Book Description
Extensive in-text notes help readers to understand the message of Scripture and apply it to their lives in a practical way.
Customer Reviews:
I love this Bible! .......2007-06-28
It is a vast academic reference--containing maps and a multitude of assisting tools throughout for Berean scrutiny. I, without hesitation, rate this Bible holding all 5 stars!
I personally would not have thought of adding such an abundance of accommodating references. The intro info and footnotes wax wisely for brain storage, but I would have added and subtracted concerning some and I do so in the margin areas. I must tell you, however, for your comfort, that I would never add or subtract from the inerrant Word of God.
The concordance isn't perfect. But of course, a Bible should not weigh a ton so I understand and have not minded adding my own desired references in the margins. I thoroughly enjoy the definitions set beside most words and the "Index to Notes" is an added plus for locating scriptures. However, I would have added this to the "Dictionary-Concordance-Thesaurus" section so one isn't continually bouncing back and forth.
The "Harmony of the Gospels" falls after the book of John and I would have set it before the Gospels. You don't notice it unless you happenstance upon it. Added to the Gospel harmony are sectioned verse references on the death and resurrection of Christ, His parables and miracles. Nice and very concise!
My Bible is severely worn which speaks volumes concerning my use of it and how I thoroughly enjoy it.
Those seeking to be true Bible scholars should also own a "Cruden's Compact Concordance" as it is small and easy to grab for quick verse hunting. A vast reference concordance such as Strong's comes in handy for deeper intrusive study but it is encombersome. I also find a Bible Dictionary, such as Unger's, a delving must. Amazon carries reasonable priced new and used copies of all.
Life application study Bible, indexed, NASB.......2007-06-16
This is the type of Bible that I've been looking for for a long time. I enjoy the life application Bible immensely and I especially like the translation. The fact that it is the upgraded an updated version of the translation makes it even more meaningful. I was able to buy the Bible with a wonderful coupon from Amazon.com which helped me to defray some of the cost of the Bible and that helped out too. I can't say enough about this particular purchase because it is one of my favorite purchases thus far from Amazon.com. It came in pristine condition and there was nothing wrong with that and I have been using it ever since. I highly recommend it for anyone who is a serious student of reading Scripture and wants an accurate translation.
Thoroughly enjoying!!!!.......2007-03-09
I finished my last reading of the Bible using the Living version and enjoyed being able to understand most of what was being said. Now I wanted to study the Bible more closely, but still wanted the reading to be ease without loosing meaning. This Bible has delivered on that hope!
Great product, Great price!.......2007-01-18
I bought this for my husband. We both like the accuracy of the NASB, but it is hard to find a "Life Application" in this version, in the Christain bookstores. Also, the version itself when leather bound is usually high. The list price is absolutely accurate at over $80. I was lucky to get this at a sale price. The leather was black and had gold edging. Very nice.
Very Sturdy Bible.......2007-01-03
This bible is well built; the binding look very sturdy and should last a long time. I also appreciate the NASB version.
The notes & guides are very helpful; they getting me thinking on another level; a real 'God Touch'.
Average customer rating:
|
Little Talks About God and You
V. Gilvert Beers
Manufacturer: Harvest House Pub
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Christianity
| Religions
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
Devotional
| Christianity
| Religions
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Christian Living
| Christianity
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
Devotionals
| Spirituality
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0890815194 |
Book Description
Scripture is not only a record of God's promises, but also a record of the way he has always fulfilled his promises to his people. In this New Living Translation Bible, every promise in Scripture is printed in bold, and a topical index helps readers easily find the promise they're looking for.
This Bible is also available in a New Testament version. Every promise in the New Testament, Psalms, and Proverbs is underlined, and a topical index makes it easy to find specific promises. Portable size for carrying everywhere.
