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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Andrew Lynn

Saving the Protestant Ethic

Saving the Protestant Ethic

Andrew Lynn

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS INC
2023
sidottu
Protestant orientations to work and economics have shaped wider American culture for several centuries. But not all strands of American Protestantism have elevated secular work to the highest echelons of spiritual significance. This book surveys the efforts of a religious movement within white Protestant fundamentalism and its neo-evangelical successors to "make work matter to God." Today, bearing the name the "faith and work movement," this effort puts on display the creative capacities of religious and lay leaders to adapt a faith system to the changing social-economic conditions of advanced capitalism. Building from the insights and theory of Max Weber, Andrew Lynn draws on archival research and interviews with movement leaders to survey and assess the surging number of new organizations, books, conferences, worship songs, seminary classes, vocational programming, and study groups promoting classically Protestant and Calvinist ideas of work and vocation. He traces these efforts back to early-twentieth-century business leaders and theologically trained leaders who saw a desperate need to foster a new "work ethic" among religious laity entering into professional, managerial, and creative class work. Leaders interviewed for the study recount the challenges of rerouting energies that were previously steered toward inward spirituality, cultural separatism, and proselytization. Through these interviews, Saving the Protestant Ethic captures ongoing in-group tensions and creative adaptation among American evangelicals as they navigate changing class and political dynamics that shape American society.
Classic Spirituality for the Modern Man

Classic Spirituality for the Modern Man

Andrew Lynn

Howgill House Books
2017
nidottu
'Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. Weak men create hard times. The basic premise of this book is that strength and weakness have a spiritual dimension.'Classic Spirituality for the Modern Man takes a radically new approach to the question of spirituality. Its purpose is to bring the spiritual classics alive so that they can once again serve their original and true purpose: to guide and inspire us as we make our way through life.Classic Spirituality for the Modern Man introduces for the general reader selections from the most profound and inspirational of spiritual classics from around the world, including: - The Kybalion - Ecclesiastes - Lao-tzu, Tao Te Ching - Buddha, Dhammapada and 'On Governance of Thoughts' - Chuang-tzu, The Writings of Chuang-tzu - Huainanzi, 'The Old Man Who Lost His Horse' - Bhagavad Gita - Al-Ghazali, The Alchemy of Happiness - Rumi, Masnavi - Pascal, PensEes - Schopenhauer, 'The Vanity of Existence' - Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra - Allen, As a Man Thinketh
Shakespeare Tales

Shakespeare Tales

Andrew Lynn

Howgill House Books
2018
pokkari
Shakespeare is widely considered to be the greatest playwright the world has known. But it has always been difficult and time-consuming to understand his works. This series gives you engaging and readable prose retellings of the complete works, preserving as far as possible for the modern reader Shakespeare's original language and mood. In this totally new edition, the tales are collected by genre and arranged chronologically. Each genre and each tale has a fresh and insightful introduction by Andrew Lynn. This first volume contains the comedies as retold by Charles and Mary Lamb and Harrison Morris. Perfect for the Shakespeare aficionado, the student, and the general reader.
Shakespeare Tales

Shakespeare Tales

Andrew Lynn

Howgill House Books
2018
pokkari
Shakespeare is widely considered to be the greatest playwright the world has known. But it has always been difficult and time-consuming to understand his works. This series gives you engaging and readable prose retellings of the complete works, preserving as far as possible for the modern reader Shakespeare's original language and mood. In this totally new edition, the tales are collected by genre and arranged chronologically. Each genre and each tale has a fresh and insightful introduction by Andrew Lynn. This second volume contains the tragedies as retold by Charles and Mary Lamb. Perfect for the Shakespeare aficionado, the student, and the general reader.
Shakespeare Tales

Shakespeare Tales

Andrew Lynn

Howgill House Books
2018
pokkari
Shakespeare is widely considered to be the greatest playwright the world has known. But it has always been difficult and time-consuming to understand his works. This series gives you engaging and readable prose retellings of the complete works, preserving as far as possible for the modern reader Shakespeare's original language and mood. In this totally new edition, the tales are collected by genre and arranged chronologically. Each genre and each tale has a fresh and insightful introduction by Andrew Lynn. This fourth volume contains the Roman tales as retold by Arthur Quiller-Couch, Harrison Morris, and Winston Stokes. Perfect for the Shakespeare aficionado, the student, and the general reader.
Shakespeare Tales

