Living The Dream Building An Extraordinary Life Through Christianity
Download Living The Dream Building An Extraordinary Life Through Christianity PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Living The Dream Building An Extraordinary Life Through Christianity 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.
Living The Dream: Building An Extraordinary Life Through Christianity
You are special and unique. You deserve to have the best possible life you can live. There is so much available to you in the world to make your life even greater than it is today. But how do you get it? How do you get from where you are today to where you deserve to be tomorrow? Christianity has taught the ways to make life extraordinary, and this book will help you learn what Christianity can do to add value to your life.
The Buddhist Art of Living in Nepal
Theravada Buddhism has experienced a powerful and far-reaching revival in modern Nepal, especially among the Newar Buddhist laity, many of whom are reorganizing their lives according to its precepts, practices and ideals. This book documents these far-reaching social and personal transformations and links them to political, economic and cultural shifts associated with late modernity, and especially neoliberal globalization. Nepal has changed radically over the last century, particularly since the introduction of liberal democracy and an open-market economy in 1990. The rise of lay vipassana meditation has also dramatically impacted the Buddhist landscape. Drawing on recently revived understandings of ethics as embodied practices of self-formation, the author argues that the Theravada turn is best understood as an ethical movement that offers practitioners ways of engaging, and models for living in, a rapidly changing world. The book takes readers into the Buddhist reform from the perspectives of its diverse practitioners, detailing devotees' ritual and meditative practices, their often conflicted relations to Vajrayana Buddhism and Newar civil society, their struggles over identity in a formerly Hindu nation-state, and the political, cultural, institutional and moral reorientations that becoming a "pure Buddhist"—as Theravada devotees understand themselves—entails. Based on more than 20 years of anthropological fieldwork, this book is an important contribution to scholarly debates over modern Buddhism, ethical practices, and the anthropology of religion. It is of interest to students and scholars of Asian Religion, Anthropology, Buddhism and Philosophy.