The War Between Good and Evil by Mark Finley
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
In the last book of the New Testament, a cosmic conflict that began before the creation then came to the Earth and how it ends is given to the followers of Christ. The War Between Good and Evil is the supplemental book of the Adult Sabbath School Bible Study Guide (2nd Quarter 2024) by Mark Finley who focuses on how Jesus Christ has won the war and has stood by His people throughout history even to today and in the future. Finley, a long-time evangelist, is passionate throughout the 128 pages on how Christ has been faithful to his followers through all of history. Unfortunately, the editing team for the publisher allowed—though Finley assumed all responsibility for things being correct—small errors in dates or names of individuals to be printed that were enough for me to notice (if it had been one or two, I wouldn’t have mentioned it essentially). Yet overall, this was a good book with a powerful message.
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A review blog of television, movies, and books with occasional opinion on sports
Thursday, June 27, 2024
Tuesday, June 25, 2024
Book Review: The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith
The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
There are two non-religious books that have impacted the world in the last two and a half centuries, both dealing with economics that would result in dueling worldviews. The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith was published the same year as the signing of the Declaration of Independence by the nation that would be his “champion” in the 20th century.
The predominate economic thought of the 18th century was mercantilism that sought to maximize exports and minimize imports to accumulate resources, i.e. money. Yet Smith viewed this theory and the French theory that focused solely on land value as inadequate for the growing Industrial Revolution that is just commencing, and this his magnum opus was a paradigm shift for economics. However, for many of certain of today’s defenders and proponents of Smith, they claim fly in the face of the author’s actual words including the very lauded phrase “invisible hand”. But even as Smith’s defenders twist his words, some of his detractors overlook many of his passages that support their critiques of him or what is thought he says by those who use his words out of context. Though this is primarily a philosophical treatise on economics that doesn’t stop Smith from revealing his antislavery views as well as his belief that competition in religion would lead to a more tolerate government—this later point would influence James Madison and the separation of church and state. While these two non-economic points were interwoven within the text as a way to emphasize Smith’s economic arguments, Smith’s use of economic data—or overabundant use—was detrimental to the book especially in his digressions and in the last chapter of Book V when covering Public Debt when he went over the history of England/Great Britain’s debt he could have literally halved the section and had a stronger argument to end his treatise. Smith’s very readable treatise comes in at over 1200 pages in this edition and there are many chapters that like the chapter on Public Debt could have been shortened and been just as, if not more, powerful in argument.
The Wealth of Nations is Adam Smith’s magnum opus that resulted in him becoming the “Father of Capitalism” and has been one of the most important economic books of all time, along with Karl Marx’s Das Kapital, and the world has been debating his work ever since.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
There are two non-religious books that have impacted the world in the last two and a half centuries, both dealing with economics that would result in dueling worldviews. The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith was published the same year as the signing of the Declaration of Independence by the nation that would be his “champion” in the 20th century.
The predominate economic thought of the 18th century was mercantilism that sought to maximize exports and minimize imports to accumulate resources, i.e. money. Yet Smith viewed this theory and the French theory that focused solely on land value as inadequate for the growing Industrial Revolution that is just commencing, and this his magnum opus was a paradigm shift for economics. However, for many of certain of today’s defenders and proponents of Smith, they claim fly in the face of the author’s actual words including the very lauded phrase “invisible hand”. But even as Smith’s defenders twist his words, some of his detractors overlook many of his passages that support their critiques of him or what is thought he says by those who use his words out of context. Though this is primarily a philosophical treatise on economics that doesn’t stop Smith from revealing his antislavery views as well as his belief that competition in religion would lead to a more tolerate government—this later point would influence James Madison and the separation of church and state. While these two non-economic points were interwoven within the text as a way to emphasize Smith’s economic arguments, Smith’s use of economic data—or overabundant use—was detrimental to the book especially in his digressions and in the last chapter of Book V when covering Public Debt when he went over the history of England/Great Britain’s debt he could have literally halved the section and had a stronger argument to end his treatise. Smith’s very readable treatise comes in at over 1200 pages in this edition and there are many chapters that like the chapter on Public Debt could have been shortened and been just as, if not more, powerful in argument.
The Wealth of Nations is Adam Smith’s magnum opus that resulted in him becoming the “Father of Capitalism” and has been one of the most important economic books of all time, along with Karl Marx’s Das Kapital, and the world has been debating his work ever since.
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Labels:
economics,
philosophy
Location:
Collegedale, TN 37315, USA
Tuesday, June 18, 2024
Book Review: The Book of Matthew by Andy Nash
The Book of Matthew: Save Us Now, Son of David by Andy Nash
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
The Gospel of Matthew is written for a Jewish audience to reveal that Jesus of Nazareth is the long-promised Messiah and written by a Jewish man who worked for the hated Romans as a tax collector. The Book of Matthew: Save Us Now, Son of David is the supplement book of the Adult Sabbath School Bible Study Guide (2nd Quarter 2016) by Andy Nash who through thought-provoking insights and illustrations that bring the text alive. Over the course of 128 pages, Nash covers all 28 chapters over the 13-week lesson but personally the next to last chapter when he covers the Matthew 26 in the chapter titled, “Christ’s Remarriage” that begins with 1st-Century Jewish tradition of marriage proposal, acceptance, and ceremony that all are paralleled in the Last Supper. While that was the highlight for me from this book, Nash had many other illustrations in each chapter that helped view the Book of Matthew in a new light.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
The Gospel of Matthew is written for a Jewish audience to reveal that Jesus of Nazareth is the long-promised Messiah and written by a Jewish man who worked for the hated Romans as a tax collector. The Book of Matthew: Save Us Now, Son of David is the supplement book of the Adult Sabbath School Bible Study Guide (2nd Quarter 2016) by Andy Nash who through thought-provoking insights and illustrations that bring the text alive. Over the course of 128 pages, Nash covers all 28 chapters over the 13-week lesson but personally the next to last chapter when he covers the Matthew 26 in the chapter titled, “Christ’s Remarriage” that begins with 1st-Century Jewish tradition of marriage proposal, acceptance, and ceremony that all are paralleled in the Last Supper. While that was the highlight for me from this book, Nash had many other illustrations in each chapter that helped view the Book of Matthew in a new light.
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Labels:
Seventh-day Adventist
Location:
Collegedale, TN 37315, USA
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