For all who dare to be honest... Most Christians are content to spend their lives in churches where mystery is denied and doubt is unwanted. Where uncertainty is shunned and honest questions are stuffed into a corner, never to be brought out again. This audio book is for the rest of us. For those who live with distinct doubts . . . but whose passion for God remains deeper still. For those who have been confused by the world—and perhaps by our own desires—and still long to connect with a God who forgives and embraces us. For those who believe that our personal wrestlings can somehow make our faith mature—and our need for God complete. Sharing his own personal vulnerabilities with soul-stirring reminders for your faith journey, Stephen Shortridge delivers a hope-filled work—encouraging mystery rather than explaining it, affirming doubt rather than removing it . . . for all who dare to be honest.
Human Intimacy: Illusion & Reality
In "Ecstasy and Intimacy," Edith Humphrey sets out to counter this trend by helping the reader rediscover the spiritual riches of the Christian tradition -- Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox.As Humphrey reveals, Christian spirituality ...
One of the best chronicles of human intimacy--from the handshake through the twelve stages that people pass through on their way to the total sexual embrace.
This book provides a comprehensive collection and overview of the latest development in the field of intimate relationships between humans and artificial partners, in particular robots and virtual agents.
Human Intimacy: Marriage, the Family & Its Meaning
Human Intimacy: Marriage, Family and Its Meaning
Never HIGHLIGHT a Book Again! Includes all testable terms, concepts, persons, places, and events. Cram101 Just the FACTS101 studyguides gives all of the outlines, highlights, and quizzes for your textbook...
Human Intimacy: Marriage, the Family, and Its Meaning
Latter-day descendants of Dworkin and McKinnon warn that lines between consent and coercion, and between object and human, will breach, with catastrophic effects. This future lends itself to evocative dystopian imagery.
In R. Cohen, B. Cohler, and S. Weissman (Eds.), Parenthood: A psychodynamic perspective (373–390). New York: Guilford. 10. Atkins, R. (1981). Finding one's father: The mother's contribution to early father representations.