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Indlæser... Mister God, This Is Anna (1974)af Fynn
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Bliv medlem af LibraryThing for at finde ud af, om du vil kunne lide denne bog. Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. Rated: D Heartwarming story about a little orphan girl's theology and how it influences the thoughts and actions of adults in her world. Some good theology and some bad theology. The idea that there is One God is good. The idea that He has many names is true if we are talking about the same God. The idea that the name of God in one religion is the same God called by a different name in a different religion is bad. The character and conduct of the God of the Old & New Testaments is remarkably different than the gods of other religions and vis-versa. It is a wonderfully nice philosophy to believe nice things about the beliefs of other like we are basically all the same -- but we are not universal believers in the same theology. That day will come upon Christ’s return. ingen anmeldelser | tilføj en anmeldelse
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En 19-årig arbejder finder i 1935 i London en bortløben 4-årig pige og skildrer deres samtaler om bl.a. Guds væsen. No library descriptions found. |
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I didn’t agree with all the conclusions Anna came to, as the book went on, but overall, her thoughts, observations, and approach to philosophy were intriguing and well-described. Reading this book is like taking a step back in time. It’s beautiful, poetic, gripping, well done, and memorable.
I’ll finish this review with one of my favorite quotes. It made me laugh out loud, and my family had to listen to me read it out. It doesn’t have anything directly to do with Anna, but I loved the general concept:
“Mum, being the daughter of an Irish farmer, was given to making stews. A large black iron pot and an equally large black iron kettle were the two most used utensils in the kitchen. Often the only way one could distinguish the stew from the brew was that tea always came in large cups and stew was put on plates. Here the difference ended, for the brew often had as much solid matter in it as did the stew.” ( )