Customer Reviews:
Favorite - Favorite - Favorite!.......2005-12-22
I can't keep a personal copy because it is such a great Bible I keep giving mine up! It is such a great way to get the shy or seeking into God's Word. Every time I go back to the local bookstore to replace mine they have to keep reordering them because they can't keep them on the shelf, and I am having to resort to ordering them in bulk.
I am a fan of KJV and NKJV for indepth study of God's Word, especially if analyzing the original language. But for daily devotions, this NLT Bible can't be beat because it flows really well and makes it easy to read while being true to the original meaning. The highlighted promises in this NLT version provide a special means of allowing the Word of God to speak to you in a most personal way.
Please note! This Bible is available in BOTH forms: complete Bible with OT & NT, as well as New Testament w/Psalms & Proverbs only! Both are excellent resources!
THIS IS ONLY THE NEW TESTAMENT.......2005-12-03
Nowhere in the description could I find that this was only the New Testament. I ordered it and received it...and SURPRISE!!! I had bought THE SAME THING at a Christian bookstore in the area and it was the WHOLE BIBLE. I was very disappointed. To top it off I had to pay shipping to return what I felt was Amazon's error in not being specific.
Great study/carry anywhere Bible........2004-02-28
This bible is a very straightforward copy of the NLT version. The NLT version is the best contemporary language translation in my opinion as it doesn't try to neuter God the Father, or make the bible PC. It has a very modern, conversational tone that has helped me see many new insights on passages I had read 50 times in other translations. It is great for carrying around. Since I tend to be very busy, I don't have a set time to read my bible and this one allows me to read it when time avails. I will grab 5 minutes here, an hour there, etc. This bible doesn't have lots of notes or explanations of everything, but I find it refreshing as it allows me to not be persuaded by some other persons interpretation/bias of the given passage.
Great Gift Bible.......2002-01-17
There are three other pocket-sized NT Bibles, that I'm aware of from Tyndale. This new addition, was an answered prayer as I feel it is great to give to non-believers. It is titled THE PROMISE BIBLE. The beginning has numerous promises listed by topic. As you progress through the Bible text, many promises are underlined. This is a great way to share with a non-believer how awesome God's promises are to us. That Jesus is a personal Savior who will empower us to live a life that is not only pleasing to him but also one filled with Joy.
This NT also contains Psalms and Proverbs. When you give this to someone, it is helpful to have two copies so that you can direct them through the various Books by page number. You can give them a brief Bible study through the Gospel of John, the Romans Road, the chapter of proverbs that numerically corresponds to the day of the month, or any other way that God might be speaking to you!
A great Soul winning Bible!
All for the Glory of God!
Book Description
Despite the strange and distant nature of her life and subject-matter, the works of Julian of Norwich remain immediate and compelling. Her Revelationsare recorded in two versions: the short text, or `first edition', written near the time; and the better-known second version, which is both longer and more complex, completed some twenty years later. The short text, offering personal details edited out in her `second edition', but which allow a better sense of Julian as a person, is presented here in translation. It includes also those chapters from the long text that describe Julian's doctrine of the Motherhood of God. The volume also contains an introduction, placing Julian in the larger context of the fourteenth-century English mystical tradition, and an Interpretative Essay. FRANCES BEERis Professor of English at York University, Toronto.
Customer Reviews:
A remarkable revelation neutralized in presentation?.......2007-06-24
Two things amaze me about this book: 1) Given the amount of critical study focused on Julian of Norwich (see the extensive bibliography), almost 10 years after publication, no previous reader has reviewed this book; 2) Given the time and place in which Julian wrote of her revelations--Wycliffe and the Lollards were being unspeakably persecuted and executed--it is amazing that Julian could articulate her revelations.
Perhaps no one can respond to the revelations as practical teachings for want of knowing how to judge such revelations except in a critical context? It may well be that over the millennia such revelations have not been unusual, but the confines of theology have prohibited their expression or caused the inspired one to distrust his/her revelations?