Shakespeare Tales

Andrew Lynn

Howgill House Books
2018
pokkari
Shakespeare is widely considered to be the greatest playwright the world has known. But it has always been difficult and time-consuming to understand his works. This series gives you engaging and readable prose retellings of the complete works, preserving as far as possible for the modern reader Shakespeare's original language and mood. In this totally new edition, the tales are collected by genre and arranged chronologically. Each genre and each tale has a fresh and insightful introduction by Andrew Lynn. This fifth volume contains the English histories as retold by Arthur Quiller-Couch and Harrison Morris. Perfect for the Shakespeare aficionado, the student, and the general reader.
The Day and the Hour: Saturday

The Day and the Hour: Saturday

Lynn Andrew

Sorek Valley Books
2019
nidottu
This seventh volume contains more pages because more is going on in the little town. You would not believe what people are doing while knowing that the Rapture will whisk them away tomorrow, but I think you will agree that the episodes on these pages are more likely than all-day prayer meetings. We could name a number of reasons for this because they are the same reasons that let us go with the flow on any day and hour. Dare we ask what stands behind that? Is it not disbelief? Events must take place that were scheduled and for which preparations have been made, of course. That this is the last opportunity to experience them is added justification. Naming a few, there is a championship baseball game; there is a craft fair at the park; there are sailing lessons on the lake. Why is there is a secular concert in the church auditorium tonight, supplanting the last of Pastor Murphy's week-long evening services? We watch the game unfold play-by-play with Homer Foster pitching for the home team and his friend Victoria Martin pitching for rival Herne as they battle for the Youth Autumn League championship title, while Leila Labaki and Harrietta Foster converse in the stands, and home-team manager Earl Clark exchanges provocations with his nemesis Al Cypher. On this her first sailing lesson Leila learns so quickly that she begins coaching the other sailors, leaving her instructor Earl Clark with nothing to do but admire her. Afterward she joins Evelyn in the baptism event which brings together explosive elements causing Earl to leave town. The implied or direct focus is always on responses to the imminence of the Parousia, for these books constitute a comprehensive look at the Rapture from every angle. I think we all want to know how it can fit the biblical data and not be silly and unscientific. Though Pastor Murphy has attempted to delve into this realistically, tomorrow morning he will find the real answer. Is he free of doubts today as he thinks about that? Can anyone be free of doubts? Is it really a hoax? While often discussing theology directly, these books deal in illustrations. Illustrations bring application to life. An illustration need not be unique, but if not even one illustration can be found, the abstract words of the application are not so inspiring. It's like instructions on the page of a cookbook. We must follow the instructions and prepare the food in order to taste it. Deciding whether or not we go ahead and do so may depend on an illustration. Of course experienced cooks taste the food just by skimming the ingredient list. Likewise, commentary writers have no use for illustrations.
The Day and the Hour: Finally

The Day and the Hour: Finally

Lynn Andrew

Sorek Valley Books
2020
nidottu
Would you be surprised if the hour passes without making anyone disappear? You have to get this close to a beloved impossibility to realize it is impossible. Was there any true certainty before the final day and hour? If not, what does that say about the certainty of heaven? But much better than introspection is to enjoy being connected to the vine, who is Christ, and by his Spirit believing his basic promise of resurrection. Now, resurrection is a frightful thing when you understand it, because if you have not been careful to get rid of them before, you drag into it all the errors of your life which you liked well enough to keep. So let us be sure we understand what God means to do in the resurrection. Whether or not there is a Rapture, there is a resurrection to prepare for, and the resurrection is inseparable from the return of Christ and the kingdom of God on earth. But before dismissing the Rapture, ask how it fits with the kingdom, for if it turns out to be essential, you surely don't want to be left behind. The obvious thing to notice about the Rapture is that it is very selective and cannot be otherwise, simply because the candidates are all born in a narrow band of history spanning barely one century. Taking this fact as a clue to its purpose, we have an obligation to carefully consider how the second coming of Christ must transpire with or without the Rapture. Or to state it graphically, we look behind the doctrine of the Rapture to see if it is connected in some essential way to the rest of prophetic Scripture. Is it more substantive than merely the shadow of a single Parousia? If the Rapture appears to be a distinct but essential part of the Second Coming, then we have no choice: we have the messy task of defending the impossible. Therefore, The Day and Hour series could not be complete without looking into the arrangements necessary for bringing about the well-documented kingdom of God on earth. That will be the last volume, but to help some of our characters get into the kingdom age we need the link which is book nine.
The Day and the Hour: Sunday

