Everyday Grace: Having Hope, Finding Forgiveness, and Making Miracles by Marianne Williamson

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: October 2004
  • 288pp
  • Sales Rank: 100,317
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2004
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
    • Format: Paperback, 288pp
    • Sales Rank: 100,317

    Synopsis

    From the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Illuminata comes a book about everyday peace, everyday purpose, everyday hope, everyday love, and everyday grace.

    In these pages, author and lecturer Marianne Williamson acts as a guide back to the spiritual source, exploring the ways to nurture a thriving soul in a harsh world. The large and small difficulties of our days challenge us to open our hearts and minds. With an attitude of hope, a call to forgive, and a celebration of miracles, Williamson helps readers to find sacred footing on ordinary ground. For no matter what, there is always an opportunity to be happy. Everyone is entitled to the pleasures of everyday grace.

    Publishers Weekly

    Although many people may perceive the achievement of mystical union with the divine as an arduous feat, requiring fasting, pilgrimage and mortification of the flesh, spirituality diva Williamson says "thirty minutes each morning" of "quality time with God" will do the trick. The author of Illuminata aims her book of nonsectarian religious consolation squarely at harried professionals who are frazzled by overscheduling and fret over the disasters they hear about on the news. The path to serenity lies in becoming a "modern mystic" who sees that "everything connects to everything" and that "every issue [is] a spiritual one," from dry-cleaning mishaps to the Middle East peace process (which will be resolved when Israelis and Palestinians understand their essential oneness). Readers can even spiritually transcend their wait at the Department of Motor Vehicles, because "every person in line is someone we can bless." In Williamson's rapturous, liturgical prose, oceanic bliss is conveniently tapped into with prayer and by beaming positive mental energy to a universe karmically primed to beam it back. Although Williamson's insistence on the magical oneness of our desires and our external reality may strike some as wishful thinking, her message will continue to bring peace of mind to her many fans. (Nov. 11) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    Marianne Williamson is the author of Illuminata, A Return to Love, and A Woman's Worth, all #1 New York Times bestsellers. Her other bestselling titles include Healing the Soul of America and Enchanted Love. Her books have been translated into more than twenty languages.

    Customer Reviews

    For Women Who Need Confidenceby Anonymous

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    April 05, 2003: Inner peace is certainly something that today's busy, stressed out people today have trouble achieving. We have such a sense of powerlessness as we're buffeted about by one crisis after another. Crises are opportunities for change, I know, but peace and quiet is hard to settle into. I don't think our competitive society fosters much acceptance or affection for the strangers we meet every day. Changing our point of view really does change our inner reality. Whether we should regard ourselves as all-knowing divine beings with the power to change external reality is something I doubt the wisdom of-- a philosophy of universalism and New Age spiritualism. I guess religious or spiritual beliefs taken to extremes are like anything else: moderation is the key. What I worry about is people who believe that each person defines right and wrong for themselves, with traditional values going out the window as the individual does her 'own thing' to the detriment of the majority. I like the idea of women as 'goddesses' who are getting back in touch with their feminine natures, and perhaps away from the burdens of being feminist super women who burn out. It's good for those who are lacking in self-esteem, self-confidence, who are dominated by men. But let's not go to the other extreme and overestimate our importance. We need to be realistic about our inner powers, and beware of being too fascinated by the workings of our own minds and hearts. We might miss out on the reality that others are experiencing.

    This book will have impact on youby Anonymous

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    January 13, 2003: This is one of the rare good books that is truthful yet opens the readers eye in the opening pages. I benefited significantly and know many others will as well. An applicable book with solutions.


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