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All Politics Is Religious: Speaking Faith to the Media, Policy Makers and Community
Rabbi Dennis S. Ross Foreword by Rev. Barry W. Lynn
All Politics Is Religious provides ideas and strategies for expressing a clear, forceful, positive and progressive religious point of view that is all too often overlooked and under-represented in public discourse. It identifies the religious themes in today’s great debates—gay rights, immigration, the needs of children and families, church-state separation and reproductive rights, including access to sex education, contraception and abortion care—and presents new language and methods for effective communication with the media, policy makers and community.
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Bede Griffiths: An Introduction to His Interspiritual Thought
Wayne Teasdale
Provides readers with an intriguing view into the thoughts, beliefs, and life of this champion of interreligious acceptance and harmony. This volume is the first in-depth study of Bede Griffiths' contemplative experience and thought.
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The Book of Job: Annotated & Explained
Translation and Annotation by Donald Kraus Foreword by Dr. Marc Brettler
The book of Job, celebrated as a classic of world literature and one of the glories of the Bible, can often be puzzling and frustrating: puzzling for its dialogue form and off-putting because of the many questions it leaves unanswered. This inviting SkyLight Illuminations edition, with probing facing-page commentary, explores Job’s daring challenges to God’s goodness, questions about the basic fairness of existence, and compelling descriptions of the glories of the created world and the bitter sorrows of human life. It invites you to enter into Job’s dialogue and stimulates thoughtful consideration of life’s most perplexing questions.
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Christians & Jews in Dialogue: Learning in the Presence of the Other
Mary C. Boys and Sara S. Lee Foreword by Dorothy C. Bass
Offers a guide for members of any faith tradition who want to move beyond the rhetoric of interfaith dialogue and into the demanding yet richly rewarding work of developing new understandings of the religious other—and of one’s own tradition.
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