The Day and the Hour: Sunday

Lynn Andrew

Sorek Valley Books
2020
nidottu
If you're serious about discovering truth, a fictional story can be an eye-opener. It has the advantage of mirroring the familiar while minimizing noise and focusing on elements that either support or discredit some doctrine. This kind of story depends on your sense of reality derived from your own knowledge and experiences. You can say, "yes, that would work," or "no, that's nonsense" because it violates some principle, or "maybe, but where's the authority?" In all those "maybe" cases we rest on God's perspective as revealed in the Bible--without which we would know nothing. The most fundamental principle, by the way, is that we are here. Philosophers build careers on making light of it, but strict honesty will make this the foundation of your science and guide your judgment of miracles. So we come to this question which impacts every sane and serious person: "What will become of me after death?" In detail, what will that miracle be like? While the Bible is the authority, its answer is not presented on a platter. This project integrates the Bible's information and assembles a Big Picture. In this first volume we begin at the beginning of the end of the dispensation of grace and consider that fascinating subject called the Rapture of the church. A hypothetical "step function" is injected in order to observe not the impact of the Rapture after the fact but to evaluate the doctrine itself through the culture that supports it. In biblical eschatology there are many, many questions that are seldom discussed. These books apply a literary tool to discover answers. While respecting sound theology, they bring to bear principles of the human heart, mind, and body.
The Day and the Hour: Monday

The Day and the Hour: Monday

Lynn Andrew

Sorek Valley Books
2020
nidottu
Every novel is a romance, if it be true to life, because all that happens under the sun--every vanity--is in some way romantic. In a popular dictionary the over-arching definition of romance is, "A mysterious or fascinating quality or appeal, as of something adventurous, heroic, or strangely beautiful." Found in the romance of the Word of God is the enigmatic episode of Samson and Delilah, perhaps the strangest love affair of all time. Books, plays, and movies have attempted to explain it, but in this author's opinion they misinterpret the motives of both Samson and Delilah. If the information in Judges chapters 13-15 is taken as having something to do with their romance, a different interpretation is possible. "And it came to pass afterward that he loved a woman in the valley of Sorek whose name was Delilah." (Judges 16:3) Thus, it appears that a separate chapter in Samson's life is beginning. But why should it be unrelated to chapter 15 and the Philistine who stole his wife? If it were not for Samson being listed among the "heroes of faith" in the New Testament book of Hebrews, we might dismiss him as a capricious fool, ignoring the angelic birth announcement, the fulfilled nazarite vow, his startling cleverness, his 20-year term judging Israel, and of course his superhuman strength. A superman indeed, born to benefit his nation, Samson dealt a blow to the Philistine enemy even in his death. Bible expositors acknowledge that he is an Old-Testament shadow or "type" of Christ. Did Samson "save" Philistine Delilah who seemed to hand him over to his enemies? While a parallel romance runs through these books, it is a current that you can ignore. Primarily, our mission is to explore the foundations of Bible prophesies that have yet to be fulfilled. You will have to endure noticing images of other characters from Scripture and literature, nevertheless. I won't say this is without purpose, but I admit it's mostly for fun. Try not to be too distracted. The first book, Sunday, opened with Kenneth Earl Clark puzzling over the incredible yet undeniable Rapture announcement. Earl is a reporter for the local paper (among other roles in the community). Today, Monday, we meet Leila Labaki, a name suggesting Lebanon as in the Song. As CEO of the Federal Services Administration she is well-liked while being everyone's boss. This is a small town with a tall FSA building that issues rules, some of which--if he were to obey them--would regulate Clark's benevolence. By the way, have you noticed that unintended consequences seem to be arranged by God? We need a better word than irony to describe this, a word that doesn't imply intentional deception. "Incongruity" comes close, but it's a lifeless word. "Literary irony" is merely respectable sarcasm. If you know what I mean, then we don't need a word for it; we just know it when we see it. Sometimes we notice it retrospectively even among intended consequences. It's a romantic thing, really. Some will insist that it's no different from deliberate irony. If it be that, the pages of these books are rife with irony, so be warned.
The Day and the Hour: Tuesday

