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The United States, still healing from WWII, found itself with all
its military branches involved in a new war called the Korean War.
It was labeled by the Pentagon as a "police action." Most of the
fighting men and women were veterans of WWII, however, a call to
arms ignited a new generation of men and women to volunteer for the
military. This story reflects the emotion and decision of a young
high school senior and his friends who find themselves deciding
should they enlist or continue on with their educations. The young
boy decides to enlist in the air force, but not until he has had
his last summer vacation on the Jersey shore, where he spent all
his vacations with his family. He honestly believes this may be his
last summer. He recruits his best friend and convinces him they
need to go down to the shore and find summer jobs on the boardwalks
or resort hotels. On a weekend in May, they con another friend, one
with a car, to take them to Point Pleasant, where they would begin
their search. They find an opportunity at an old hotel in Bay Head,
where they lie about their age and convince the hotel owner they
can perform the duties of his two required bellhops for the coming
season. They are hired and become the season's new bellhops for the
Grenville Hotel. It's the summer of 1951. Join Tim and Bobby for
the most exciting summer of their lives, full of adventure,
romance, and even heartbreak. In these few short weeks of summer,
they find themselves in a variety of adult situations they had
never dreamed of, like the hotel owner who created and maintained a
harem of married women who came each year for more than fun in the
sun offers to share his fantasies. The boys also get caught up in a
murder investigation of one of the guests, and they witness the
affairs of married couples who come annually to exchange their
partners. One very attractive and wealthy lady who had her own
private suite each summer attempts to seduce and adopt Tim and take
him home to West Palm Beach. Tim sadly falls in love with a young
lady already spoken for, while Bobby faces his first encounter with
a young girl looking for love. The summer comes to an end and has
changed the lives of these two young boys who became young men
during the summer of 1951.
The Lord's Prayer is a simple prayer that goes back to Jesus. But
even though it has been around for a long time, we no longer know
how to pray it as it should be prayed. We grow up saying this
prayer in a hurried way, we continue to recite it in a rush, and we
risk dying without ever waking up to its richness. This book slows
things down, in order to help us recognize something of the
richness of this great prayer. There is a real need to reflect and
meditate on each phrase of the Our Father, to 'chew' on the words
as a cow would chew on the cud, to find the marrow of meaning, and
so discover true nourishment. It is like digging for hidden
treasure. Each chapter approaches a particular phrase of the Our
Father from multiple perspectives, in order to facilitate a
deepening level of engagement with its richness. By going through
the Lord's Prayer phrase by phrase, it is possible to taste
something of the unique flavour of each line. Every chapter
includes moving stories which throw a new spotlight on the
marvellous riches concealed in this familiar prayer. Each chapter
also includes short prayers based on the Lord's Prayer, prayers
that get us in touch with the depth and breadth of this
foundational prayer. Once we translate the spiritual wisdom of the
Lord's Prayer into the personal language of our experience, we
shall be led to a unique encounter with the God who yearns for us
more than we could ever yearn for him.
Wisdom at the Crossroads is an introduction to the life and thought
of the gifted Jesuit priest, theologian, author and educator,
Michael Paul Gallagher SJ (1939-2015). It follows his journey from
the simplicity of an Irish rural childhood to the more complex
world he soon encountered. That changing world prompted him to
think deeply about the question of faith in our times, the effects
of a shifting culture on our perceptions, and the challenge of
unbelief and atheism as it manifests itself today. The book
illuminates Michael Paul’s rare gift – both in personal
conversation and in the written word – of helping people to move
from a detached consideration of faith to an awareness of what was
deepest in their own hearts, for it was from that hidden layer of
wonder that he believed the journey of faith could unfold. Being
attuned to the depths in his own heart, he was able to identify the
liberating wavelength in the lives of others and in the culture of
our time, awakening many people to a vision that healed them into
hope.