Surely, if the reader has never experienced a divine revelation and feels excluded from the process of revelation, then there is no personal basis for reviewing. The very fact of receiving divine revelations becomes an anomaly, whereas historical and literary criticism can be academically acquired. And that is where this book has its strength, in placing Julian's life and experience solely in a church-historical context.
As I read, I found myself wanting to have the revelations without commentary, and I also found myself questioning the translation into modern English,wondering how much theological doctrine had shaped the translation. After all, revelation as a mental process, does not require the articulated word.
My exceptions to the critical process come from a non-academic presentation of Lady Julian--as the crucial character in Anya Seton's "Katherine." Yes, it is a historical novel, but one that is meticulously researched. And yes, Seton had a redemptive purpose--to shed a fresh light on the mental and spiritual lives of its two main characters, Lady Katherine Swynford and John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster. After a tumultuous and disreputable love affair, even by the standards of Edward III's court, they eventually married and their legitimised children became the progenitors of England's Tudor dynasty.
Thus, I was familiar with a number of Lady Julian's sayings, but given as a course of teaching to Katherine Swynford, a teaching of God's unconditional love that altered Katherine's life. To have created that scenario, Seton had to see the usefulness of Julian's revelations. I believe she gave credit to author Marchette Chute for acquainting her with Julian.
Therefore, for me, the relation of her sayings in Beer's book to earlier writers and theologians comes across as merely academic, without practical value.
I would suggest that to the extent that writers attempt to examine Julian's revelations according to orthodox Christian doctrine, they lose the significance--these revelations are deeply heterodox and had Julian been a religious leader, they could have been dangerous in their time. They speak, however, even today to the reader who acknowledges divine revelation, without imtermediary, as every individual's privilege.
A footnote does indicate that Julian's treatment--and eventual dismissal of the concept of sin--stretches orthodox doctrine. I would suggest that it fully breaches it. And Julian's statements find a resonance in an unlikely time and place--19th century New England. A woman brought up in the Congregational [Trinitarian] Church, but uncomfortable with its rigidity, produced a similar statement on the nature of sin:
"All that is, God created. If sin has any pretense of existence, God is responsible therefor; but there is no reality in sin, for God can no more behild it, or acknowledge it, than the sun can coexist with darkness."
The work is titled "Unity of Good" and it was written in 1891 by no less than Mary Baker Eddy, the discoverer of Christian Science and founder of the resultant church. While Eddy accepted and wrote of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, she rejected the concept of three persons in one. The form of Julian's discourse is of necessity shaped by the orthodox concepts of the trinity, but it can be usefully read quite apart from those concepts.
Julian's writing on the motherhood of God is the final essay in Beer's book. This concept is, for anyone who is not familiar with Eddy's writings, foundational in Christian Science, where God is described as Father-Mother and as Divine Love--not a punisher of the man He created and loved.
As a Christian Scientist, this reader cannot interpret Julian's revelations from an orthodox theological standpoint, nor can she fail to see the practicality of Julian's revelations and their frequent similarities to Christian Science.
Revelation obviously transcends time and place.
Average customer rating:
- This book is great
- Not bad...
- Great book for Pagans
- Good recipes, needs a copy-editor
- It has worked for us
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Mad About Mead: Nectar of the Gods
Pamela Spence
Manufacturer: Llewellyn Publications
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Baking
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
Beer
| Drinks & Beverages
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
Spirits
| Drinks & Beverages
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
Wine & Winemaking
| Wine
| Drinks & Beverages
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
Folklore & Mythology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Wicca
| Earth-Based Religions
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
Witchcraft
| Earth-Based Religions
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
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The Compleat Meadmaker : Home Production of Honey Wine From Your First Batch to Award-winning Fruit and Herb Variations
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Making Wild Wines & Meads: 125 Unusual Recipes Using Herbs, Fruits, Flowers & More
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Making Mead Honey Wine: History, Recipes, Methods and Equipment
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Brewing Mead: Wassail! In Mazers of Mead
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Sacred and Herbal Healing Beers: The Secrets of Ancient Fermentation
ASIN: 1567186831 |
Customer Reviews:
This book is great.......2006-01-11
I refer to this book every time I make mead.
