. In this updated and expanded edition of
Sacred Pathways, Gary Thomas details nine spiritual temperaments
and--like the Enneagram and other tools do with
personality--encourages you to investigate the ways you most
naturally express yourself in your relationship with God. He
encourages you to dig into the traits, strengths, and pitfalls in
your devotional approach so you can eliminate the barriers that
keep you locked into rigid methods of worship and praise. Plus, as
you begin to identify and understand your own temperament, you'll
soon learn about the temperaments that aren't necessarily "you" but
that may help you understand the spiritual tendencies of friends,
family, and others around you. Whatever temperament or blend of
temperaments best describes you, rest assured it's not by accident.
It's by the design of a Creator who knew what he was doing when he
made you according to his own unique intentions. If your spiritual
walk is not what you'd like it to be, you can change that, starting
here. Sacred Pathways will show you the route you were made to
travel, marked by growth and filled with the riches of a close walk
with God. A Sacred Pathways video Bible study is also available for
group or individual use, sold separately.
|
Let Us Give Thanks
(Hardcover)
David Holeton, Catherine Hall, Gregory Kerr-Wilson
|
R729
R609
Discovery Miles 6 090
Save R120 (16%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
By their very nature, most newspaper columns and editorials are
ephemeral. They are often written in haste to meet a deadline, and
what excites interest today may elicit only yawns tomorrow or the
next day. This is especially true of community newspapers, whose
focus is on matters of interest to a smaller, parochial readership.
This book is a collection of pieces that step outside that mold.
The author's broad education (four degrees, including a Ph.D. and a
J.D.) and wide range of work experiences (college professor,
probation officer, prosecuting attorney, professional magician,
novelist, editor, publisher, and grocery-store sackboy, to name a
few) have provided him with a unusual perspective from which to
observe and comment on the problems and pleasures of being a
sentient being on Planet Earth in the twenty-first century-and on
how we got to this point in human history. Inspired by the example
and encouragement of the newspaper editor who gave him his first
job in journalism, the author has inflicted upon the readers of
several newspapers his reflections on a broad and eclectic range of
subjects, from religious and racial intolerance to UFO "sightings"
and the beauty of a toad's eye. Throughout it all, the author has
been motivated by one unvarying purpose-to make his readers think.
Not just about last week's school board meeting or next month's
municipal elections, but about ideas and issues with a shelf-life
longer than that of ripe tomatoes in your grocer's produce
department. Here, then, are half a hundred of those pieces, rescued
from dusty newspaper "morgues" and offered to a broader audience
than the unsuspecting subscribers to whom they were originally
addressed. The author will be pleased if you read them, but he will
have failed in his purpose unless reading them makes you think.
|
|