Remembering Zion


Book Description

Remembering Zion is a deeply spiritual novel of love set in the beauty and splendor of the American Southwest and Mexico. It is about a man who finds his perfect love and then loses her, only to be given gifts he never dreamed were possible. Remembering Zion is a journey of the heart and the soul. It is about the wonder and immortality of love. The author writes: "For those of you who believe in the notion of the Beshert, that for everyone there is a chosen one with whom we can achieve an immortal love, I hope you find this novel as touching to read as it was for me to write." Morley Glicken is the author of Ending the Sex Wars: A Woman's Guide to Understanding Men, also published by iUniverse. The novel takes many of the ideas presented about love in that book and applies them to people who are as real and memorable as those in our own lives. Remembering Zion has wonderfully romantic descriptions of Mexico and the Southwest, beautiful love poetry, and unforgettable characters who love deeply and show the reader how spiritual love leads to love for the ages, eternal love.







The Harp on the Willows


Book Description




Second Temple Songs of Zion


Book Description

Although in Second Temple literature we find a variety of songs concerned with the future of Jerusalem, little attempt has been made to analyse these comparatively as a generic group. In this study, three songs have been selected on the basis of their similarity in style, ideas and their apparent original composition in Hebrew. The texts have been subjected to a literary analysis both individually and then comparatively.




Power of Your Life Message


Book Description

Through real-life stories and experiences, your defined ideas and beliefs about what God wants for your life will be changed forever! This powerful book gives you vital insights into how to find your purpose and life message. If you are struggling to know God’s will, path, or purpose for your life, The Power of Your Life Message will reveal the secrets to seeing how God uses your ordinary, everyday experiences to become the person He created you to be. Glory to God! He is able to do so much more than we can even think of or ask for. God uses the power that is working in us (Ephesians 3:20 PEB). You are not alone (or crazy) in your struggle to find His will. Author David Crone shares the experiences of his deeply personal journey that ended with an intimate relationship with His heavenly Father. You will be challenged to change your mindset, which opens the door to internal transformation. You will learn how to define your life message and how to make decisions that lead to fulfilling God’s exhilarating and exciting plans for your current and eternal destiny.




Remembering Biblical Figures in the Late Persian and Early Hellenistic Periods


Book Description

Social memory studies offer an under-utilised lens through which to approach the texts of the Hebrew Bible. In this volume, the range of associations and symbolic values evoked by twenty-one characters representing ancestors and founders, kings, female characters, and prophets are explored by a group of international scholars. The presumed social settings when most of the books comprising the TANAK had come into existence and were being read together as an emerging authoritative corpus are the late Persian and early Hellenistic periods. It is in this context then that we can profitably explore the symbolic values and networks of meanings that biblical figures encoded for the religious community of Israel in these eras, drawing on our limited knowledge of issues and life in Yehud and Judean diasporic communities in these periods. This is the first period when scholars can plausibly try to understand the mnemonic effects of these texts, which were understood to encode the collective experience members of the community, providing them with a common identity by offering a sense of shared past while defining aspirations for the future. The introduction and the concluding essay focus on theoretical and methodological issues that arise from analysing the Hebrew Bible in the framework of memory studies. The individual character studies, as a group, provide a kaleidoscopic view of the potentialities of using a social memory approach in Biblical Studies, with the essay on Cyrus written by a classicist, in order to provide an enriching perspective on how one biblical figure was construed in Greek social memory, for comparative purposes.







The Spiritual Practice of Remembering


Book Description

We often dismiss history as dull or irrelevant, but our modern disengagement from the past puts us fundamentally out of step with the long witness of the Christian tradition. Yet, says Margaret Bendroth, the past tense is essential to our language of faith, and without it our conversation is limited and thin. This accessible, beautifully written book presents a new argument for honoring the past. The Christian tradition gives us the powerful image of a vast communion of saints, all of God's people, both living and dead, in vital conversation with each other. This kind of connection with our ancestors in the faith, Bendroth maintains, will not happen by wishing or by accident. She argues that remembering must become a regular spiritual practice, part of the rhythm of our daily lives as we recognize our world to be, in many ways, a gift from others who have gone before.







Gifts from Jerusalem Jews to the Austro-Hungarian Monarchs


Book Description

Presentations of offerings to the emperor-king on anniversaries of his accession became an important imperial ritual in the court of Franz Joseph I. This book explores for the first time the identity constructions of Orthodox Jewish communities in Jerusalem as expressed in their gifts to the Austro-Hungarian Kaisers at the time of dramatic events. It reveals how the beautiful gifts, their dedications, and their narratives, were perceived by gift-givers and recipients as instruments capable of acting upon various social, cultural and political processes. Lily Arad describes in a captivating manner the historical narratives of the creation and presentation of these gifts. She analyzes the iconography of these gifts as having transformative effect on the self-identification of the Jewish communities and examines their reception by the Kaisers and in the Austrian and the Palestinian Jewish press. This groundbreaking book unveils Jewish cultural and political strategies aimed to create local Eretz-Israel identities, demonstrating distinct positive communal identification which at times expressed national sentiments and at the same time preserved European identification.