The best-selling author of Creating Love sets out to redefine what it means to live a moral life in today's world by helping readers reclaim and cultivate their inborn moral intelligence by developing one's instincts for goodness in childhood and nurturing them through one's adult life to promote good character and moral responsibility. 75,000 first printing.
In this provocative history, Barbara Keys situates this novel enthusiasm as a reaction to the profound challenge of the Vietnam War and its aftermath.
In these ways, On Patience sheds light on Franz Kafka’s remark that, “Patience is the master key to every situation,” and Gregory the Great’s perhaps surprising claim that, “Patience is the root and guardian of all the virtues.” ...
“Motherhood is an open wound,” Jessica Mesman Griffith writes to Amy Andrews in Love & Salt: A Spiritual Friendship Shared in Letters: There's new life in me, with a heartbeat. And yet I'm so aware of death!
... Amanda Fulford, Darren Garside, Joel Héry, Louis Hubert, Walter Humes, Tim Ingold, Mick Lindo, Gale Macleod, Zoë Macleod, Imogen Macleod, Malcolm Macleod, James MacAllister, James McGonigal, Oleksandra Mittal and Saif Eddine Necib.
A powerful, genuinely ecumenical, meticulously documented, incontrovertible case on behalf of the moral teachings known to Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Protestants as the justifiable work traditions.
Reclaiming the Lost Virtue of Nobility Carrie Lloyd. The noble pray— a lot. The noble make enough room in their lives. They offer up a metaphorical blank canvas in prayer that asks for Him to show up in miraculous ways. Despite previous ...
Updated with a new introduction, this fifteenth anniversary edition of A Return to Modesty reignites Wendy Shalit’s controversial claim that we have lost our respect for an essential virtue: modesty.
Australian theologian Jane Foulcher recovers the counter-cultural reading of humility that marked early Christianity and examines its trajectory at key junctures in the development of Western monasticism.
In this powerful book, John Bradshaw shows how we can learn to nurture that inner child, in essence offering ourselves the good parenting we needed and longed for.
The essays in this volume offer an approach to the history of moral and political philosophy that takes its inspiration from John Rawls.