Cheers!
Not bad..........2005-03-31
Sure there are alot of Pagan overtones to this book, but I don't mind that at all. This author does a good job of explaining many historical things about Mead. She has experience harvesting her own honey, and offers several tips on how to make mead. Although I wouldn't recommend this book for someone who is a beginner, it is a good book to round out your mead making library.
Great book for Pagans.......2004-05-14
This book has been described as a "Frothy Pagan Rant" and that's really about on the mark but if you're into that sort of thing it's probably right up your alley. The author is a pagan and a bee keeper so she knows the practical business of making mead right out of the comb. She's also a bit easier to understand than other authors. She includes sample rituals as well as many recipes (including one for pumpkin) and goes a bit into the legal aspects of home brewing. A good book for pagans that want a well-rounded education when it comes to mead. Non-pagans might find it a bit over the top though. Hell, I'm a druid and I think she needs to take a chill pill too.
Good recipes, needs a copy-editor.......2004-01-26
I like this book and found the recipes and technical details useful; readers fearing to be put off by jargon will find comfort with the writer's cheerful folksy style.
But it pains me to find a reference to "King Arthur and his Knights Templar" (an anachronism of no more than 1600 years) on the first page (xiii, actually) and a statement that "honey ferments naturally" on p. 3. She does go on later to say that honey must be diluted to allow the yeast to work; I know these are trifling details, but for me they cast a dubious light on the rest of the ritual and traditional material. I really want a word with the editor; I like the book and I am happy to refer to it when I start brewing.
It has worked for us.......2002-09-03
We were new to brewing mead and picked up this book to give us some insight into where to start. Not only have we had success with every recipe from this book that we have tried, her hints on fixing problems helped us save several batches of recipes from other sources. Like the reviewer above, cleanliness isn't pushed here... but as in all cooking, it is necessary and common sense. In the last two years we and our friends have brewed up over 200 gallons of various kinds of mead and malomels and enjoyed them all thanks to this book.
Average customer rating:
- wonderful pre-permanant bible for children
- Engaging
|
The Step-By-Step Bible: A Panoramic Journey Through God's Word
V. Gilbert Beers
Manufacturer: Chariot Victor Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Stories
| Bible
| Christianity
| Religions
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Ages 9-12
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 078143307X |
Book Description
The Step-by-Step Bible recounts the story of the Bible from Creation to the early church as one continuous story. Putting God's Word in chronological order will help readers of all ages better understand the sequence of Bible events.
Customer Reviews:
wonderful pre-permanant bible for children.......2005-11-29
This is a book I bought for my 8 year old son and I am now buying another for my niece. It is so clear and consice that my son can now read his own bible and not feel overwelmed by the "thickness" of it because he understands the stories so well now. The parables are also easier to understand. I think its tough buying a first bible that your child will actually read and this book was a GREAT starter for us.
Engaging.......1999-12-17
This is a wonderful chronological overview of the Bible that begins with Genesis and follows through to Christ's death and resurrection. The book concludes with our commission to go out and preach the Gospel and to help our brothers and sisters in the world. It is engaging and easy to follow for children, but adults can learn from it as well.
Book Description
Inside this book you'll find fun stories, simple prayers, catchy rhymes and verses from God's book, the Bible. You don't have to be a grown-up to understand what God has to say. Spend some time with God today.
Book Description
High School kids in Salmon Falls are much the same as high school kids anywhere else: bored. In the far reaches of Ira County, Vermont, in the dead of winter, it seems there's nothing to do. But when eighteen-year-old Kyle Nelson and a handful of friends decide to challenge the status quo with an act of civil disobedience, they discover that there's more to do than they ever bargained for.
Garret Keizer's gripping novel about young men and women desperate for change bears witness to the dangerous force of ideas and the searing power of friendship. Here is a novel that looks truth squarely in the eye, and dares to keep on looking.
