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We all go through tests and initiations along our challenging life journeys. For gaining wisdom needed for balance in our emotional, mental, spiritual, and physical bodies, Janine Palmer (Silver Moon) shares tools and encouragement for letting go of what no longer serves and for healing and rising out of the ashes. Janine Palmer (Silver Moon) is a clinical hypnotherapist and shamanic practitioner. Her messages are presented and shared here in short poetic verses with deep compassion, love, and wisdom.
Everyone knows the story of Joan of Arc, a peasant girl who put Charles VII on the throne - before being burned by the English as a heretic and witch. But things are not always as they appear. Jeanne d'Arc was only five when three angels and saints first came to her. Shrouded by a halo of heavenly light, she believed their claim to be holy. The Archangel Michael and Saint Margaret told her she was the foretold Warrior Maid of Lorraine, fated to free France and put a king upon his throne. Saint Catherine made her promise to obey their commands and embrace her destiny; the three saints would guide her every step. Jeanne bound herself to these creatures without knowing what she'd done. As she got older, Jeanne grew to mistrust and fear the voices, and they didn't hesitate to punish her cruelly for disobedience. She quickly learned that their cherished prophecy was more important than the girl expected to make it come true. Jeanne is only a shepherd's daughter, not the Warrior Maid of the prophecy, but she is stubborn and rebellious, and finds ways to avoid doing - and being - what these creatures want. Resistance has a terrifying price, but Jeanne is determined to fight for the life she wants. But when the cost grows too high, Jeanne will risk everything to save the three people she loves most in all the world. Not everyone is destined to be a hero. Sometimes you have no choice.
For the purpose of letting go of unneeded and unnecessary burdens, Janine Palmer (Silver Moon) shares tools of wisdom for balance in many areas of life and for taking our power back as we work our way through the tests and initiations of our sometimes-challenging journeys, healing through the transformative fires of life and rising out of the ashes. Janine Palmer (Silver Moon) is a clinical hypnotherapist and shamanic practitioner. Her messages are presented and shared here in short poetic verses with deep compassion, love, and wisdom.
For the purpose of letting go of unneeded and unnecessary burdens, Janine Palmer (Silver Moon) shares tools of wisdom to help achieve balance in many areas of our life. She also seeks to help teach how to take our power back as we work our way through the tests and initiations of our sometimes-challenging journeys to learn how to heal through the transformative fires of life and to rise out of the ashes. Janine Palmer (Silver Moon) is a clinical hypnotherapist and shamanic practitioner. Her messages are presented and shared here in short poetic verses filled with deep compassion, love, and wisdom.
"Exhilarating…Stewart has achieved a near impossibility, creating a page-turner about jousting metaphysical ideas, casting thinkers as warriors." —Liesl Schillinger, New York Times Book Review Once upon a time, philosophy was a dangerous business—and for no one more so than for Baruch Spinoza, the seventeenth-century philosopher vilified by theologians and political authorities everywhere as “the atheist Jew.” As his inflammatory manuscripts circulated underground, Spinoza lived a humble existence in The Hague, grinding optical lenses to make ends meet. Meanwhile, in the glittering salons of Paris, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was climbing the ladder of courtly success. In between trips to the opera and groundbreaking work in mathematics, philosophy, and jurisprudence, he took every opportunity to denounce Spinoza, relishing his self-appointed role as “God’s attorney.” In this exquisitely written philosophical romance of attraction and repulsion, greed and virtue, religion and heresy, Matthew Stewart gives narrative form to an epic contest of ideas that shook the seventeenth century—and continues today.
From the author of "The Paradise Complex" comes a new book that explores the lost message of the Messiah. Douglas Lockhart questions the "fact" of divine intervention and provides a detailed analysis of Jesus' life, his compatriots, and the roots of early Christianity.
'Voluptuous' may not be a common word associated with God, but the author speaks metaphorically of God in a way that calls us to laughter, love, and joy -- voluptuousness as 'full delight' -- and invites us to worship a God of intimacy rather than a God of distance. The light yet not trivial tone of this work supports the author's basic premise that we are meant to live our humanity joyfully, thankfully, and fully from our hearts. The book is rooted in the Christian tradition but affirms that truth can also be found in other religions, spirituality, and secular practices.
This study explores Marcion's ideas through his writings and the writings of early Christian polemicists who shaped the idea of heresy.
How should we understand biblical texts where God is depicted as acting irrationally, violently, or destructively? If we distance ourselves from disturbing portrayals of God, how should we understand the authority of Scripture? How does the often wrathful God portrayed in the Old Testament relate to the God of love proclaimed in the New Testament? Is that contrast even accurate? Disturbing Divine Behavior addresses these perennially vexing questions for the student of the Bible. Eric A. Seibert calls for an engaged and discerning reading of the Old Testament that distinguishes the particular literary and theological goals achieved through narrative characterizations of God from the rich understanding of the divine to which the Old Testament as a whole points. Providing illuminating reflections on theological reading as well, this book will be a welcome resource for any readers who puzzle over disturbing representations of God in the Bible.