Tuesday, 29 May 2012

SUFFERING

  Barcode Software/ SUFFERING download free
all designed by CSS Menus
 
Main Menu
Home
News
Blog
Links
Contact Us
News Feeds
FAQs
Submit Your News
Search
Submit Software
Hierarchical tree
RSS socialnet
Add to MyYahoo!
Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Add to Newsburst
Add to Google
Add to My AOL
Add to Pluck
Subscribe in FeedLounge
Add to Windows Live
Add to NetVibes
Subscribe in Rojo
Subscribe in Bloglines
Add to MyMSN
Add to Plusmo for your cellphone
Add to PageFlakes
Add to Technorati
Add to BlinkBits
Popular tags


DVD audio to MP3 :: DVD audio to WAV :: DVD audio to WMA :: DVD to MP3 :: Wav :: WMA :: AC3





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

  Bar code  (EU)
  Barcode Components
  Barcode Equipment
  Barcode Font
  Barcode Software
 

Page - 1 Pages - 1 Total Found - 2


The Problem of Pain

5 stars (A life altering book) - I first listened to this book in audio form on a long drive, so heard the entire text in one session. It really was an inspiring experience. I actually listened to it a second time on the return trip. Lewis' gift for verbalizing complex logical and moral issues amazed and inspired me. As one reviewer said, Lewis is the "ideal persuader for the ... good man who would like to be a Christian but finds his intellect getting in the way." His discussions are logical, yet human. A masterful book. 3 stars (Good stuff, except for the Arminian slant) - C.S. Lewis makes many insightful points, but his Arminian (vs. Calvinistic) views distort his presentation at times. For example, he suggests that it isn't God's "fault" that pain and suffering entered the world, i.e. God's sovereign will was thwarted by man. When of course Calvinists like myself argue that it's the Biblical view that our all powerful and sovereign God foreordains all things as the prophet Isaiah says. But overall, it was a worthwhile read. 5 stars (Thought Provoking Jack Lewis) - I'm a blogger. Blogging makes me read. It makes me turn off the television and read. This is very good. What I have been reading lately is C. S. Lewis. Particularly, I've been re-reading The Chronicles of Narnia. After reading through The Magician's Nephew and The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe, I decided to shift gears and read one of Lewis's theological works before resuming the Chronicles. All I can say is, "Wow!" The Problem of Pain is not what I expected. I'm not sure what it was that I did expect. Perhaps something more along the line of a good evangelical book - you know, shallow, but with lots of Bible verses. Pain is exactly the opposite. Deep and with very little use of prooftexting. How the Church of the twenty-first century needs more minds like C. S. Lewis! We have been drowning in the fluff of "make-me-feel-good-like-Jabez-bless-me-bless-me" Christian publishing for years. It is ...
HarperSanFrancisco :: Religion & General :: Religion & Christian Life :: CHRISTIAN LIVING PRACTICAL LIFE PERSONAL GROWTH :: Suffering :: Religious aspects :: Religion - Classic Works :: The Problem of Pain

A Grief Observed

5 stars (Excellent!!) - Shipping was quick, everything was exactly as advertised! Two thumbs up, five stars, all of the above!!! 5 stars (Recorded Grief) - C.S. Lewis can almost be described as a contradiction. For much of his life, he was an agnostic, eventually coming to accept Christianity not through any miraculous transformation, but through rational thinking. He was a confirmed bachelor, but wound up marrying late in life, to the American divorcee Joy Davidman, his perfect counterpart in almost every manner. His life was awakened by Joy's presence, but their brief marriage (just nearly four years) was terminated when Joy died of cancer. C.S. Lewis kept track of his thoughts and ramblings after this event in a series of notebooks that became " A Grief Observed ". " A Grief Observed " is at times almost too personal. Lewis leaves nothing hidden, allowing readers access to his anger and his questioning of God. He claims that these are not all his thoughts, merely 'one in a hundred', that he has recorded as he tries to sort through his sorrow and grief. He likens his pain to various metaphors, including that of an amputee who still feels the pain of the lost limb - for Lewis, his lost wife who was part of him. He finds that it is always easy to offer comfort to those who have lost loved ones, to even pray for them, when they are not our loved ones. He questions God at every turn, eventually finding his way back to faith, seeing this challenge as a test of his faith and love. "God has not been trying an experiment on my faith or love in order to find out their quality. He knew it already. It was I who didn't. In this trial He makes us occupy the dock, the witness box, and the bench all at once. He always knew that my temple was a house of cards. His only way of making me realize the fact was to knock it down." " A Grief Observed " is a short book, under one hundred pages, filled out with an afterword that is a brief biographical sketch on Lewis ...
HarperSanFrancisco :: Religion & General :: Religion & Christian Life :: Lewis :: C S :: CHRISTIAN LIVING PRACTICAL LIFE GRIEF :: SUFFERING :: CONSOLATION :: Religious aspects :: Religion :: A Grief Observed


1

Pages - 1 Found items - 2 Items per page - 20




Review module
Top Shareware
Popular News
Latest News
Tags
dvd :: to :: ipod :: video :: suite :: avex :: mobile :: ipod :: software

Submit you software SoftWare Club Download Software Activex Controls | Barcode Components | Barcode Font | Shareware Directory | Upload Software | Hystory Archive | Download com | Download Software | Download (( | Discount Software | Download Games | Free Download | Download Soft Inc. | Free Trial Demo | DVD Software Net | Game Download | Trip 4 you | Try Software For Buy | Video Game | Trial Free Download | CSS Menus |
4Submit.com
$REDIR_KEY