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2 Corinthians (Hardcover)
Antoinette Clark Wire; Edited by Barbara E Reid; Volume editing by Mary Ann Beavis
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R1,461
Discovery Miles 14 610
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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2020 Catholic Press Association honorable mention award for gender
issues, inclusion in the church When 2 Corinthians is read as a
whole in the early manuscripts, we hear a distraught and defensive
Paul, struggling to recover the respect of the Corinthians that he
assumed in 1 Corinthians. Scholars have supplied a recent visit
gone awry to explain this, but Wire argues that the Corinthians
have not kept the restrictions Paul laid down in his earlier
letter. It is Paul who has changed. No longer able to demand that
they imitate his weakness as he embodies Jesus' death, he concedes
and even celebrates that they embody Jesus' power and life and
thereby demonstrate the effectiveness of his work among them. With
special attention to the women in Corinth who pray and prophesy,
Wire looks at each part of 2 Corinthians through three feminist
lenses: a broad focus on all bodies within the tensions of the
ecosystem as Paul sees it; a mid-range focus on the social,
political, and economic setting; and a precise focus on his
argument as evidence of an interaction between Paul and the
Corinthians. When Paul ends with "The grace of the Lord Jesus
Christ, the love of God, and the partnership of the Holy Spirit,"
the Corinthians have pressed him to reshape his message from "yes
but" and "no" to "yes," from a tenacity of qualifiers and
subordinations to an overflow of encouragements.
Wired Guides' book Northern Rock beautifully presents the best
traditional climbing, sport climbing and bouldering in Yorkshire
(grit and limestone), Northumberland, Lancashire and the North York
Moors. The bumper selection of over 3500 climbs and problems with
detailed, accurate maps and full photo-diagram coverage has been
carefully curated by dedicated local experts from each area. A
guidebook that will provide any climber with a massive resource of
quality days out and inspiration for many more on top of that!
Northern Rock is published by the Yorkshire Mountaineering Club,
Northumbrian Mountaineering Club, Red Rose Definitives and the
Cleveland Mountaineering Club.
The episode of the opportunistic valet of Britain's ambassador
to neutral Turkey during World War II--dubbed Cicero for the
eloquence of the top-secret material he appropriated from his
employer Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen and sold to the Nazis--is a
staple of intelligence lore. Yet this remarkable and sometimes
comical story has often been recounted with little regard for the
facts, most prominently in the popular film "Five Fingers." Now,
historian and former intelligence officer Richard Wires presents
the first full and objective account of the Cicero spy episode,
offering closure to past discrepancies and credible solutions to
remaining mysteries. Copiously documented, "The Cicero Spy Affair"
provides readers with the true chronology of events and places them
in an international context. It is a story set in the hotbed of
intrigue that was wartime Turkey, replete with a dramatic car
chase, a series of colorful mistresses ever loyal to their lover
the spy, and an old-school British ambassador whose documents are
photographed at night as he plays the piano in the drawing room
and/or slips into a sleeping pill-induced slumber.
Despite the affair's amusing aspects, it is also a sobering tale
in which there are no winners and from which there are serious
lessons to be learned. Germany never made use of the highly
sensitive British documents it obtained during this crucial
four-month period of the war because the handling of the
information was caught up in a bitter and wasteful personal rivalry
between Ribbentrop and Schellenberg. It was sheer luck for the
British that their war effort did not sustain any significant
damage. For, while the book states definitively that security
regarding the Allied invasion of Normandy was not breached in the
Cicero affair, Germany did gain a potential advantage concerning
campaigns in the Aegean and the Balkans. This embarrassed the
British greatly, especially since Cicero walked away a free man.
However, the greedy valet--the most highly paid spy in history at
that time--did not achieve his goals, either; he discovered some
years later that the British banknotes he insisted on as payment
were counterfeited by the Germans as part of a larger
counterfeiting project. Cicero died a desperate man, deeply in
debt--a fitting anticlimax for an espionage episode resulting in
neither bodily injury nor strategic impact, but in humiliation on
all sides.
Elinor De Wire has been writing about lighthouses and their keepers
since 1972. During that time she found that hundreds of lighthouse
animals wandered into her research notes and photo collection. This
book is the story of all these cold-nosed, whiskered, wooly,
hoofed, horned, slithery, buzzing, feathered, and finned keepers of
the lights. Where else would a dog learn to ring a fogbell; a cat
go swimming and catch a fish for its supper; or a parrot cuss the
storm winds rattling its cage? Who other than a lightkeeper would
swim a cow home, tame a baby seal, adopt an orphan alligator, send
messages via carrier pigeons, or imagine mermaids coming to visit?
