|
Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian sacred works & liturgy
Though he has no formal rabbinical training, Ephraim Sobol began
teaching a weekly parsha class in his community. In two years time,
the class grew as his students shared their excitement. He began
writing "Two Minutes of Torah," a weekly Dvar Torah email based on
his class. These emails took on lives of their own, and soon they
were a much sought after read. Appealing to audiences with a broad
spectrum of knowledge, Two Minutes of Torah offers original and
concise insights into the parsha. To help students connect with the
lessons, he has woven many of his real-world experiences into his
essays.In the third volume of his popular series of books on the
parsha, Sobol completes that which he set out to do: provide a
constant companion for those seeking insights on the parsha every
week. Now spanning the entire Torah, these works have become an
essential component of many Shabbos tables.Using a folksy and
inviting manner Sobol provides fresh, deep insights into an ancient
text.
The 1928 Book of Common Prayer is a treasured resource for
traditional Anglicans and others who appreciate the majesty of King
James-style language. This classic edition features a Presentation
section containing certificates for the rites of Baptism,
Confirmation, and Marriage. The elegant burgundy hardcover binding
is embossed with a simple gold cross, making it an ideal choice for
both personal study and gift-giving.
The 1928 Book of Common Prayer combines Oxford's reputation for
quality construction and scholarship with a modest price - a
beautiful prayer book and an excellent value.
In the last few decades, yoga has helped millions of people to
improve their concepts of themselves. Yoga realises that man is not
only the mind, he is body as well. Yoga has been designed in a such
a way that it can complete the process of evolution of the
personality in every possible direction. Kundalini yoga is a part
of the tantric tradition. Even though you may have already been
introduced to yoga, it is necessary to know something about tantra
also. Since the dawn of creation, the tantrics and yogis have
realised that in this physical body there is a potential force. It
is not psychological or transcendental; it is a dynamic potential
force in the material body, and it is called Kundalini. This
Kundalini is the greatest discovery of tantra and yoga. Scientists
have begun to look into this, and a summary of the latest
scientific experiments is included in this book.
The Ramayana tells the tale of Rama and his beloved Sita, but its
narratives and intent, as with all great literature, point to the
grand themes of life, death and righteousness. Originally written
in ancient Sanskrit, the elegant, epic work is a key part of the
canon of both Hinduism and Buddhism. It continues to inspire art,
theatre, poetry and temple architecture, dominating the spiritual
landscape of the vast Indian sub-continent and the diaspora
throughout the rest of the world. This deluxe new edition revives
Ralph T. H. Griffith's evocative verse translation and abridges it
for the modern reader - bringing the gripping narrative to the
forefront. The Flame Tree Gothic Fantasy, Classic Stories and Epic
Tales collections bring together the entire range of myth, folklore
and modern short fiction. Highlighting the roots of suspense,
supernatural, science fiction and mystery stories, the books in
Flame Tree Collections series are beautifully presented, perfect as
a gift and offer a lifetime of reading pleasure.
What are the legal rights to ancient documents of editors,
archaeologists, curators, or modern states? In the light of recent
controversies, this collection emphasizes the status of the Dead
Sea Scrolls. The Dead Sea Scrolls were found in Palestine,
recovered in Jordan, and largely edited by an international
Christian team who prevented public access to unpublished
manuscripts. Subsquently, the state of Israel, which had already
purchased many of the Scrolls, has assumed responsibility for all
of them. Most recently, one scroll editor has claimed copyright on
his reconstruction, instigating a lawsuit and introducing serious
implications for future Scrolls scholarship. This volume looks at
international copyright and property rights as they affect
archaeologists, editors and curators, but focuses on the issue of
'authorship' of the Scrolls, both published and unpublished, and
the contributors include legal experts as well as many of the major
figures in recent controversies, such as Hershel Shanks, John
Strugnell, Geza Vermes and Emanuel Tov.
For the first time, in one, book, are the three most popular
English translations of the Qur an: the ones by Abdullah Yusuf Ali,
Marmaduke Pickthall, and Muhammad Habib Shakir. Two of them,
Abdullah Yusuf Ali and Muhammad Habib Shakir are Arabic scholars
The Kalacakratantra is the latest and most comprehensive Buddhist Tantra that is available in its original Sanskrit. This will be the first thorough academic work to be published on this Tantra. The Kalacakratantra's five chapters are classified into three categories: Outer, Inner, and Other Kalacakratantra. The present work concentrates on the Inner Kalacakratantra, which deals with the nature of a human being.
This volume challenges a long history of normalizing patriarchal
approaches to the Qur'an and calls for a questioning of the
interpretive credibility of many inherited Qur'anic commentaries.
