Tilfældige bøger fra liamfoleys bibliotek
Beowulf: An Illustrated Edition af seamus Heaney
The Accidental Investment Banker af Jonathan A. Knee
Messengers of Joy: How Important Is Priesthood Today? af Cardinal Godfried Danneels
Gospel of Luke: The Ignatius Study Guide (Ignatius Catholic Study Bible) af Scott Hahn
Baudolino af Umberto Eco
A World Lit Only by Fire: The Medieval Mind and the Renaissance: Portrait of an Age af William Manchester
The New Oxford Annotated Bible, New Revised Standard Version with the Apocrypha, Third Edition (Hardcover 9700A) af Michael D. Coogan (Ed.)
Medlemmer med liamfoleys bøger
Medlemsforbindelser
interessante biblioteker: CatholicLibrary, citizenkelly, kindermord, kiwidoc, MarthaJeanne, oakesspalding, steen, tmcarew, wyvernfriend
LibraryThing-forfattere: William L. Smith (Smithwil)

Medlem: liamfoley
Bibliotek920 bøger — se bibliotek
Anmeldelser24 anmeldelser — se anmeldelser
Skyertag-sky, forfatter-sky
Tagshistory (336), Catholicism (320), Irish (193), Penguin (84), literature (81), philosophy (74), medieval (67), theology (66), military (65), fiction (50) — se alle tags
GrupperAncient and Medieval Manuscripts, Archivists on LibraryThing, Catholic Tradition, Irish & Celtic Studies, Irish Librarythingers, Mac Users at LibraryThing, Medieval Europe, Military History, Monks, Monasteries and Monasticism, Political Conservatives — vis alle grupper
YndlingsforfattereAlbert Camus, Frederick Copleston, Jared Diamond, Graham Greene, Peter Kreeft, Mary Lavin, Sigrid Undset, P.G. Wodehouse (Fælles favoritter)
Om mig Back in Ireland after spending the the last eight years in the Southern United States.
I love history in general but Early Modern history in particular, I also like Irish History, Church History and literature as well as Philosophy. I am working on yet another Masters, this time in Archives.
Om mit bibliotek Some of my books are rare and unobtainable, the fruits of searching through collections in used book stores in Ireland, I have many contemporary works. I am in the process of uploading them to LT.
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Rigtigt navnLiam
StedDublin, Ireland
E-mailliamfoley
ireland.com
Kontotypeoffentlig, livstid
ForbindelserForbindelser
URLer
http://www.librarything.com/profile/liamfoley (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/liamfoley (bibliotek)
Medlem sidenOct 14, 2006

Beskeder fra andre LibraryThing'ere
(Skriv besked.)
skrevet af byzanne kl. 6:17 am (EST) den Jun 15, 2008
skrevet af lollygaggingabout kl. 8:28 am (EST) den Jun 13, 2008
Actually Judeo-Christianity is the largest area of the collection right now. The tag for those books is "White Blue" and it shows that there are 103 books. Probably 1/5 of those are various editions of Bibles. I don't know if you're familiar with Unitarian Universalism. While our roots are in Christianity the faith has broadened to include exploration of spirituality in many forms.
If you're interested in knowing more about UUism this is a basic explanation: http://www.beliefnet.com/story/80/story_...
and this is a good article as well:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unitarian_U...
Have a great day!
Vicki, UUCLR Librarian
skrevet af UUCLR kl. 7:10 am (EST) den Apr 30, 2008
skrevet af tartalom kl. 12:37 pm (EST) den Apr 9, 2008
skrevet af tartalom kl. 3:37 pm (EST) den Apr 8, 2008
The denomination I belong to has links with many other Protestant churches; though none of these would be regarded as the 'mainstream' denominations. We believe that the main denominations have gravely departed from God's infallible Word in a great many areas of doctrine and practice. We do not regard Liberal churchmen as being Protestants at all, but heretics who murder men's souls.
As for the Church of Rome, you may know our relation to it from our Subordinate Standards; particularly from the Westminster Confession of Faith Ch. 21.
May I leave you with a few quotations which will give you some idea of what we hold and endeavor to be to the Glory of God.
“A man’s capacity for such propriety in Christ’s righteousness is union with Him. Christ’s taking our nature into union with Him was His capacity to take our sins and condemnation on himself; and His taking our persons into union is our capacity to have that interest in His righteousness so as to be made the righteousness of God in Him.” Obadiah Grew {Puritan}, Christ Our Righteousness, p.?
