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The Book of Job (Hardcover)
Leonard S Kravitz, Kerry M. Olitzky
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R1,398
R1,156
Discovery Miles 11 560
Save R242 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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What a wonderful way to start each day. An inspirational companion
of comfort, reassurance, and hope that helps you start each day of
the year on a positive note—with a powerful quote from a Jewish
source, and a brief, striking reflection on it from an inspiring
spiritual leader. Contributors include: Judith Z. Abrams •
Bradley Shavit Artson • Tsvi Blanchard • Lester Bronstein •
Nina Beth Cardin • Michael M. Cohen • William Cutter • Amy
Eilberg • Dov Peretz Elkins • Edward Feinstein • Mordecai
Finley • Nancy Flam • Elyse Frishman • David Gelfand • Neil
Gillman • James Stone Goodman • Leonard Gordon • Irving
(Yitz) Greenberg • Joel Lurie Grishaver • Lawrence A. Hoffman
• Abie Ingber • Elana Kanter • Irwin Kula • Lawrence
Kushner • Lori Lefkovitz • Adina Lewittes • Arthur J. Magida
• Vivian Mayer • Michael Paley • James Ponet • Bernard S.
Raskas • Rachel T. Sabath • Jeffrey K. Salkin • Sandy
Eisenberg Sasso • Amy Scheinerman • Harold Schulweis • Rami
M. Shapiro • Mychal B. Springer • Ira Stone • Joseph
Telushkin • Harlan J. Wechsler • Sharon L. Wechter • David
Wolpe
At day's end, quiet your mind and unburden your heart. These
peaceful reflections offer wisdom to "sleep on." For each night of
the year, an inspiring quote from a Jewish source and a personal
reflection on it from an insightful spiritual leader help you to
focus on your spiritual life and the lessons your day has offered.
Contributors include: Yosef I. Abramowitz • Bradley Shavit Artson
• Leila Gal Berner • Jonathan Jaffe Bernhard • Tsvi Blanchard
• Barry H. Block • Terry A. Bookman • Herbert Bronstein •
Ayelet Cohen • Jerome K. Davidson • Avram Davis • Lavey Derby
• Malka Drucker • Amy Eilberg • Edward Feinstein • Yehudah
Fine • Mordecai Finley • James A. Gibson • Melvin J. Glazer
• James Scott Glazier • Edwin C. Goldberg • Elyse Goldstein
• James Stone Goodman • Irving Greenberg • Daniel Gropper •
Judith HaLevy • Brad Hirschfield • Elana Kanter • Stuart
Kelman • Francine Klagsbrun • Peter S. Knobel • Jeffrey
Korbman • Jonathan Kraus • Irwin Kula • Neil Kurshan • Mark
H. Levin • Levi Meier • Steven Heneson Moskowitz • David
Nelson • Vanessa L. Ochs • Nessa Rapoport • Jack Riemer •
Jeffrey Salkin • Nigel Savage • Ismar Schorsch • Harold M.
Schulweis • Rami Shapiro • Rick Sherwin • Jeffrey Sirkman •
Marcia Cohn Spiegel • Liza Stern • Michael Strassfeld •
Michael White • Arnold Jacob Wolf • Joel H. Zaiman • Josh
Zweiback • Raymond A. Zwerin
“In codependence, the emphasis is on everyone and everything but
ourselves....In recovery, we learn how to say no, to set boundaries
in relationships, and then perhaps walk away—if
necessary—sometimes for a long time, perhaps forever. It's not
without effort....Even if a relationship is worth saving, your
active codependence can destroy it. It will not help it or you and
will certainly not convince the other person in your life to stop
drinking or using or gambling or eating compulsively or running
around. But your recovery can nurture a relationship with God while
it nurtures you at the same time.†—From Recovery from
Codependence This book is not just for Jewish people. It's for all
people who would gain strength to heal and insight from the Bible
and the wisdom of Jewish tradition. With the same groundbreaking
insight of his Twelve Jewish Steps to Recovery: A Personal Guide to
Turning From Alcoholism and Other Addictions and Renewed Each Day:
Daily Twelve Step Recovery Meditations Based on the Bible, Kerry
Olitzky has produced an inspiring new volume that brings healing
wisdom to those whose lives are most directly affected by the
addiction of a loved one. Recovery From Codependence: A Jewish
Twelve Steps Guide to Healing Your Soul explains how the Twelve
Steps of Co-Dependents Anonymous are relevant for Jewish people and
all people who would gain strength to heal and insight from Jewish
tradition. You may be a codependent person if you are in a
relationship with an alcoholic or addicted person, someone who has
an eating disorder, engages in compulsive gambling or sex, if you
are addicted to a relationship, or if you are part of a
dysfunctional family. Though you may be suffering, broken in
spirit, this book can help you be healed, be empowered to take hold
of your life, and be made to feel spiritually whole once again.
Using the familiar Twelve Step model, Dr. Olitzky, known for his
spiritual leadership and for reaching out to help people in
recovery, takes the codependent person on a Jewish journey through
the Twelve Steps. Rabbi Olitzky's inspiring message draws on the
experience of Jewish tradition and the personal experiences of
recovering codependent people. He provides Twelve Step support for
people of all faiths and backgrounds.
