FYI, I receive a portion of the proceeds from advertising links on this blog.

Friday, November 8, 2024

New Release Paperback: SIN by C. W. Steinle

 


"A remarkable read indeed and one that brings amazing Judeo-Christian understanding to a climactic awareness of its impact upon the world's destiny—you won't put this read down." —Douglas W. Krieger (More of  review below)

Take a journey from the beginning of this Age right through the Hippie and Woke ideologies to understand how they all deal with the issue of SIN. Ancient moral codes from around the world have striking similarities. For instance, the Egyptian 42 Negative Confessions from 4000 years ago align with the Bible's ethics. 

After 4,000 years of progress, what happens when the ancient model for right and wrong is abandoned? How were ethics redefined by the Hippie Movement transforming into the current focus on "Identity?" SIN follows the quest by kingdoms for ethical societies and concern for integrity of the soul. 

Steinle explores moral codes from 2100 BCE through 1500 CE, discovering texts and artifacts proving righteousness has been in the minds of humanity from the beginning of this Age. In the 21st-century-atheist view, ethics and moral standards are progressing in step with human advancement. 

Consequences of violating pop culture’s ethics might include cancellation, being doxxed, or tagged with demonizing names. According to the CDC, suicide rates for ages 15–19 increased 57% from 2009 through 2017. Guilt and shame are certainly not new; but suddenly decoupled from the ancient ways, and “falling short” of the unforgiving pop standards, where can people turn for acceptance and restoration? 

What if the answer to personal peace has been there all along? Not a hoax or gimmick; but what millions of people for thousands of years have actually experienced. Relief from the damage of sin for both the offended and the offender. And it all starts with seeing SIN for what it is.

#Sin #NewRelease #Paperback amazon.com/dp/B0DHL94DB8

"To say that I am in awe over the comprehensive societal, cultural and religiopolitical account in Chris W. Steinle's SIN would do it critical injustice—it is breathtaking, stereoscopic in its analysis of where we have been and where we are and eschatologically going!  Simply put: Your weltanschauung will not only be interrupted; it will be unalterably adjusted—and for the better.  His understanding of the present, affected by the past, lays bare our future—truly; I have not enjoyed a text of this stature since Francis A. Schaeffer's HOW SHALL WE THEN LIVE?  A remarkable read indeed and one that brings amazing Judeo-Christian understanding to a climactic awareness of its impact upon the world's destiny—you won't put this read down.  I predict it will find itself as a stalwart standard bearer of understanding history—making sense out of the kaleidoscope of the miscellaneous all leading to the inevitable intervention of the Messianic Age!"  Douglas W. Krieger, Author; Chair, Commonwealth of Israel Foundation.

Table of Contents

Sin by Any Other Name Speaking of Sin Who Makes the Rules? Part I. An Apocalyptic Paradigm Shift Choice of a New Generation Two New Things “Under the Sun” Existential Nuclear Threat End-times Israel Regathered Last Generation Syndrome The Not So Great Schisms Hippies without a Cause Part II. Gimme that New Age Religion Collective Consciousness Origins of the Spiritual Realm Multidimensional Universes Metaphysical Individualism Woke Continuity with Hippie Movement Moral Shift from God to State The Cicero Principle Change in Moral Focus Woke Values Common with Scriptures From Privilege to Power to Sin The Social Media Collective The Tyranny of the Social Part III. The Ancient Boundaries Religion at the Beginning of the Age Göbekli Tepe Caral-Supe Early Religious and Legal Codes Code of Ur-Nammu (circa 2100–2050 BCE) The Ma’at Principles (c. 2000 BCE) Code of Hammurabi (c. 1754 BCE) Iron Age Religious and Ethical Codes Vedic Ethical Codes (c. 1500-500 BCE) Ten Commandments (c. 1200 BCE) Zoroastrian Asha Doctrine (c. 1200 BCE) Ten Precepts of Jainism (c. 9th-6th Century BCE) Eightfold Path: Buddhism (c. 6th Century BCE) Delphic Maxims (c. 6th Century BCE) Confucian Virtues (c. 5th-4th Century BCE) Moral Codes in the Common Era Sharia (7th Century CE) Inca Moral Code (c. 15th Century CE) The Myth of Moral Relativism Part IV. A Solution from the Midst of the Age The Sacrifice Principle The Far Side of the Jesus Movement The Law under Grace Does the Bible Speak on Abortion? Homosexuality The Power of Love What’s Next? amazon.com/dp/B0DHL94DB8 Religious #Antiquities & #Archaeology

No comments:

Post a Comment