Catholicism in the Western world has moved from a situation where
Mary and Marian devotion were simply taken for granted to a new
situation where it now demands real effort to turn to Our Lady in
any meaningful way. The Rosary used to play a big part in the lives
of many Catholics. Now, they are more likely to carry iPods instead
of Rosary beads, and to sport a tattoo instead of wearing the
Miraculous Medal. The trouble is not simply that we have stopped
thinking about Mary in the way our ancestors did, but that we no
longer feel about her in the same way they did either. How can we
learn to see Mary in a new way? The author explores the insights of
other faiths – Protestantism, Orthodoxy, Islam, and Judaism; and
also the insights of the `other’ within the Catholic tradition
– the Eastern-rite Catholics who, despite their full communion
with Rome, have a distinct approach to Mary based on their unique
liturgical and spiritual tradition. Perhaps the novelty of their
viewpoints on Mary can bring us to the joy of surprise about her
once again. If we can learn to wonder anew about this woman from
Nazareth, maybe we’ll be brought to enjoy the even greater wonder
of her son, Jesus.
It’s amazing to think that the first smile Jesus ever gave was in
response to Mary’s smile. It must have been an extraordinary
moment: her son was smiling at her, and it was God smiling at her
too. This book looks at Mary, this extraordinary woman who is
“the cause of our joy” because she brought us the greatest joy
of all: Jesus. She was full of joy because she was full of
gratitude, gladly acknowledging the fullness of grace that God had
given her. Her deep joy overflowed when she visited her cousin
Elizabeth: “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit exults in
God my Saviour”. But this Magnificat song wasn’t just a
once-off song of praise: the reason it came to Mary’s lips so
easily was because it was her usual way of praying. She constantly
thanked God for the gifts he had given her. Whatever the
circumstances, Mary had the deep inner conviction that “all shall
be well, and all manner of thing shall be well” as Julian of
Norwich was later to express it. Many of us seek joy outside of
ourselves, in food and drink, or in riches and reputations. But
Mary found an inner joy that came from encountering God, a joy that
was immeasurably greater than any material joy. And by giving Mary
a place in our hearts, we can find true joy in God as well.
Western culture is moving so fast that it is hard to stop long
enough to look compassionately at ourselves and where we are going.
This book is an attempt to do just that, and to initiate a two-way
conversation between the Gospel and culture.
The discerning and perceptive essays gathered together in this
volume make evident that a comprehensive understanding of Pauline
thought must include the following aspects of his entire and
comprehensive matrix: -an examination of the Pauline letters in
their specific and contingent as well as their broader and coherent
contexts; -a careful and precise analysis of all relevant Jewish
literature, including the Dead Sea Scrolls; -the incorporation of
all relevant archaeological, historical, and literary evidence for
the reconstruction of the political, cultural, and religious matrix
of the Greco-Roman cities to which Paul's letters are addressed.
The issues treated in this volume are of enormous relevance for a
better understanding of Paul's Jewish Matrix and his very
"Jewishness."
The United States, still healing from WWII, found itself with all
its military branches involved in a new war called the Korean War.
It was labeled by the Pentagon as a "police action." Most of the
fighting men and women were veterans of WWII, however, a call to
arms ignited a new generation of men and women to volunteer for the
military. This story reflects the emotion and decision of a young
high school senior and his friends who find themselves deciding
should they enlist or continue on with their educations. The young
boy decides to enlist in the air force, but not until he has had
his last summer vacation on the Jersey shore, where he spent all
his vacations with his family. He honestly believes this may be his
last summer. He recruits his best friend and convinces him they
need to go down to the shore and find summer jobs on the boardwalks
or resort hotels. On a weekend in May, they con another friend, one
with a car, to take them to Point Pleasant, where they would begin
their search. They find an opportunity at an old hotel in Bay Head,
where they lie about their age and convince the hotel owner they
can perform the duties of his two required bellhops for the coming
season. They are hired and become the season's new bellhops for the
Grenville Hotel. It's the summer of 1951. Join Tim and Bobby for
the most exciting summer of their lives, full of adventure,
romance, and even heartbreak. In these few short weeks of summer,
they find themselves in a variety of adult situations they had
never dreamed of, like the hotel owner who created and maintained a
harem of married women who came each year for more than fun in the
sun offers to share his fantasies. The boys also get caught up in a
murder investigation of one of the guests, and they witness the
affairs of married couples who come annually to exchange their
partners. One very attractive and wealthy lady who had her own
private suite each summer attempts to seduce and adopt Tim and take
him home to West Palm Beach. Tim sadly falls in love with a young
lady already spoken for, while Bobby faces his first encounter with
a young girl looking for love. The summer comes to an end and has
changed the lives of these two young boys who became young men
during the summer of 1951.
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