“Jesus the Mediator of the New Covenant” - Heb. 12:24. Jesus Christ is the sum and quintessence of the gospel; the wonder of angels; the joy and triumph of saints. The name of Christ is sweet, it is as music in the ear, honey in the mouth, and a cordial at the heart.” Thomas Watson {Puritan}, Unknown
“By grace we are what we are in justification, and work what we work in sanctification.” Richard Sibbes {Puritan}, Unknown
“Perfect holiness is the aim of the saints on earth, and it is the reward of the saints in Heaven.” Joseph Caryl {Puritan}, Unknown
“By walking with God, I mean, a sincere endeavour, punctually and precisely, to manage, conduct, and dispose all our affairs, thoughts, words, and deeds, all our behaviour and conversation, in reverence and fear, with humility and singleness of heart, as in the sight of an invisible God, under the perpetual presence of his all-seeing, glorious, pure eye; and, by a comfortable consequence, to enjoy, by the assistance and exercise of faith, an unutterable sweet communion and humble familiarity with his holy Majesty; in a word, to live in heaven upon earth.” Robert Bolton {Puritan}, General Directions for a Comfortable Walking with God
“While we are zealous for good works, let us be careful not to put them in the place of Christ’s righteousness, and not to advance anything which may betray others into so dreadful a delusion.” Matthew Henry {Puritan}, Unknown
“1. Some actions of God’s love unto us are so in Christ, that they are wholly suspended on him, and his merits are the only procuring cause of them: for example, forgiveness of sins is an action of God’s love unto us, and yet this wholly depends upon Christ and his merits; so that his precious blood must either procure this mercy for us from God, else they will never be forgiven; and this and the like love of God is both in Christ and for Christ. 2. There are some other actions of God’s love which arise merely and only out of the absolute will of God, without any concurrence of Christ’s merits; as the eternal purpose of God, whereby he hath determined so choose some men to salvation: this is an action of God’s love, merely arising out of his absolute will, without Christ’s merits. For Christ is a Mediator, and all his merits are the effects of his love, not the cause of it. And yet this love, though it be not for Christ, yet it is in Christ.” John Randall {Very Early Puritan}, In a Sermon upon Romans 8
“Never did any man take Jesus Christ savingly, who took him not for a husband and a Lord, to serve, love and obey him for ever after, as well as a saviour to disburden him of his sins; as a King to govern him by his Word and Spirit, as well as a Priest to wash him in his blood.” Robert Bolton {Puritan}, Instructions for a Right Comforting
“There is no possible way in which a sinner can be freed from the perpetual obligation of the law as a covenant than be presenting, in the hand of faith to it, the infinitely perfect and meritorious righteousness of the second Adam as a full answer to all its high demands. When this glorious righteousness is received by faith, and graciously imputed to a man, the law in its covenant form is fully satisfied with respect to him. A sinner depends on the righteousness of Christ for justification to no good purpose if he does not rely on it only, and neither in whole nor in part on his own obedience.” John Colquhoun, Unknown
“They that are truly converted are new men, new creatures; new not only within, but without; they are sanctified throughout, in spirit, soul and body; old things are passed away, all things are become new; they have new hearts, and new eyes, new ears, new tongues, new hands, new feet…they walk in newness of life, and continue to do so to the end of life.” Jonathan Edwards {Puritan}, Religious Affections, pp. 313-14
Sorry for the amount, but you can read them a few at a time. Feel free to visit www.puritanismtoday.co.uk
Yours Faithfully,
Gary
skrevet af puritanismtoday kl. 7:08 pm (EST) den Apr 1, 2008
Fran
skrevet af medievalmama kl. 2:20 pm (EST) den Mar 24, 2008
Fran
skrevet af medievalmama kl. 3:57 pm (EST) den Mar 21, 2008
My secondary field is contemporary American lit, especially the novelists of the 1980s and into the 1990s -- (I just gave a very well-received paper on "Bakhtin's dialogic imagination, Medieval exegesis, and Alice Walker's _By The Light of My Father's Smile_" as a half session paired with Dr. Kim Sisson on "To Hold as T'were the Mirror up to Hate: Terrence McNally's Response to the Christian Right in 'Corpus Christi'".)
My tertiary was Renaissance non-dramatic literature, but I am now more interested in the drama.
