
New Perspectives |
We shall not cease
from exploration T.S. Eliot We are drowining in information, John Naisbitt, Megatrends |
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Earth rise over moon landscape. Photographed 1968, Apollo 8 mission. |
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Hardcover - 400 pages (November 1, 1999) Best-selling author and prophecy scholar Tim LaHaye and coauthor Jerry B. Jenkins examine the signs of the end times and present 20 reasons why they believe the current generation could see the Rapture. LaHaye and Jenkins lead the reader through the basics of prophecy, then present their 20 reasons in detail. Great for anyone wanting to find out more about end-times prophecy after reading the Left Behind book series. |
Left Behind (Left Behind #1) by Tim F. Lahaye, Jerry B. Jenkins Paperback - 320 pages (April 1996) Throughout the world, people have mysteriously disappeared. Theories
abound--terrorists, UFOs, aliens from another planet. For those who have been left behind,
the apocalypse has just begun. This fictional account of life after the Rapture delivers
an urgent call to today's readers to prepare their own hearts and minister to others. |
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Ethics for the New Millennium by Dalai Lama
Hardcover - 320 pages (August 1999) Also available in Audio Cassette (Abridged) |
In a modern society characterized by insensitivity to violence, ambivalence to the suffering of others, and a high-octane profit motive, is talk of ethics anything more than a temporary salve for our collective conscience? The Dalai Lama thinks so. In his Ethics for the New Millennium, the exiled leader of the Tibetan people shows how the basic concerns of all people--happiness based in contentment, appeasement of suffering, forging meaningful relationships--can act as the foundation for a universal ethics. |
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| What is there in the human soul that wants to embrace catastrophe? Why do we believe, yet fear, that we must endure scarcely-imaginable pain and terror before we can attain to that wisdom that makes us whole? Dr. Edinger's very valuable book explores the impact of these age-old questions using the biblical Book of Revelation as his text. He teaches how St. John's apocalyptic visions can illuminate our own and our society's darkest hours. | Archetype of the Apocalypse : A Jungian Study of the Book of Revelation
by Edward F. Edinger, George R. Elder (Editor)
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For I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see,
Saw the Vision of the world, and all the wonder that could be.
From, "Locksley Hall" by Alfred Lord Tennyson
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| For all life longs for the
Last Day And threre's no man but cocks his ear to know when Michael's trumpet cries that flesh and bone may disappear, and there be nothing but God left. William Butler Yeats - |
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For we know in part, and we prophecy in part. But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away. I Corinthians 13, verses 9-10 |
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The Ultimate Time Machine : A Remote Viewer's Perception of Time, and
Predictions for the New Millennium by Joseph McMoneagle
Paperback - 256 pages
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As a remote viewer with a respected record of accuracy and over 30 years of work with the United States government and in the private sector, McMoneagle is one of the most qualified people in the 20th century for predicting what the future may hold. While many readers will initially be attracted to the prophetic aspects of The Ultimate Time Machine, the most rewarding aspect of this book is McMoneagle's perception of time. McMoneagle suggests that the future, and even the past, are not necessarily on the fixed, linear path that we think they are, but actually are connected in a flexible web that we continually influence with the ultimate time machines, ourselves |
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The ceremony of innocence
is drowned; The best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity. Surely some revelation is at hand. Surely the Second Coming is at hand. from "The Second Coming" |
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"I've seen the future, where the battle between good and evil that has raged for millennia is fought to conclusion, and the struggle for our hearts and minds is decided for all time. We survive, maybe, but only by discarding the question that confuses us, 'What do I want?' and asking what the world, what the universe wants and needs. Asking, 'What does life, itself, expect of me?'" "Frank Black" - Millennium (Final Episode) |
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Watch Ye, therefore; for ye know not when the Master of the house cometh, at even, or at midnight, or at the cockscrowing, or in the morning;
Lest coming suddenly, he find you sleeping.
And what I say unto you, I say unto all, Watch.Saint Mark - Verses 35-37
For a fascinating exploration of all things Millenniumistic, be sure to visit the