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Fast track route to getting your life-work balance right
Covers all the key aspects of the work-home-self triangle, from
knowing when and how to say 'no' and trusting your intuition to
setting compelling goals and loose boundaries
Packed with lessons and tips from well balanced companies,
including SAS, Ernst & Young and Capital One, and ideas from
life-work gurus such as Daryl Conner, Charles Handy, Richard
Pascale and Ed Schein
Includes a glossary of key concepts and a comprehensive resources
guide
ExpressExec is a unique business resource of one hundred books.
These books present the best current thinking and span the entire
range of contemporary business practice. Each book gives you the
key concepts behind the subject and the techniques to implement the
ideas effectively, together with lessons from benchmark companies
and ideas from the world's smartest thinkers.
ExpressExec is organised into ten core subject areas making it
easy to find the information you need:
01 Innovation
02 Enterprise
03 Strategy
04 Marketing
05 Finance
06 Operations and Technology
07 Organizations
08 Leading
09 People
10 Life and Work
ExpressExec is a perfect learning solution for people who need to
master the latest business thinking and practice quickly.
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Joshua (Hardcover)
John Goldingay, David Firth, Lissa Wray Beal
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R1,466
R1,212
Discovery Miles 12 120
Save R254 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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John Goldingay is one of the most prolific and creative Old
Testament scholars working today. In this book he draws on the best
of biblical scholarship as well as the Christian tradition to offer
a substantive and useful commentary on Joshua. The commentary is
both critically engaged and sensitive to the theological
contributions of the text. Goldingay treats Joshua as an ancient
Israelite document that speaks to twenty-first-century Christians.
He examines the text section by section--offering a fresh
translation, textual notes, paragraph-level commentary, and
theological reflection--and addresses important issues and problems
that flow from the text and its discussion. This volume, the first
in a new series on the Historical Books, complements other Baker
Commentary on the Old Testament series: Pentateuch, Wisdom and
Psalms, and Prophets. Each series volume is grounded in rigorous
scholarship but is useful for those who preach and teach. The
series editors are David G. Firth (Trinity College, Bristol)
and Lissa M. Wray Beal (Wycliffe College, University of
Toronto).
How to have work be as good for your soul as it is for the mortgage
payments.
A full colour book to accompany the Exhibition of Yorkshire Clocks
at the Red House Antique Centre in the City of York. This is the
first book to be published on the subject of Yorkshire longcase
clocks. It contains a selection of clocks from the private
collection of Dr Firth, who has one of the largest private
collections of grandfather clocks in Europe. Within the 132 pages
are over 150 colour photographs, showing the fine craftmanship,
wonderful details and provenance of these beautiful antiques. More
details on the exhibition on the the website YorkshireClocks.co.uk.
Ever since the first century, Christians have regarded Isaiah as a
high point in the Old Testament prophetic literature. Its themes of
messiah and suffering servant, deliverance from exile and new
creation--to name a few--have been viewed as reaching particular
fulfillment in the gospel. Then too, the impact of Isaiah on the
church's language of worship and hymnology, and on the Western
tradition of art and literature, is beyond measure. The book of
Isaiah has also received more than its fair share of scholarly
examination, with various theories of its origin and composition
proposed. Originating in a 2008 Tyndale Fellowship conference on
Isaiah, Interpreting Isaiah presents some of the most significant
evangelical scholarship on Isaiah today. Essays on recent
scholarship and the theology of Isaiah offer valuable overviews
that bring readers abreast of current understanding. And more
sharply focused studies in particular Isaianic themes and texts
explore issues and exercise methodologies that will interest and
reward diligent teachers and preachers of the Old Testament.
The book of Psalms has been precious to countless people in many
languages and countries over many centuries. It has expressed their
hopes and fears, inspired their faith, and renewed their trust in
God. Through the Psalms, the spiritual insight and religious
heritage of ancient Israel have had a profound and lasting impact
on the human race. The book of Psalms is also of great interest to
biblical scholars, and scholarly study of the Psalms is in the
midst of a sea change. A generation ago, the dominant tendency was
to study individual psalms in relation to their literary forms and
cultural functions. However, in recent years, studies have
increasingly emphasized Hebrew poetry, the structure of the entire
Psalter, and its development from earlier collections to a unified
canonical book. In exploring these and other facets, this volume
aims to bridge the gap between general introductions to the study
of the Psalms and specialized literature. Written by members and
guests of the Tyndale Fellowship Old Testament Study Group, it
offers the insights of internationally recognized Old Testament
scholars into the world of the Psalms.This volume will be a
treasure to both students and scholars alike.
Looking at the Book of Esther through the lens of intertextuality,
this collection considers its connections with each division of the
Hebrew Bible, along with texts throughout history. Through its
exploration, it provides and invites further study into the
relationship between Esther and its intertexts, many which are
under explored. Topics covered in the book include considerations
of Esther alongside the Torah and the prophetic books, as well as
in dialogue with the Qumran community. As an edited collection, the
book draws together scholars with expertise in the wide variety of
texts that are intertextually connected with Esther, offering the
reader a more nuanced and informed discussion. By including some
reflection on the nature of intertextuality as a ‘method', it
also enables the reader to appreciate the varying intertextual
approaches currently employed in biblical studies. In applying
these to a focused analysis of Esther, this collection will
facilitate greater insight on both the book of Esther and current
methodological research.
Looking at the Book of Esther through the lens of intertextuality,
this collection considers its connections with each division of the
Hebrew Bible, along with texts throughout history. Through its
exploration, it provides and invites further study into the
relationship between Esther and its intertexts, many which are
under explored. Topics covered in the book include considerations
of Esther alongside the Torah and the prophetic books, as well as
in dialogue with the Qumran community. As an edited collection, the
book draws together scholars with expertise in the wide variety of
texts that are intertextually connected with Esther, offering the
reader a more nuanced and informed discussion. By including some
reflection on the nature of intertextuality as a 'method', it also
enables the reader to appreciate the varying intertextual
approaches currently employed in biblical studies. In applying
these to a focused analysis of Esther, this collection will
facilitate greater insight on both the book of Esther and current
methodological research.
Scholarly study of Samuel continues to wrestle with how we
interpret this pivotal text. Even such basic matters as the
question of what kind of literature it is remain unresolved while
older questions such as the nature of its text and sources are
debated anew in the light of material from Qumran and of current
approaches to Hebrew narrative. Recognizing the importance of
questions such as these, David Firth explores and introduces fresh
ways of reading Samuel as a unified and yet complex text, which
displays high levels both of literary artistry and of theological
commitment. Although some stories in the books of Samuel are well
known, and in the case of David and Goliath even proverbial, much
of the content of these books is strange to modern readers. It is a
story about a woman wanting a child, for example, that relates the
beginnings of monarchy within Israel. Even the question of the
monarchy is problematic, for we are introduced to not one royal
family but two-those of Saul and David. David is ultimately shown
to be the king chosen by God, yet by the end of the book he is only
just managing to hold on to the kingdom as it is nearly torn from
him by rivalries within his family. These arresting stories are
perplexing, for Samuel's writers seldom tell us how to read and
interpret them. Firth presents these complex and fascinating
stories as part of a bigger picture, enabling students to chart
their way through the literary and historical issues of the Samuel
narrative. Firth addresses issues of historicity, sources, date and
authorship, as well as -- crucially -- appreciating the text as a
literary whole.
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