Customer Reviews:
Insightful read for teens.......2006-06-14
What is there to do when you live in a small town and run out of things to do? High school kids at Willoughby Union turn to under aged drinking much like high school kids anywhere. Then a question is asked to the class: "If god went to India he'd have to come as bread. If god came to Willoughby Union, he'd have to come as what?" The answer that came to Kyle: Beer! Realizing how much beer impacted their lives Kyle and his friends get together to form a group called SUDS- Students Undermining a Drunk Society. They plan a rebellion to change the drinking age. Then a terrible accident occurs and the rebellion swerves out of control leaving some behind in the skid marks.
This realistic fiction book was not the best I have ever read but it was worth the time to read. One thing I would have liked to see more is a relation to kids outside of a small town; all connections seemed to be targeted only towards small town kids. After reading this you learn to appreciate friends and how drinking can have some terrible outcomes. God of Beer will make you think, cry, and could even change your morals towards underage drinking.
Review of "God of Beer".......2003-05-28
The book "God of Beer" is an accurate portrayal of what takes place in a small town where teenage kids have nothing to do and turn to underage drinking as a way to pass the time. It starts with a teacher asking what God would have to come to their town as in order to reach the kids and realize he is there. The main character, Kyle Nelson, answered that God would have to come as beer. This angers the teacher as he had asked the question in comparison to Gandhi saying that God would have to come as bread to India because all the people are starving and they wouldn't realize that God was there unless he came as something they needed. The teacher thinks that it is wrong to compare beer to bread, but a debate ensues that since the kids have all the basic things in life they would be more relatable towards beer than bread. A group of kids forms a group in order to try and raise awareness about drinking and also lower the drinking age to 18. They have parties where they serve unmarked cans to people and most are sodas but some are beers. They do this to show that people can still have a good time without drinking. One member of the group, and probably the most popular of them all, is killed in a car accident after she drove her boyfriend home. She wasn't drunk but he could barely stand walk to the car. He was distracting her from driving which caused for the accident. This is where I think the book is fairly weak. The focus of the first hundred or so pages is all about the club and trying to improve conditions so that people won't have to drink to pass the time and when a member of their club is killed because of someone that is drunk, they completely forget about it. I can see them doing this for a while but the book goes on to explain what happens to each one of them in the upcoming year and it seems they don't care about underage drinking anymore. Most of them have said that they won't drink until they are 21 but they don't try to keep other kids from drinking like they did before. The whole focus of the books shifts because of the death, which is very accurate to what teenagers do if someone dies, but at some point I think that they wouldn't just give up on the club since they have been even more affected by drinking. Garret Keizer does a fantastic job writing this book and I recommend it to anyone because it is written so well but I personally did not enjoy this entire book.
Learning Lessons from the God of Beer.......2003-04-09
With a flair for the dramatic, Garrett Keizer's "God of Beer" details the struggles of a diverse group of high school friends and their hopes of rescuing their rural Vermont community from drowning in alcoholism. Using a plotline filled with the twists and turns that reflect the nature of everyday high school life, Keizer explores a difficult subject in a highly realistic and painfully straightforward manner with elements of truth and authenticity imbedded within it.
The story finds its beginnings in the voice of Kyle, the likeable but in his own words average high school senior who holds no real dreams or ambitious for the future. Sparked by his own comment that beer is the governing force of the community in Salmon Falls, Kyle and his friends, smart and witty Quaker Oats, and beautiful basketball star Diana, decide as part of a social studies project to form a social protest group to fight against this disturbing trend. On the suggestion of Quaker Oats, they form a group called SUDS, or Students Undermining a Drunken Society. SUDS mission is threefold, to "lower the drinking age, raise the drinker's awareness, and destroy the non-drinker's stigma." Invigorated with their idea, the group plans staged drinking parties where the police are intentionally called and where students receive mystery drinks of either soda or beer so no label can be assessed to the person holding the drink.
