7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Word of Caution if You Read "The Reflective Life", January 9, 2007
This review is from: Seeing What Is Sacred: Becoming More Spiritually Sensitive to the Everyday Moments of Life (Paperback)
I have always loved Ken Gire's work. This book is no different: insightful, simple and deeply profound. It can compared to eating a delicious meal because each bite is so rich. However, if you read a previous Ken Gire book, "The Reflective Life" please be aware that it is the same book with a different title. I purchased it thinking it was brand new but ended up giving it as a gift since I already own it under its previous title.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Viewing Life Through God's Filter, July 11, 2006
This review is from: Seeing What Is Sacred: Becoming More Spiritually Sensitive to the Everyday Moments of Life (Paperback)
From the time we're children, we learn that the playing field is not equal. Some excel in sports, math, or reading. Others display a natural creativity, or a knack for attracting friends like moths to a porch light.
But think back far enough, and I'll bet you can remember someone like Nancy, who could barely lift her head to look you in the eye. Overshadowed. Alone. Desperately in need of a friend, but not knowing where to begin. So she didn't.
Every town, every school, every neighborhood has a child like Nancy. If you haven't met her yet, you or your children will. How we deal with the Nancys of this world is a window into who we really are. In his new book, Seeing What is Sacred: Becoming More Spiritually Sensitive to the Everyday Moments of Life, gifted author Ken Gire writes about how to live a more reflective life. I love his view of the bigger picture when he writes:
"To better love God and other people is the goal of the reflective life. But before we can love them, we must see them. And we must see them not as we would like to see them or as they would like to be seen. We must see them as they are. Otherwise we don't love the person. We love the image we perceive the person to be."
Gire's book strips away the fog and inspires its reader to slow down and count each moment as a possibility to see through God's eyes.
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