My M.A. in 1981 was in literary theory -- "Deconstruction: From Derrida to Yale" with a chapter each on J. Hillis Miller, Paul de Mann, Geoffrey Hartman, and Harold Bloom. I was lucky that Derrida came to Emory for a whole week and Miller taught at Emory for that same semester and I was allowed to sit in on all of Miller's classes and on all of Derrida's lectures.
Long answer for a short question -- but our shared interests were why I was surprised that we did not have more books in common.
F
For fun, I read murder mysteries and fantasy, mainly with strong female protagonists.
skrevet af medievalmama kl. 3:53 pm (EST) den Mar 21, 2008
skrevet af medievalmama kl. 1:17 pm (EST) den Mar 20, 2008
Professor Smith,
LT attributes you as being the author of this book: http://www.librarything.com/work/5023192. Is this so?
William L. Smith, smithwil in Library Thing, is NOT the author. Thank you for asking, and pointing it out!
;-)
skrevet af smithwil kl. 10:36 pm (EST) den Mar 8, 2008
Here I'm biased, as Francis Carty is one of my best friends. I'm not myself terribly interested in McQuaid per se, but FXC's focus here on his efforts at reputation management I find interesting (both Francis and I have taught public relations at university). It's very well written, as is everything Francis does. He has also written an autobiographical account of his own religious calling: Why I Said No to God, which you might find of interest.
Conor
skrevet af ConorMcGrath kl. 9:01 am (EST) den Feb 24, 2008
I'm not really up-to-date on the various Theological faculties on the Austrian Universities. I attend lectures as my health permits at the Theological Courses of the Archdiocese of Vienna - which is for lay people. That's where I have been learning Hebrew. There are are proper courses, but those aren't suitable for me. I just go to lectures, and this Hebrew class. However the lectures are great as the speakers come from various places in Austria and Germany. Most of my theology I have learned from books, and some from a distance course out of England. It's a lot more exciting to sit there and listen to someone, and maybe be able to ask questions.
We lived in Geneva for a while, and although I much prefer Vienna, due to the WCC and the Lutheran World Federation there were often interesting things going on in English. The Lutheran pastor knew I was interested and somewhat informed, so he got me into a lot of things that weren't generally open.
skrevet af MarthaJeanne kl. 2:33 pm (EST) den Feb 22, 2008
Actually, I can read Latin - sort of - better than either Greek or Hebrew anyway, thanks to Mr. Cor and two years of High School Latin, and several decades of looking at Latin inscriptions. It might be interesting, at that, to read a facing page edition of 'City of God'. I would read the English or German, but check out interesting passages in the Latin. By the end of that I would either add Latin to the languages I need to work on, or give up on it entirely.
BTW our 'books you share' category will be a lot higher once I finish getting my library entered. I saw several in your library. For now, Raymond E. Brown already gives me a good opinion of you. I'm an American by birth and passport, Church of England by choice, although now going to Old Catholic services, and a fairly permanent resident of Austria.
skrevet af MarthaJeanne kl. 5:01 am (EST) den Feb 22, 2008
skrevet af maryanntherese kl. 7:21 pm (EST) den Feb 15, 2008
All the best!
skrevet af fannyprice kl. 3:48 pm (EST) den Jan 12, 2008
I'm glad to have found someone who shares my affinity for O'Connor. That is such an excellent collection. The title story had such a personal focus, and Larry's family symbolized O'Connor's family in many ways. O'Connor even admits that he has written about his father in various disguises.
I'm leaving for Galway mid-week for the holidays and am looking forward to it. Don't know how much reading I'll get in but I'm taking Frank O'Connor's Collected Stories with me.
Hope your holidays are filled with peace, love and joy.
Sean
skrevet af SeanLong kl. 7:31 am (EST) den Dec 17, 2007
Thanks for getting in touch. Have just read Waters' Lapsed Agnostic. Didn't enjoy it much personally.I often don't agree with him, but he is generally interesting at least. I found this book too long/repetitive: some quite banal rants against, eg, consumerism, which may be perfectly sensible but just not very insightful. As an atheist, I did find him a bit unnecessarily dismissive of why people would choose not to believe in God - he is interesting on his own path, but seems to feel that because he has rejected one way of life, it stands to reason that everyone should. Anyway, hope you enjoy it.