Things seem to be going well at first, but the plot thickens with the introduction of polar opposite characters David, a self-conscience backwoods country boy who still finds himself in high school at age 21, and Condor, a transfer student from California with a short fuse and a large chip on his shoulder. Kyle becomes caught in a hopeless balancing act, trying to keep David and Condor away from each other while at the same time struggling to understand and explain his love for Diana, who, in typical high school fashion has fallen for the outsider Condor. Things go from bad to worse as the SUDS group's ideas receive criticism on all sides, from Kyle's mother all the way up to the police themselves. Shortly thereafter, everything turns completely south when, after one of the local drinking parties, a sober Diana is killed in a car accident while taking the drunken Conrad home.
Left to pick up the pieces, the SUDS group quickly dissolves and the town goes into mourning. Kyle blames himself and struggles to maintain a perspective on life, turning to some longstanding friends for elderly advice. David goes into a rage, entering a local minimart and smashing all the beer because "they killed my friend." Quaker Oats, the pacifist, follows David's lead when, during a court session to try and determine who was at fault for Diana's death, he smashes beer bottles right on the court benches and winds up in jail for three days. With Condor lying crippled in the hospital bed, the community holds a touching memorial service to remember and relive one of the town's greatest young heroines, but the experience is so painful that Kyle wonders if it was even worth the tine
With not much left to go on, the plot maneuvers its way through a series of awkward moments during which Kyle continues to come to grips with Diana's death. After making peace with Condor before the recovered victim returned home to California, Kyle begins to get ready to assume the typical life of a man in Salmon Falls; working at the plastics factory during the day, and drinking off the long day at the bar come nightfall. However, because of the recent events, Kyle nobly but predictably refuses to fall into the trap of the latter, and provides some hope in the story that he may try and attempt college in a year or two when the factory life grows old. The book concludes with Kyle's transformation complete, as he puts away a full beer bottle and vows not to open it until his age allows him to.
Keizer makes a valiant effort to push an often ignored subject into the spotlight, and the backdrop he creates to the story in little Salmon Falls Vermont provides the perfect opportunity for him to do so. His creation of a variety of contrasting characters also provides promise of an intriguing story, but unfortunately he comes up short in not giving these characters a real purpose or direction with a weak plot line that often leaves the reader wondering where the story will go next. In addition, the student's once vibrant hopes of transforming their community quickly dissolve, and while their intentions may have been good at the outset; the inability to make any significant change by the novel's conclusion leaves a realistic yet almost hopeless impression about the state of drinking in the high school setting. Yet, Keizer must be applauded in tackling this issue and not being afraid to show the harsh realities of drinking. Although the accident and its corresponding response are predictable and almost glamorized, Keizer never lets the novel become washed in sympathy and remorse. Instead, he does a solid job of representing the high school society accurately, offering insights into a highly complex world swirling with emotions and anxieties.
Keizer does his best work in taking these various thoughts, fears, and actions and showing how they all fit together to contribute to the drinking problem that teenagers face. His ability to portray this struggle in real life color instead of painting the traditional black and white picture on the subject makes this book a success and worth a read.
Thoughtful read for teens.......2003-03-18
This book poses a very interesting question for teens who are thinking about issues dealing with the meaning of life, their faith, and their values. The teens in the book are challenged to consider the following: Gandhi stated that the only meaningful way God could come to the poor in India was as food. What form would God have to take to be meaningful to teens living in middle-class North America? The youth in the story decide the answer is "beer." I have used this book with a group of youth to pose the same question to them and it generated interesting discussion. On the literary side, the story is a quick read, throws in all the stuff teens will relate to and depicts teenagers in a sensitive but honest light.
Needs work.......2003-02-07
Poorly done. Read Publisher Weekly's review from above, they are right on, but a little too nice. It's amazing what gets past editors' desks - the dialogue is so cheesy, even young adults should be insulted.
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