Dr. Newman and His Religious Opinions
Author | : Charles Hastings Collette |
Publisher | : Gale and the British Library |
Total Pages | : 242 |
Release | : 1866 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : |
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Author | : Charles Hastings Collette |
Publisher | : Gale and the British Library |
Total Pages | : 242 |
Release | : 1866 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Kurt Newman |
Publisher | : Penguin |
Total Pages | : 274 |
Release | : 2017 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 0525428836 |
"A groundbreaking medical memoir by one of our nation's leading pediatric surgeons - the visionary head of Children's National - for fans of Jerome Groopman and Atul Gwande. Anyone who has seen a child recover from a deep wound or a broken bone knows that kids are made to heal. Their bodies are more resilient, more adaptive, and far more able to withstand acute stress than adults. And yet children are often treated as an afterthought by the medical establishment and shunted off to doctors who specialize in treating adults. Will an anesthesiologist accustomed to treating older patients know how best to handle a toddler going under for the first time? If your soccer-playing daughter suffers a concussion, should you take her to the nearest ER--or drive further to seek out doctors who specialize in treating kids? In this deeply inspiring memoir Dr. Kurt Newman draws from his long experience as a pediatric surgeon working at one of our nation's top children's hospitals to make the case that children are more than miniature adults. Through the story of his own career and deeply moving accounts of the brave kids he has treated over the years (and their equally brave and determined parents) he reveals the revolution that is taking place in pediatric medicine"--
Author | : Holly Ordway |
Publisher | : Ignatius Press |
Total Pages | : 206 |
Release | : 2014-07-29 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1681493578 |
This is the story of a glorious defeat. Ordway, an atheist academic, was convinced that faith was superstitious nonsense. As a well-educated college English professor, she saw no need for just-so stories about God. Secure in her fortress of atheism, she was safe (or so she thought) from any assault by irrational faith. So what happened? How did she come to “lay down her arms” in surrender to Christ and then, a few years later, enter the Catholic Church? This is the moving account of her unusual journey. It is the story of an academic becoming convinced of the truth of Christianity on rational grounds — but also the account of God’s grace acting in and through her imagination. It is the tale of an unfolding, developing relationship with God — told with directness and honesty — and of a painful surrender at the foot of the Cross. It is the account of a lifelong, transformative love of reading and the story of how a competitive fencer put down her sabre to pick up the sword of the Spirit. Above all, this book is a tale of grace, acting in and through human beings but always issuing from God and leading back to Him. And it is the story of a woman being brought home.
Author | : John Mackinnon Robertson |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 384 |
Release | : 1913 |
Genre | : Christianity |
ISBN | : |
Author | : J. M. Robertson |
Publisher | : anboco |
Total Pages | : 474 |
Release | : 2016-09-28 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 3736415273 |
An attempt to write the history of Christianity in the space of an average novel is so obviously open to objections that, instead of trying to parry them, I will merely state what seems to me the possible compensation of brevity in such a matter. It is or may be conducive to total comprehension, to coherence of judgment, and in a measure even to the understanding of details. A distinguished expert in historical and philological research has avowed that specialists sometimes get their most illuminating ideas from a haphazard glance into a popular and condensed presentment of their own subject. Without hoping so to help the experts, I humbly conceive that the present conspectus of Christian history may do an occasional service even to an opponent by bringing out a clear issue. Writers of a different way of thinking have done as much for me. The primary difficulty is of course the problem of origins. In my treatment of this problem, going as I do beyond the concessions of the most advanced professional scholars, I cannot expect much acquiescence for the present. It must here suffice to say, first, that the data and the argument, insofar as they are not fully set forth in the following pages, have been presented in the larger work entitled Christianity and Mythology,1 or in the quarters mentioned in the Synopsis of Literature appended to this volume; and, secondly, to urge that opponents should read the study on the Gospels by Professor Schmiedel in the new Encyclopædia Biblica before taking up their defensive positions...
Author | : James Fitzjames Stephen |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 344 |
Release | : 2015 |
Genre | : Literary Collections |
ISBN | : 0199585717 |
The latest volume in Oxford's new edition of Selected Writings of James Fitzjames Stephen, this volume brings together thirty-five essays expressing Stephen's views on the questions of his day, which have not lost their interest in ours.
Author | : William Samuel Lilly |
Publisher | : BoD – Books on Demand |
Total Pages | : 470 |
Release | : 2023-10-18 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 3385213371 |
Reprint of the original, first published in 1875.
Author | : John F. Crosby |
Publisher | : CUA Press |
Total Pages | : 257 |
Release | : 2014-10 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 0813226899 |
It has been said that John Henry Newman stands at the threshold of the new age as a Christian Socrates, the pioneer of a new philosophy of the individual Person and Personal Life. Newman's personalism is found in the way he contrasts the theological intellect and the religious imagination. Newman pleads for the latter when he famously says, in words that John F. Crosby takes as the motto of his book, I am far from denying the real force of the arguments in proof of a God ...but these do not warm me or enlighten me; they do not take away the winter of my desolation, or make the buds unfold and the leaves grow within me, and my moral being rejoice. In The Personalism of John Henry Newman, Crosby shows the reader how Newman finds the life-giving religious knowledge that he seeks. He explores the heart in Newman and explains what Newman was saying when he chose as his cardinal's motto, cor ad cor loquitur (heart speaks to heart). He explains what Newman means in saying that religious truth is transmitted not by argument but by personal influence.Crosby also examines Newman's personalist account of what it is to think; he explains what it is for a person to think not just by rule but by his spontaneous living intelligence. Crosby examines the subjectivity of Newman, and shows how the modern turn to the subject is enacted in Newman. But these personalist aspects of Newman's mind, which connect him with many streams of contemporary thought, are not the whole of Newman; they stand in relation to something else in Newman, something that Crosby calls Newman's radically theocentric religion. Newman is a modern thinker, but not the modernist he is sometimes mistaken for. The inexhaustible plenitude of Newman derives from theunion of apparent opposites in him: the union of his teaching on the heart with his theocentric teaching, of the subjectivity of experience with the objectivity of revealed truth. Crosby writes for a broad non-specialist public just as Newman did.
Author | : Members of the Evangelical Alliance |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 1272 |
Release | : 1864 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : |