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In this book you will find a series of reflections which will take the reader on a journey through Lent and Easter. Sunday by Sunday you will be invited to read a passage from the relevant Gospel and spend time simply finding Christ there. At the end of each reflection, you will find a series of questions, which you are invited to answer, in part or in full, as you see fit. Having said that, feel free to ignore them if you wish. For this reason, the process also lends itself to study groups whereby people can share their reaction to the text with each other. Indeed, you might even find yourself disagreeing with my reflection, and that is fine too. My primary motivation is to brake open the word of God for people today so that they can see its relevancy for their own daily lives. In this way, and in the name of Christ, I am simply offering people, 'A Cup of Cold Water, ' in order to quench our thirst for his uncompromising, radical, and unconditional love. 'In the life of Jesus, we see God's response to suffering humanity, and our journey through Lent and Easter exposes the depth and nature of his outrageous and uncompromising love. Hence, I often make the point, that personal growth in faith, often comes in what appears to the world, as failure. In the same way, true self-knowledge, is born out of the mistakes that we make. Ultimately, God simply invites us to be good, and to live lives which reflect something of his goodness. We may stumble, and fall along the way, but we can be sure of one thing, that he will always be there with us.'Deacon SeanOur Lady of the Wayside
Readers comments on John Nicoll's poetry: This is extremely lyrical poetry - each word laid delicately and each line crafted with precision.Gorgeous, gorgeous.Well - crafted and emotive poetry.Always very evocative.Lovely!Enjoyable poetry.You read one poem and then you want to read another and another.
The Christmas story is God's way of telling us that we are loved radically and unconditionally by him, and this is how we are to be defined as people, the people of God, the people who belong to God, the people of God. Such love by its very nature is intimate, revealed in the birth of a child who was born in a stable and laid in a manger, whilst at the same time sharing our flesh and blood. Why do we find this so difficult to believe? Perhaps, it is because that, deep down, we see ourselves as being unattractive and undesirable. Yet time and time again, throughout the Gospels, we discover a God who, through His Son, seeks out the rejected, despised, unwanted and unloved and assures them of one thing, God's unconditional love. This book invites the reader, therefore, to simply spend time with the word of God during the seasons of Advent and Christmas. In this way, a treasure might well be discovered that God is, in fact, closer to us than we could ever imagine and loves us more than we could ever know. In his writings Deacon Sean has sought to help spread the Gospel to the world at large, encouraging the reader to not only read about the faith but to go out, and live it as well, through practical language, and simple faith.Father Andrew FranklinParish Priest Our Lady of the Wayside
Whenever Sam is miserable and feeling unhappy he eats his sweets in his bedroom - usually after coming home from school.He gets delightful pleasure and joy from eating up his sweets. It's an obsessive habit of his. One which he has all the time.Sam is obsessed with sweets. He has an obsessional possession for sweets of all sorts. Usually a confection assortment. Mainly lollypops - his favourite.Relaxing on the armchair, he licks his lollypop. The children call him the "Lollypop Kid".
Timothy was once a sad, disconsolate and miserable Pupil at a Secondary Catholic School. In all his subjects he remained in the bottom set. During the course of the next school year, his teacher, unfortunately, never taught ever again which made Timothy deeply sad, subdued and devastated.This book is sold in support of: OnSide Youth Zones - "Here for young people"UK Registered Charity 1125893
In this comic retelling of The Sorrows of Young Werther, dictionary editor Dave Gardner is in love not with his best friend's fiancée but with the fiancée of his worst enemy. Can philosophy help him out? What if he was to spend the year living each month according to a different philosophy, from Hedonist and Stoic to Rationalist and Existentialist? Will 2000 years of accumulated wisdom help him win the heart of ravishing colleague Sophie, who's already in a relationship with mysteriously wealthy Dom? If nothing else, can philosophy teach us how to embrace life's inevitable disappointments? Aided by his philosophy lecturer friend Max, Dave sets about finding out...Written in diary form, the novel tackles big philosophical questions with a light playful touch. Dave's philosophical lodestars are not Hume, Kant and Nietzsche but The Simpsons, Monty Python and Morrissey. So if you've always wanted to know about the history of Western philosophy but thought there weren't enough jokes in Sophie's World, this may be just the book for you.Robert Grossmith is a UK writer, based near Norwich. His short stories have been widely anthologized, including in The Time Out Book of London Short Stories, The Best of Best Short Stories and The Penguin Book of First World War Stories. He has also published a novel about lucid dreaming, The Empire of Lights (Hamish Hamilton, 1990), as well as poems, scholarly articles and book reviews. He has a BA in Philosophy & Psychology and a PhD on Vladimir Nabokov and worked for many years as a bilingual dictionary editor. Further information is available at www.robertgrossmith.com
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