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Conversations with God: An Uncommon Dialogue, Book 1 Hardcover – October 29, 1996
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- Print length223 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherG. P. Putnam's Sons
- Publication dateOctober 29, 1996
- Dimensions5.83 x 0.98 x 8.53 inches
- ISBN-100399142789
- ISBN-13978-0399142789
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book great, exciting, and useful for mature Christians. They also describe the message as profound and life-changing. Opinions are mixed on the value for money, with some finding it worth the money and reasonable, while others say it exposes contradictory arguments.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book excellent, mind-wringing, and exciting. They say it's useful for mature, discerning Christians. Readers also mention the series is wonderful and inspiring.
"...It's a wonderful book that brought me hope and love into my life like never before. It's brought me closer to God then ever before...." Read more
"...Once what I already felt inside was confirmed and supported, appreciated and encouraged, my entire being shifted...." Read more
"...The words are elegant, logical, and impactful. The lessons are eye-opening, empowering, and liberating...." Read more
"...on Walsch's claim but I will say that he offers a beautiful and compelling vision of reality and our creative power...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking. They say it's enlightening, profound, and life-changing. Readers also mention the book is an uplifting series that helps their spiritual growth. They appreciate the good lessons and truth.
"...There are so many great messages within this book that it would take forever to list them all, but here are the most important.1...." Read more
"...I already felt inside was confirmed and supported, appreciated and encouraged, my entire being shifted...." Read more
"...Its lessons reverberate across all of life's experiences and provide the tools to handle any and every experience that life throws your way...." Read more
"...I immediately got the book, and could clearly see every page was full of absolute truth...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking and heartwarming. They say it's a book of love, hope, and peace. Readers mention the book gives them tears of gratitude and laughter of joy.
"...1. Love is everything2. God is totally loving. God does not judge, condemn, or punish. ever.3. There is nothing you have to do...." Read more
"...I could go on and on, but let's just say my life has been filled with joy and happiness...." Read more
"...make ourselves experience optimum health as well as wealth, beautiful relationships, a supreme paradise etc...." Read more
"...Yet the message contained in this book gave me tears of gratitude and laughter of joy...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the value for money of the book. Some mention it's worth the money, while others say it's not biblical, not about religion, and full of errors and contradictions.
"...and confused about what was happening to him with a sincere and realistic demeanor...." Read more
"...in it (God's love, Love is the way to heaven), but it's full of errors and contradictions...." Read more
"...reading the book once you reach the point I mention above, it's worth the money...." Read more
"...Contains some “wisdom” but frankly not as much as I expected." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book repetitive, boring, and convoluted. They also mention the rough-edged pages look cheap.
"Interesting concept. Well executed. Got pretty boring and tired by the end. Contains some “wisdom” but frankly not as much as I expected." Read more
"...I found the dialog to be patronizing, boring and sometimes repetitive." Read more
"...is an interesting book, although it started off slowly and felt a little repetitive." Read more
"...Plus, it has a nice hardcover, although I don't like the rough cut edges of the pages." Read more
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I'm one of those people who have been helped by this wonderful book. I discovered it about a year ago when browsing the library. In hindsight, I'm convinced that I was lead to this book, but now is not the place to discuss that.
What can be discussed is how the book and it's two follow ups changed my life. I used to be a born again christian, but after reading this series, I was...well...born again! This time however, to a new level of thinking and wisdom that surpassed anything Christianity ever offered me.
I'm going to be blunt and say that this book has done more for me then the Bible ever did. The bible may have some great stuff in it (God's love, Love is the way to heaven), but it's full of errors and contradictions. Plus, it is a little outdated, having been written roughly two thousand years ago, when slavery was okay, we butchured animals to please the Gods, and stoning a person to death was still common place (fun fact: According to Leviticus, when your child disobeys you, take him or her to the city gates and stone them to death).
But Conversations with God is written for the modern era. It's packed with wisdom and insight that's written in common sense, easy to read english. There are so many great messages within this book that it would take forever to list them all, but here are the most important.
1. Love is everything
2. God is totally loving. God does not judge, condemn, or punish. ever.
3. There is nothing you have to do.
4. There is no such thing as right or wrong, only individual views. You create your own morality.
5. You come here not to learn, but to remember and create yourself anew.
Some have said that the conversations with God books basically say that you're free to go out and do anything you want, because there is no such thing as right or wrong. Well, that's true. But as God points out, there are consequences for everything you do. Thus, if you go out and steal, you'll be arrested and go to jail. Negative consequence. If you go out and help the elderly, you'll feel good. Good consequence. So while you're free to do anything you want, there will be consequences of whatever you do. The question is, what consequence do you want?
