Divine Messages For Humanity

Download Divine Messages For Humanity PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Divine Messages For Humanity book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
The Divine Human

Author: John C. Robinson
language: en
Publisher: John Hunt Publishing
Release Date: 2016-09-30
With our unprecedented longevity, aging has become a new developmental stage in the human life cycle. Conscious sacred aging now offers humanity profound opportunities for psychological, spiritual and mystical transformation, expanding not only our lifespan but our awareness of God as well. What if we discover in this awakening that we are already divine? What if this realization transforms our very nature and purpose in the world? The Divine Human answers these questions and more, revealing the ultimate meaning of the New Aging.
Fully Human, Fully Divine

A solid blend of theology and spirituality, this refreshing book introducesQin an interactive wayQthe humanity and divinity of Jesus by applying the significant points of both to the reader's spiritual life. Written by Michael Casey, a monk of Tarrawarra Abbey in Australia, "Fully Human, Fully Divine" invites the reader to encounter the pulsating humanity of Jesus.Liguouri Publications
Love, Human and Divine

Author: Edward Collins Vacek
language: en
Publisher: Georgetown University Press
Release Date: 1994-04-01
Although the two great commandments to love God and to love our neighbors as ourselves are central to Christianity, few theologians or spiritual writers have undertaken an extensive account of the meaning and forms of these loves. Most accounts, in fact, make love of God and love of self either impossible or immoral. Integrating these two commandments, Edward Vacek, SJ, develops an original account of love as the theological foundation for Christian ethics. Vacek criticizes common understandings of agape, eros, and philia, examining the arguments of Aquinas, Nygren, Outka, Rahner, Scheler, and other theologians and philosophers. He defines love as an emotional, affirmative participation in the beloved's real and ideal goodness, and he extends this definition to the love between God and self. Vacek proposes that the heart of Christian moral life is loving cooperation with God in a mutually perfecting friendship.