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Product Description
From Dan Millman, author of the classic Way of the Peaceful Warrior, comes a collection of awesome true stories attesting to the presence of the divine on Earth. Throughout recorded history miracles have happened. Many brilliant leaders and thinkers--presidents, scientists (including Einstein), philosophers-have attested to the power of intuition and the existence of some universal mind to which we are all connected at times. Dan Millman is the perfect person to document such stories; his 10 previous books have more than 2 1/2 million copies in print. He is uniquely qualified to describe these unwavering testaments to the belief that faith is rewarded, that supernatural things happen, and that God and spirituality are regularly proven in everyday life. Divine Interventions will validate faith, affirm the existence of the supernatural, and inspire true believers with stories that are nothing short of miraculous.
Amazon.com Review
What does "divine intervention" mean to you? Authors Dan Millman and Doug Childers define it as "a form of extraordinary guidance, revelation, or grace that transforms human lives by leading to a higher path, courageous choice, inspired creation, or call to service in the world." Millman, a world-class athlete and author of the bestselling Way of the Peaceful Warrior, was first touched by the divine in an unlikely way--a serious collision with a white Cadillac. The accident disrupted his athletic career and during his recovery he began to question his life's purpose, leading him to understand his athletic accomplishments as preparation for another path of "teaching, writing, and service." Doug Childers had an extraordinary experience with the power of love in the face of an attack by two thugs, one armed with a steel pipe.
In Divine Interventions: True Stories of Mysteries and Miracles That Change Lives, the authors have collected stories detailing disparate encounters with the divine, from the story of how a camel herder named Muhammad became a prophet, to the birth of mysticism in the writings of Carl Jung and Walt Whitman, to Bill Wilson's journey through alcoholism and the beginnings of Alcoholics Anonymous. The stories are short and easily readable, and while Millman and Childers are careful to address issues of historical accuracy, they are not out to prove anything, letting the stories speak for themselves. There are a variety of truths in this collection of miracle and mystery, bound together by the power of the divine to change ordinary lives into extraordinary ones. --Jodie Buller
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