Book's

Dr. David Burnett

The Spirit of China: The roots of faith in 21st century China

E£255.00

Burnett explores the influences of Buddhism, Confucianism, and the Jesuits; he looks at the Ming Dynasty and the rise of the Manchus; he assesses the motivations behind Mao, Deng Xaio-Ping, and the current communist and commercial regime. Why is an atheistic leadership seeing a widespread religious revival of several faiths? What is the future of religion in China? A wide-ranging introduction to the ideas, beliefs, and conflicting visions that have shaped modern China.

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    Søren Kierkegaard

    Repetition

    E£160.00

    Repetition means getting our cognitive and moral bearings not through prompted remembering, but quite unexpectedly as a gift from the unknown, as a revelation from the future. Repetition is epiphany that sometimes grants the old again, as new, and sometimes grants something radically new.

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      Lee Strobel

      The Case for Faith: A Journalist Investigates the Toughest Objections to Christianity

      E£170.00

      Was God telling the truth when He said, you will seek me and find Me when you seek me with all your heart?

      In his first bestseller The Case for Christ, Lee Strobel examined the claims of Christ, reaching the hard-won verdict that Jesus is God and His unique son. In this book,  The Case for Faith, Strobel turns his skills to the most persistent emotional objections to belief  the eight heart barriers to faith.

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        Søren Kierkegaard

        Works of Love

        E£325.00

        Works of Love is, perhaps, the greatest single piece of literature written in the history of humankind. Astonishingly, it has been greatly ignored by philosophers, laymen, and theologians alike. Unlike its predecessors Works of Love has largely remained unknown in the Western world. In an attempt to introduce my parents to this masterpiece, I discovered that the Russians had not even bothered to produce a translation to this very day! Reading recent reviews written by modern readers—a bare dozen or so—I recognized in their writings precisely how I felt about the book: mesmerized and changed. Most reviewers were both disturbed by the fact that such a life-altering book could have been given a cold shoulder, lasting a swiftly-approaching two centuries.

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