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Paperback Encyclopedia of New Age Beliefs Book

ISBN: 1565071603

ISBN13: 9781565071605

Encyclopedia of New Age Beliefs

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Book Overview

This comprehensive volume of in-depth information, comparisons to Christianity, and insights into New Age practices helps readers understand the New Age. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent condition

The product received was in excellent condition and received in a most timely manner. Appreciate the excellent service.

A great resource

This is one of the most helpful and resourceful discernment books on new age beliefs. The book gives brief descriptions, and quick facts. Topics are easy to find at a glance. The content of the book is impressive, well researched, and helpful. There are charts at the end of most chapters that compare new age beliefs/practices with Christianity which helps the reader to distinguish the difference. The book has been an extremely helpful resource for the times in which we live. Thank you to the authors who produced this laborous work to help assist christians.

A resourse book to have on your shelf

The New Age is not so new, as the authors point out in this fine book. They cover a variety of topics that could be considered as occultic and definitely not Christian. I have found it useful more than once when a topic came up where I wanted more information. They have written this book in such a way that you don't have to read it cover to cover. I like the dual columns, and the information they provide is well worth the price of admission. As a researcher myself, I know that it took these gentleman thousands of hours of tedious research to compile this tome, so my hat goes off to them.

Devastating Critique of the New Age

Ankerberg and Weldon have produced a highly detailed examination of several aspects of New Age thought in this book. In my view, what makes this book good is that it spends a large amount of time quoting from folks in the New Age movement, rather than simply writing an exclusively Christian commentary on New Age thought. By analyzing what New Age leaders are saying about their own teachings, Ankerberg and Weldon help quell the notion that they are simply writing an ad hominem attack on the New Age. In particular, I thought that the section on Eastern gurus was one of the best commentaries yet written on this phenomenon, precisely because the chapter includes so many quotes from the gurus themselves that are simply devastating. When confronting New Age thought, Christians have the considerable challenge of getting the discussion out of the clouds and getting down to the level of how New Age thought can be practically lived with any real assurance that its claims are true. It's very hard to get the discussion to this level precisely because many New Age disciples don't want to go there. The one thing about this book that came across loud and clear without it ever being said is that many folks who become involved in the New Age don't want a practical spirituality that can be relied upon and put into everyday living. They want a dimestore spirituality that doesn't require them to live by any moral code other than whatever they think is right at any point in time. Self divinity sounds nice and it attracts an awful lot of people to New Age thought, but this book effectively shows that not only is the concept of self divinity a complete denial of what we know to be true about the human race, it also tends to be very debilitating to the New Age disciple once it becomes clear that the realities of the New Age movement don't fulfill the promises it makes.I did not give the book 5 stars for 2 main reasons. First, I thought that the authors spent too much time interjecting the concept of demonic possession or demonic influence into the discussion. After a while, this became a distraction to me while reading the book, and frankly, I think the whole concept was significantly overemphasized. Entering the concept of demonic influences into a discussion with a non Christian is probably the best way to alienate that person from the joy of Christianity. Secondly, the one thing I was hoping to see that I didn't see was an in depth discussion of the latest New Age craze - nature based spirituality. Whether it takes the form of wicca, native american spirituality, or other forms of paganism, there is not a comprehensive discussion of this area. It is touched upon in a few places in the book, but because it's such a hot topic right now, I would have greatly enjoyed a separate section that was devoted specifically to this arm of New Age thought and having it thoroughly examined as its own topic.With the exception of th

This book is one of the best resources on the New Age.

If you are a Christian apologist addressing the New Age Movement or simply a curious seeker of truth, this book is simply one of the best apologetic resources on the market. Due to the influx of the New Age Movement into the Christian Church, I find myself referring to this book more and more often. Ankerberg and Weldon have done a masterful job.
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