The Journey of the Soul: Traditional Sources on Teshuvah is
dedicated to the process of self-discovery through Teshuvah
(commonly translated as repentance). Teshuvah is the method,
described by Jewish tradition, through which one literally turns or
returns (as the term suggests) to the correct path in life and to
God. According to the Sages, one of the reasons that God created
the world was to produce good. By granting man the opportunity to
repent-to better himself-God adopts man as His partner in the
effort to create and perpetuate this good. This in turn brings man
closer to redemption. Repentance also makes it possible for the
sinner to try again. One's intention to change and one's attempt at
change bring the individual back on the path to God. In the works
from which selections were made for this collection, individual
authors suggest that their writing is designed to assist one's
exploration of the inner life. In keeping with the tradition of
this literature, which includes works from Abraham bar Chiyyah,
Bachya ben Joseph ibn Pakuda, and Maimonides, among others, this
collection is a culmination of the efforts of these individual
authors and is dedicated to the same purpose. Performing Teshuvah
requires constant attention through study, prayer, and good acts.
This book is a vehicle specifically designed to guide the reader
toward his or her own personal return to God, which will, in turn,
bring the Jewish nation closer to redemption. Jason Aronson Inc.
230 Livingston Street Northvale, New Jersey 07647 Shmuel HaNagid 4
94592 Jerusalem Israel No. 7 Spectrum House 32-34 Gordon House Road
London, NW5 1LP England
"Why me?" Why do we suffer? How can we heal?
"Spiritual suffering must be differentiated from physical pain,
although the two are intertwined in such a way that it is nearly
impossible to distinguish one from the other. We suffer spiritually
when we do not grow from our illness, when we do not learn from the
experience of physical and emotional pain." from the
Introduction
Too many of us faced with bodily illness, whether our own or
that of a loved one, feel lost as to what to do or how to handle
it.
Grounded in the spiritual traditions of Judaism, this book
provides healing rituals, psalms and prayers that help us initiate
a dialogue with God, to guide us through the complicated path of
healing and wholeness. Olitzky explores: What Judaism teaches us
about healing Finding the meaning of illness in Jewish tradition
How to draw on prayers, services, psalms, and other spiritual
resources for healing How to grow by fully embracing the process of
recovery
Olitzky brings together his inspiring guidance in using Jewish
texts with his own experience dealing with illness in others
including those he loves to demonstrate how the healing of the soul
is an indispensable counterpart to curing the body.
Wake up to the divine abundance that is all around you! This
inspirational companion helps you recognize God’s gifts in the
everyday world around you. For each day of the year, an inspiring
quote from a Jewish source and a personal reflection on it help you
focus on your spiritual life and all the things you have to be
grateful for. Using both the secular and Jewish calendar as a
framework, this daily devotional helps you honor the special and
holy events of the year as well as identify the sacred in the
mundane moments of your life. It draws on the wisdom of Jewish
sources and teachings, and ancient and contemporary spiritual
thinkers, to gain perspective on the abundance that is all around
you—in your achievements and challenges, relationships and
personal time, joy and suffering, job and home. It will help you
elevate the ordinary to the extraordinary every day of the year.
Jewish tradition encourages study as a way of honoring the
memory of those who are no longer among us. "Grief in Our Seasons
"offers a comforting link between study and the tradition of saying
Kaddish, helping those who are mourning to heal at their own pace
and to cherish the memory of their loved ones each and every
day.
Each section of "Grief in Our Seasons" is devoted to a stage of
mourning, providing daily readings from sacred Jewish texts and
words of inspiration, comfort, and understanding. Meditations
Before Saying Kaddish share the insights of others who have faced
the challenges of mourning, and tell how they found solace during
the process.
This book is not just for Jewish people. It's for all people who
would gain insight and strength to heal from Jewish tradition. All
people who are in trouble with alcohol, drugs, or other addictions
food, gambling, and sex Anyone seeking an understanding of the
Twelve Steps from a Jewish perspective regardless of religious
background or affiliation Alcoholics and addicts in recovery
Codependents Adult children of alcoholics Specialists in recovery
and treatment An updated and expanded edition of a recovery
classic. A rabbi, a psychiatrist, and many recovering Jewish people
share their understanding of the Twelve Jewish Steps of recovery
from addiction of all kinds based on conversations with each other
and with God. They present a Jewish perspective on the Twelve Steps
and offer consolation, inspiration, and motivation for recovery for
people of all faiths and backgrounds by drawing on traditional and
contemporary Jewish sources and by sharing what recovering people
say about their experiences. They explore why some Jews are
uncomfortable with the Twelve Steps, as well as how the Jewish
understanding of the Twelve Steps differs from the Christian
understanding of it."
Wake up to the divine abundance that is all around you
This inspirational companion helps you recognize God s gifts in
the everyday world around you. For each day of the year, an
inspiring quote from a Jewish source and a personal reflection on
it help you focus on your spiritual life and all the things you
have to be grateful for.
Using both the secular and Jewish calendar as a framework, this
daily devotional helps you honor the special and holy events of the
year as well as identify the sacred in the mundane moments of your
life. It draws on the wisdom of Jewish sources and teachings, and
ancient and contemporary spiritual thinkers, to gain perspective on
the abundance that is all around you in your achievements and
challenges, relationships and personal time, joy and suffering, job
and home. It will help you elevate the ordinary to the
extraordinary every day of the year.
At day's end, quiet your mind and unburden your heart. These
peaceful reflections offer wisdom to "sleep on." For each night of
the year, an inspiring quote from a Jewish source and a personal
reflection on it from an insightful spiritual leader help you to
focus on your spiritual life and the lessons your day has
offered.
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