The Lightkeepers' Menagerie gathers together animal stories from
lighthouses all around the world, tales of happiness and sadness,
courage and cowardice, tragedy and comedy, even absurdity.
Sometimes, fur, feathers, and fins tell the best tales.
This is the first of two titles by the Manic Street Preachers'
bassist and lyricist, Nicky Wire. For more than twenty years and
from Blackwood, Wales to Tokyo, Japan, Nicky Wire has kept a
personal visual history of the band in their various stages from
Generation Terrorists through Holy Bible and right up to last
year's remarkable album, Postcards from a Young Man. Edited down
from over 1,000 of Wire's personal polaroid's and with accompanying
text by the man himself, Death of The Polaroid promises to be a
rich, visual biography of one of the most loved and iconoclastic
British bands of the past two decades.
With thousands of islands adrift in cerulean waters and a long,
labyrinthine coastline, Greeks have always traveled liquid
highways. They built the world's first documented lighthouse at the
Mediterranean port of Alexandria more than two-thousand years ago,
and since that time countless sentinels have risen and fallen on
Greek shores. Weather, warfare, erosion, and earthquakes have
reduced some to rubble, but more than 100 traditional stone
lighthouses still stand in Greece today--old sentries keeping watch
over every vessel, large or small, from freighters and tankers and
cruise ships to fishermen and ferries. Their romance, beauty, and
history are captured in this handy guidebook. Beguiling images,
fascinating histories, and helpful travel information will guide
you to these beloved seamarks in the land of Hellene.
With a global population estimated to reach nearly 10 billion by
2050 we face a huge challenge in feeding everyone on the planet.
How is that to be achieved? In this brilliantly insightful, one
stop guide WIRED journalist Matt Reynolds assesses the limits and
drawbacks of current food production and looks at the ways in which
they can be tackled. He considers the potential for lab-grown meat
to replace inefficient livestock farming. He talks to the
scientists hoping to perfect more productive and disease-resistant
crops. He explores initiatives to make agriculture less
environmentally damaging and to reduce food waste. And he addresses
the fundamental question: how do we feed more people while using
fewer of the Earth's resources?
Who invented the best lighthouse lens? What do the colors mean on
lighthouses? Which Florida lighthouse is sometimes is mistaken for
a rocket? Why did Seminoles set fire to Cape Florida Lighthouse?
Why did a cat parachute off St. Augustine Lighthouse? Which Florida
lighthouse wears colorful holiday lights? Where do Florida's
skeleton lighthouses and spider lighthouses stand? When is Florida
Lighthouse Day celebrated? How do Florida lighthouses run
automatically? Florida Lighthouses for Kids answers these questions
and more. A lively text, rich in pictures, details the history and
lore of Florida's thirty-three lighthouses. From old Amelia Island
Light to tall Ponce de Leon Inlet Light, from the battered sentinel
at Key West to the sturdy brick tower at Pensacola, their stories
unfold. Learn about the people who designed and built them. Meet
some of the keepers who braved storms and suffered loneliness while
tending their beacons.
The past decade has witnessed extraordinary advances in artificial intelligence. But what precisely is it and where does its future lie?
In this brilliant, one-stop guide WIRED journalist Matt Burgess explains everything you need to know about AI. He describes how it works. He looks at the ways in which it has already brought us everything from voice recognition software to self-driving cars, and explores its potential for further revolutionary change in almost every area of our daily lives. He examines the darker side of machine learning: its susceptibility to hacking; its tendency to discriminate against particular groups; and its potential misuse by governments. And he addresses the fundamental question: can machines become as intelligent as human beings?
Fossil fuels may be keeping the world running, but they're also
destroying the planet. What viable alternatives do we have, and
what technological breakthroughs are on the horizon? In this
brilliantly wide-ranging, one-stop guide WIRED journalist Nicole
Kobie outlines the environmental threats we face through our
reliance on carbon-based energy, and considers whether and when
sustainable energy can take its place. She looks at the major
technologies currently available - solar, wind and geothermal among
them - explaining how they work and what potential they possess.
She shows how electricity supply is being transformed by advances
in storage and distribution. She assesses how each form of energy
is being adapted to serve our industrial and domestic needs. And
she addresses the fundamental question: can the world's energy
supply become fully sustainable within the next decade?
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