Many, many Christians hate this book and this series, convinced that it's a work of the devil, out to corrupt and turn people away from God. The book also goes against many of the Christian teachings and things said in the bible. I admit that the book does go against many established beliefs, but it's not anti-religious. It points out the mistakes that religion has made, but it is not condemning them. For example, here's how God explains religions (found on pages 152-155)
"These areas and questions very often include the subjects most vital for your soul: the nature of God; the nature of true morality; the question of ultimate reality; the issues of life and death surrounding war, medicine, abortion, euthanasia, the whole sum and substance of personal values, structures, judgments. These most of you have abrogated, assigned to others. You don't want to make your own decisions about them.
"Someone else decide! I'll go along, I'll go along!" you shout. "Someone else just tell me what's right and wrong!"
This is why, by the way, human religions are so popular. It almost doesn't matter what the belief system is, as long as it's firm, consistent, clear in its expectation of the follower, and rigid. Given those characteristics, you can find people who will believe in almost anything. The strangest behavior and belief can be-has been-attributed to God. It's God's way, they say. God's word.
And there are those who will accept that. Gladly. Because, you see, it eliminates the need to think."
I think this explains fundamentalists, bible beaters, and those who believe that Satan wrote these books pretty well.
Religions are just another path to God. "Our way is not the way, it is a way". This book says that if you don't like it's messages, then dont read them. Don't believe them. Allow each soul to walk it's path.
Some ideas in here are truely life changing. There is no such thing as the devil. Eternal damnation does not exist. There is a hell, but it is nothing like we've visualized it, and it's never eternal (in fact, you can get out whenever you want). God is true love, never judging, never condemning, never sending people to hell. God doesn't command us, God doesn't control us or want anything from us. Best of all, suffering is unnecessary!
When comparing this book's messages with those who have visited the spiritual world (via Near Death Experiences), I found that almost all the information it gives (including everything in the above paragraph) is correct. Of course, it's my view that it's correct. You could see it as incorrect. That's okay because it's your view.
It goes withought saying that it's best to be open minded when reading this book. Even then, it just won't be for some people. That's fine. They are free to believe whatever they want. Me? I choose to believe this book and it's predecessors.
Some have said that the ideas in this book are not entirely origional. So what? Does that make thier value, thier worth any less? Just because the ideas are not origional, doesn't mean that it's worthless.
This book is also very deep and has many layers and levels. It takes a long time to truely understand everything it says, so skimping through it isin't going to help you understand it.
I've been applying this book and it's follow ups in my daily life for over a year. And you know what? I've had nothing but good things come my way. I now feel more alive, more open then ever before. I am truely free to see the world with a new view. Best of all, I no longer fear God! In fact, I love God more then I ever have in my life.
This book wasn't written or inspired by Satan (if he existed). It's a wonderful book that brought me hope and love into my life like never before. It's brought me closer to God then ever before. It's given me an upbeat and optimistic view of life. This book changed my life for the better in every single aspect of it.
It's a book of love, hope, and peace. Just look at how many people have been touched by it. The ones who hate it get the most attention, but judging by it's average rating (four stars with over 900 reviews), I think that this book has truely touched the lives of millions.
There's a great moment in the classic movie "The Time machine" where a charachter asks at the end, "If you could take three books with you(into the future), what would you take?"
My answer?: The conversations with God series.
I started reading that evening, and never stopped till it was finished. My head spun with so much happy (not quite the word I really want) that my walk along the bay to and from work each day took on a whole new journey. Book 1 presented God as I innately knew Him/Her/It/ to be. Once what I already felt inside was confirmed and supported, appreciated and encouraged, my entire being shifted. As the subsequent books were published, I devoured them like a yummy PBJ with Cherry preserves and soft white bread! Just delicious! That was 1996.
Today, I am re-reading and re-assimilating. When I asked God a few nights ago, what is it we pay for this exchange with? I know nothing is free, and the is always a balance, and exchange of energies in this remarkable Universe we live in. So what can I do for You, I'd ask. What means of exchange could I present to You as my offering? You tell me I can be, do or have, anything? Well, sure I can, at a cost, right? I can have that thing, those things, them things, that situation, or any thing I want, but its going to cost going into debt, or draining my bank account. You love to make things happen for us, so what means of "payment" do you take? :) Ahhhwww, those silly chuckles I hear when God smiles. His answer was simple. "Pay Attention".
