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What makes something beautiful? In this engaging, elegant study, David Konstan turns to ancient Greece to address the nature of beauty.
Jim Armond is in serious trouble. His business and marriage are on the verge of failure, and his best friend has been linked to the mob. When Jim meets Jack-the voice he's been hearing all his life who has suddenly decided to step out of the shadows of his mind-the experience leaves Jim questioning his sanity and leads to a chain of events that causes Jim's life to teeter between transformation and tragedy. Jack has told Jim that he is in control of all events that occur in his life. But can Jim be certain? Louie Rivella, Jim's best friend, has borrowed money from the mob, and now he can't repay his debt. Jim decides to intervene, but he soon discovers that his assets are frozen in divorce proceedings. Now both friends' lives are in jeopardy. When Louie has a heart attack at his bar, spirit and the divine intervene. Out of the crowd emerges Angelina Parish. As she and Jim kneel to administer CPR to Louie, her hand touches Jim's, and an event occurs that has a transformational effect on everyone in the room-except the mobsters. Jim is sure that he has discovered his soul mate in Angelina, but he still has to face the mob. Can Jim overcome the specter of certain death awaiting him?
Leanna Burns, the author of ?From A-Z: Feed Your Soul and Lose the Weight? is once again suggesting to readers to ?let it go!? Of course in that book it was about feeding one's soul and letting go of the weight. In ?Soul Beautiful, Naturally? the author follows a similar path. This book encourages every woman to embrace her soul beauty and to let go of society's mythical standard of physical beauty. A woman who lives in soul beauty is a woman who lives in love. This potent combination of beauty and love has the power to heal and positively affect every living thing.
Your Most Valuable Possession Your soul, simply put, is your mind to think, your heart to feel, and your will to decide. It's the very deepest part of your humanity, the source of all treasure and talent. Refreshingly honest and keenly insightful, pastor and talk show host Gregory Dickow shows how your mindset is the single most powerful force in shaping your emotions, your decisions--and your destiny. When you discover the power of God's healing love, then fear, anxiety, anger and shame will stop sabotaging your happiness--and your life. Your best days are going to be your next days. Turn your pain into purpose and let God continue your winning story.
“For those for whom conservatism means something more than anti-liberalism . . . who wish to dive deep into the conservative tradition in search of pearls” (The American Conservative). Ours is an age full of desires but impoverished in its understanding of where those desires lead—an age that asserts mastery over the world but also claims to find the world as a whole absurd or unintelligible. In The Vision of the Soul, James Matthew Wilson seeks to conserve the great insights of the western tradition by giving us a new account of them responsive to modern discontents. The western- or Christian Platonist–tradition, he argues, tells us that man is an intellectual animal, born to pursue the good, to know the true, and to contemplate all things in beauty. By turns a study in fundamental ontology, aesthetics, and political philosophy, Wilson’s book invites its readers to a renewal of the West’s intellectual tradition. “Conservatism needs a new prophet. James Matthew Wilson is the man for the job, and The Vision of the Soul is his calling card . . . A new classic. For it we give thanks to God, and to Plato.” —Covenant “James Wilson’s important book returns to a conservatism in the tradition of Burke, Eliot, and Russell Kirk. . . . He wants us to focus on beauty and its place in Western culture. The book is a strong defense of that culture, but not an unthinking one.” —Crisis Magazine “A stirring and timely account and defense of the West’s traditional way of understanding the universe and our place in it.” —Matthew M. Robare, The Kirk Center
Despite its foundational role in the history of philosophy, Plato’s famous argument that art does not have access to truth or knowledge is now rarely examined, in part because recent philosophers have assumed that Plato’s challenge was resolved long ago. In Art and Truth after Plato, Tom Rockmore argues that Plato has in fact never been satisfactorily answered—and to demonstrate that, he offers a comprehensive account of Plato’s influence through nearly the whole history of Western aesthetics. Rockmore offers a cogent reading of the post-Platonic aesthetic tradition as a series of responses to Plato’s position, examining a stunning diversity of thinkers and ideas. He visits Aristotle’s Poetics, the medieval Christians, Kant’s Critique of Judgment, Hegel’s phenomenology, Marxism, social realism, Heidegger, and many other works and thinkers, ending with a powerful synthesis that lands on four central aesthetic arguments that philosophers have debated. More than a mere history of aesthetics, Art and Truth after Plato presents a fresh look at an ancient question, bringing it into contemporary relief.
Even though Jonathan Edwards is arguably America's greatest theologian, the content and value of his work remains a mystery to most. Stahle systematizes and summarizes Edwards's biblically grounded thought in contemporary language and makes Edwards accessible to pastors, students, and church study groups. Edwards's conceptions of the Trinity are explained in detail and shown to be the basis for the rest of his theology, including his ideas about sin, salvation, holiness, the purpose of history, Scripture, revivals of religion, heaven and hell, and the church. Reflection and study questions are provided to enrich comprehension and demonstrate the relevance of Edwards's theology for contemporary life. The wealth of this Puritan's personal piety and intellectual brilliance is no longer beyond the reach of twenty-first century Christians.