Conor McGrath
skrevet af ConorMcGrath kl. 5:55 am (EST) den Dec 17, 2007
skrevet af TumnusEthic kl. 11:28 am (EST) den Nov 3, 2007
skrevet af TumnusEthic kl. 4:26 pm (EST) den Oct 12, 2007
Joe
skrevet af wgman kl. 9:09 pm (EST) den Oct 11, 2007
skrevet af TumnusEthic kl. 11:27 pm (EST) den Oct 8, 2007
Joe (wgman)
skrevet af wgman kl. 1:45 pm (EST) den Sep 20, 2007
skrevet af jkavanagh kl. 8:36 am (EST) den Aug 18, 2007
Yes - I just saw the GGS production on the TV and thought it was much better than the book!!! And when I saw Jared in the flesh - I realized that his personality reflected my feelings about the book ----- bo....and insip.. - perhaps I dare not say it as I know you liked his book. I did write a review but maybe I am too unfair.
Anyway - nice to hear from you again.
Just received a Mary Lavin title in the mail - looking forward to some Irish fare...
Cheers, Karen
skrevet af kiwidoc kl. 8:14 pm (EST) den Aug 17, 2007
skrevet af jkavanagh kl. 3:05 pm (EST) den Aug 15, 2007
Medieval cities is a really good book if you are a history buff- fascinating to realize that the development of European cities and especially the Meditterean was so strongly influenced by Islam. I had thought it was just a kinda cultural collapse mainly caused by attacks from Barbarians that stymied Europe into the Dark Ages.
I have to confess that some parts of the book are quite lucid for me and others not - I think he makes assumptions about a certain level of knowledge that I perhaps do not have. If you are a history buff you will find him very good.
Some of his comments date the book - for example taking about the current Italian states - long since unified.
Are you interested in history - Medieval in particular?
Cheers, Karen
skrevet af kiwidoc kl. 12:19 pm (EST) den Aug 6, 2007
Cheers, Karen
skrevet af kiwidoc kl. 12:37 pm (EST) den Aug 1, 2007
Cheers, Karen
skrevet af kiwidoc kl. 12:18 pm (EST) den Jul 30, 2007
I see that you have Jared Diamond as a favourite author.
I have just finished reading 'Guns, Germs and Steel' after it gathered dust on my shelf for a few years.
I don't know how you found it - but I thought the book ideas very interesting, the writing style pedantic and repetitive (more in keeping with a textbook style), and overall it was a bit of a slog. Ouch - I generally love non-fiction but like a bit more of a creative style to presentation unless I am taking a University course. Would love to know what you thought.
Karen
skrevet af kiwidoc kl. 12:41 pm (EST) den Jul 27, 2007
skrevet af Sarahsponda kl. 9:16 am (EST) den Jun 4, 2007
skrevet af nwhyte kl. 6:12 am (EST) den Jun 2, 2007
I see that you have a copy of Mary Lavin's Tales From Bective Bridge in your library, and I was wondering if you have read it and what your opinion, if any, was of her. I'm currently reading from her Collected Stories. She's been criminally neglected here in the U.S., but I'll put her work up against any of the masters of the short story form.
Sean
skrevet af SeanLong kl. 8:48 am (EST) den Mar 28, 2007
Just saw your name on SeanLong's profile. So, a Happy St Patrick's Day to you as well.
Amanda
P.S. I am Australian but my mother-in-law is from Ballybunion in Kerry.
skrevet af amandameale kl. 9:17 am (EST) den Mar 16, 2007
skrevet af SeanLong kl. 10:08 am (EST) den Feb 21, 2007
Funny though, when I go back my brother's kids refer to me as "Uncle Sean, the Yank." I have to remind them that I was born there. And I still have trouble understanding the slang, especially in Cork. When my niece said her sister was "out doing a line with her boyfriend," well, you can understand what I thought. I had no idea that it meant she was out with him on a date.
skrevet af SeanLong kl. 10:50 pm (EST) den Feb 20, 2007
skrevet af SeanLong kl. 10:14 pm (EST) den Feb 20, 2007
Yes, as Irishman we should be sharing more books! I have yet to input all the books that I bought in Ireland over the years which I keep in two separate book cases. I have some titles that may interest you.
I am intrigued by your library, especially your Catholic, Irish and history tags. Do you get back to Limerick much?
Sláinte chugat
skrevet af SeanLong kl. 9:09 pm (EST) den Feb 20, 2007
Happy New Year.
skrevet af charlescameron kl. 7:18 pm (EST) den Jan 3, 2007
skrevet af job2007 kl. 6:20 pm (EST) den Dec 4, 2006
skrevet af ggchickapee kl. 1:11 pm (EST) den Nov 6, 2006
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