Oh, for crying out loud. That is so simple and so....astoundingly simple. So simple that most of us don't have a clue what that means and it's very easy to NOT do. Pay Attention. In Book 1, God said "If you don't go within, you go without." Pay Attention. God doesn't need or want worship, just Pay Attention. What you put your attention on or to, you make real. You get what you pay attention to. If you pay attention to your family drama, that is what you get. If you pay attention to your illnesses and disease, worry about your poor health, then you will have that experience. If you pay attention to the idea you need more money, you will need more money. If you pay attention to your spouse, and or your children, with patience and love, you will have that experience. If you pay attention to your job, or your teacher or professors, you will have mastered the experience, allowing more of the same to come to you.
Imagine what you could do with this power. If we pay attention to the Source that All This Comes From, what would it choose as a means to create life on Earth? Humans let their minds get in the way of everything they do, judging, condemning, naming, stifling creation itself. The result is destruction. Killing, and war. Our evolvement has taken on that of a spoiled bratty teenager who just thinks they know everything, eating, driving, drinking, playing, avoiding, punishing, criticizing, rebelling, and growing....yes growing. All done from their ill-informed mind-state. If they'd only use their brain and pay attention to what truly matters.
Five Stars to all of the CWG books. Open your mind and let the dustbunnies take a hike.
Top reviews from other countries
His strength/ruse is in adopting two different writing styles (a colloquial one and a more old-fashioned, even biblical, one), thus making the reader believe that the ideas presented in the book are kind of a top-down revelation.
Neal constructs an elaborate but wobbly metaphysical paradigm of our “reality”, incorporating esoteric and lofty ideas that make you feel good for a while but in the end are worthless, if not harmful. Besides the “everything happens for a reason or according to a soul’s plan” (which is enough to make you delusional; the Universe doesn’t care whether you fall from a cliff or do anything else), he adds more to an already confusing system of his creation. Neale states that creationists and evolutionists are “both right”, that the “mystery of life” is too great to solve and that we should “leave it alone”. Another example is how he treats the question of the calamities of the world – basically, people deserve the tornadoes because it’s all created by their consciousness. The pinnacle of nonsense and in total contradiction with known history, anthropology and chronology of Earth/human development, he states that “the first people” were immortal but doesn’t specify what happened along the way for the immortality to shrink to 70 years of average human lifetime. By this time, you should have a headache because of your brain getting ready to drop out.
Most of the book is dedicated to Neale’s (apparent) struggle with his own mental conditioning, coming mainly from Christianity. This book talks only through the lens of this religion, making sweeping generalisations, however, along the lines of “all religions of the world”, “all teachers”, and so on. Speaking of “great teachers”, Neale creates a sort of an ideal prototype of an invincible “master” of life, the likes of Jesus, that he uses an an example to follow throughout the whole book (Christian conditioning is pretty strongly felt here once again). Neals also reassures himself that it’s ok to get rich by selling his “God’s work”, asks questions about relationships, health and “success”. The question is not whether it’s “ok” that he gets rich by selling his multiple books (as it turned out), but whether his creations bring any value?
Speaking of the latter, there are some useful ideas to ponder, like being more aware of our thoughts, where our opinions come from and what motivates our actions. Also, becoming aware that our value judgements (good, bad, right, wrong) are labels that we invent in order to define ourselves and create a framework of our lives. Another point is getting rid of shame regarding sex and practising honest communication in relationships. The problem is that you can find all of this in good psychology/philosophy books without the need of constructing a whole load of unsubstantiated, unfalsifiable, metaphysics around it!
Don’t waste your time and spare your brain cells. Walsh is one of numerous pop-spirituality priests who sells his unfalsifiable theories that are at best entertaining, at worst impractical and harmful, promoting magical thinking.
CWG is a treasure and really explains the simplicity of being who you are, the way we have changed over the years, it explains and connects us to our inner self reading it feels so good, the simple things happening on a daily basis, just looking at them from the author's point of view makes a whole lot of difference. It feels like coming home. Not a book, an experience. It maies me emotional writing this review, it has become so personal. Totally aligned with discovering and changing with
Re-minding and re- learning the wisdom from Neale Donald Walsch. I wanna read all of them. Thank you for the service, Amazon.