The author presents a fresh reading of the sacred text and Islamic
teaching traditions as the rediscovery of a lost humanitarian and
gender-egalitarian textual richness that has been poorly and
loosely handled for centuries. The book stresses the importance of
reviewing the interpretive linguistic choices that jurists and
exegetes over the last fourteen centuries have adopted to
semantically reshape the Qur'anic text. The vigilant reading the
author provides of carefully chosen texts and commentaries suggests
that many interpretive approaches to the Qur'an are dominated by
sociopolitical factors alien to the intrinsic values of the text
itself. More importantly, inconsistencies across putatively sound
books of tafsir indicate that the Qur'anic text often suffers from
historical and systematic drainage of its humanitarianism,
gender-egalitarianism, and religious pluralism.
The "Upanishads" are the sacred writings of Hinduism. They are
perhaps the greatest of all the books in the history of world
religions. Their origins predate recorded history, being revealed
to the Rishis of the Vedic civilization some 5000 to 10,000 years
ago. Many see them as the kernel of the mystical, philosophical
truths that are the basis of the Higher World religion of Hinduism,
their cradle, of which Buddhism is a successor and Judaism is an
offshoot. With Islam and Christianity being offshoots of Judaism,
this makes them the foundational documents for understanding and
practising religion today. Much of the original text of the
"Upanishads" is archaic and occasionally corrupted, but it does
convey a moral and ethical thrust that is abundantly clear. Alan
Jacobs uses modern free verse to convey the essential meaning and
part of the original text. He omits Sanskrit words as far as
possible and the commentary provided is contemporary rather than
ancient.
The first in the Magerman Educational Siddur Series, The Koren
Children's Siddur created for the early elementary grades, combines
stimulating and beautiful illustrations with thought-provoking
educational components on each page to provide teachers and parents
with an educational resource as much as a conventional siddur. The
siddur, for kindergarten, first and second grades, is also
accompanied by a comprehensive Teacher and Parents Guide to
maximize the educational potential of this beginner's siddur.
In this highly original study, David Gillis demonstrates that the
Mishneh torah, Maimonides' code of Jewish law, has the structure of
a microcosm. Through this symbolic form, Maimonides presents the
law as designed to perfect the individual and society by shaping
them in the image of the divinely created cosmic order. The
commandments of the law thereby bring human beings closer to
fulfilling their ultimate purpose, knowledge of God. This symbolism
turns the Mishneh torah into an object of contemplation that itself
communicates such knowledge. In short, it is a work of art. Gillis
unpacks the metaphysical and cosmological underpinnings of
Maimonides' scheme of organization with consummate skill, allowing
the reader to understand the Mishneh torah's artistic dimension and
to appreciate its power. Moreover, as he makes clear, uncovering
this dimension casts new light on one of the great cruxes of
Maimonides studies: the relationship of the Mishneh torah to his
philosophical treatise The Guide of the Perplexed. A fundamental
unity is revealed between Maimonides the codifier and Maimonides
the philosopher that has not been fully appreciated hitherto.
Maimonides' artistry in composition is repeatedly shown to serve
his aims in persuading us of the coherence and wisdom of the
halakhic system. Gillis's fine exegesis sets in high relief the
humane and transcendental purposes and methods of halakhah as
Maimonides conceived of it, in an argument that is sure-footed and
convincing.
In Enchanted Dulcinea, this English translation of the novel by
Mexican author Angelina Muniz-Huberman, Dulcinea travels in a car
writing novels in her mind about several Dulcineas: a medieval
princess on a quest, a nineteenth-century lady-in-waiting in
Mexico, and a twentieth-century young woman who was sent to Russia
as a girl to escape the Spanish Civil War and later journeys to
Mexico to reunite with her parents. Unsure of her identity,
Dulcinea remembers, debates, and records memories of her exile. As
she circles Mexico City, she examines the role of memory, speech,
and writing through her fragmented narrative voice. Dulcinea
explores her place in the world through storytelling, blurring the
line between reality and imagination. This novel pairs a lyrical
and contemplative style with experimental writing to present common
themes of identity formation and exile in a unique form. Dulcinea's
quest is also one of spiritual connection with apocalyptic and
mystical overtones. With allusions to both Christian and Jewish
mystical traditions, this novel reveals a crypto-Jewish presence
typical of Muniz-Huberman's writing, forming part of a Sephardic
literary tradition. This edition includes an introduction and
annotations by the translator, Rebecca Marquis.
The 'pivot pattern' is a unique type of chiasmus, a linguistic
pattern characterized by an inversion of the internal order of a
phrase or passage. The main idea is found primarily at its pivot,
while its elements, normally of an uneven number, are distributed
on both sides of the pivot in a mirrored symmetry. Klaus undertakes
here to compile a 'grammar' of the pattern, and to characterize,
exemplify and differentiate its various forms.>
|
|