The Day and the Hour: Tuesday

Lynn Andrew

Sorek Valley Books
2021
nidottu
Nothing in Scripture locates the Rapture in time. There is no prerequisite other than the fact that it hasn't happened yet. However, we can apply reason and predict that it will occur not long before the tribulation period Jesus spoke of, because tribulation will surely result from it. So if you are looking for a sign, you might use increasing evil as a barometer to forecast a day when the church will be silenced. The Rapture, it seems, should come no later than that. But there is no way to calibrate the barometer because the world has never been what it is today. To put it simply, we don't know how bad things can get. There have always been pockets and periods of extreme evil, but the world has never been as interrelated as it is now, and the ultimate strength or weakness of that is unknown. Scripture has a way of transcending human progress. It tells us that Babylon will be destroyed in the last days. The destruction detailed by Isaiah and Jeremiah did not happen when the Persians supplanted the Babylonian empire. Nor was Babylon destroyed when the Greeks overcame the Persians. Alexander the Great wanted Babylon to be the capital of his empire. Though it gradually lost commercial significance, many Jews continued to live in Babylonia, and it never became the permanent ruin seen by Scripture's prophets. On the ancient Euphrates River site in Iraq there stands a reproduction of Nebuchadnezzar's palace built by Saddam Hussein using some of the original bricks. It has become an archaeological site protected by the United Nations. New York, for various reasons, is an increasingly unsuitable host for the UN headquarters. But what city would be more suitable? At the end of Sunday there was an imaginative preview of the center of world commerce, government, and religion that Babylon will become. In the midst of it the Rapture announcement it strikes like a thief in the night, stealing the spotlight from the "Great City." Until relatively recently the literal revival of Israel was considered impossible. Now that Israel is the focus of world events and Jerusalem is an international city, must it continue to seem unlikely that Babylon on the Euphrates will become important again? Next to Jerusalem, Babylon in mentioned in the Bible more than any city. Babylon was the fountainhead of Satanic religion. Jerusalem was "the city of God" and will be so in the future. Is it unreasonable to expect that Babylon will rise again only to be permanently destroyed as detailed in Revelation chapter 18 while Jerusalem lives on as in Revelation 21? Chapter 13 in The Day and the Hour: Tuesday offers solutions to the economic, political, and physical problems that seem to stand in the way of a city on the Euphrates in Iraq becoming that "Great City" and an important seaport. It surely makes a good story.
The Day and the Hour

The Day and the Hour

Lynn Andrew

Sorek Valley Books
2021
pokkari
The Day and the Hour: Wednesday (2nd Edition)This is the fourth in the Day and the Hour series of novels that follow the lives of several residents of a small town in what they believe is their last week of life on earth.
The Day and the Hour: Thursday

The Day and the Hour: Thursday

Lynn Andrew

Sorek Valley Books
2017
nidottu
By the time Thursday rolls around, the world's institutions have responded to the imminent catastrophe. Thanks to Felix, a character stranger than this author could invent, we get a detailed report of an outrageous reaction by authorities in China. And by another fortuitous connection, Claudia learns about discussions among rabbis in Jerusalem. Meanwhile, the media have rushed to educate their audience on other forms of eschatology while pushing the theory that UFOs are responsible for the Rapture warning. Incidentally, there is significance in nearly all of the names. Not Felix, however. I don't know where that one came from, but his alter ego (in the story) is very significant. Thursday begins a series of lively lectures on Genesis by a former witch and lover of history whose name, appropriately, is Clio. Is this ironic? There is no victim. Such ironies keep occurring. I can't help it. There are dozens of characters, many of them appearing in multiple volumes. As a kind gesture to the reader struggling to remember them, first names within a family begin with the same letter, including the name of the dog if there is one. A prominent character introduced back at the beginning in book one is Adam Murphy, pastor of Grace Bible Church. He is one of several clergy folk, all of them living on Parson Street. His older brother, Aaron Murphy is the Catholic priest. There are many good things to say about Pastor Adam, but he receives no respite from Murphy's law which he believes was discovered by the original Adam. A government official whose assignment is to promote cooperation with the dreaded Reorganization arrives in town on Thursday. Tall, gray-eyed, incredibly beautiful Evelyn Newton meets with Earl Clark's resistance committee. It turns out she is on their side. Earl breaks a date with Leila to spend the evening with Evelyn, and he learns at dinner that she has come to town seeking to be baptized by Adam Murphy, an old friend. (Adam and Evelyn knew each other in high school, which of course was in Appleton Wisconsin when her family name was Ribble, but there is much more to that.)