여기 성서학자가 번역하고 명상하는 도덕경 명상집이 있다.
3종1세트랄까? 도덕경 원문, 한글 번역, 그리고 짧은 명상이 한권에 담겨있다.
무료공개이다. 누구나 즐겁게 시간날 때마다 조금씩 읽어가며 자기의 명상을 추가할 수 있겠다.
공부는 스스로 해야 하고, 생각도 스스로 해야 하고, 글도 자기의 글을 써야 한다.
여기 성서학자가 번역하고 명상하는 도덕경 명상집이 있다.
3종1세트랄까? 도덕경 원문, 한글 번역, 그리고 짧은 명상이 한권에 담겨있다.
무료공개이다. 누구나 즐겁게 시간날 때마다 조금씩 읽어가며 자기의 명상을 추가할 수 있겠다.
공부는 스스로 해야 하고, 생각도 스스로 해야 하고, 글도 자기의 글을 써야 한다.
Never judge a book by its cover.” This was certainly true for me with Yung Suk Kim’s groundbreaking book, How to Read the Gospels: An Introduction. While waiting for the review copy to arrive, my expectations were low because I had read many introductions over the past two decades and had come to assume, ‘It will be another introduction to the Gospels.’ However, I was proven wrong. Upon opening the book and skimming through its contents, I found myself repeatedly thinking, ‘I’ve never seen anything like this.’
Greetings. I've just read your manuscript. Thank you! I love the structure, it hangs together well, it'll be accessible for seminarians, and it's inspiring—I think it'll encourage readers to learn more about justice and the parables. I'm very, very pleased with it. And good work on the discussion questions.
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I'd like to discuss the title. Would you be open to that? I wonder if you'd consider this: "Justice and the Parables of Jesus: Interpreting the Gospel Stories through Political Philosophy." ... Once again, thank you for your work on this excellent manuscript. T&T Clark will be proud to publish it.
Daniel J. Siegel, MIND: A Journey to the Heart of Being Human (Norton, 2017).
"By mind, I mean all that relates to our subjective felt experience of being alive, from feelings to thoughts, from intellectual ideas to inner sensory immersions before and beneath words, to our felt connections to other people and our planet. And mind also refers to our consciousness, the experience we have of being aware of this felt sense of life, the experience of knowing within awareness." (1)