Our Picks This Month
- International shipping available to New Zealand!
- Free Australian Shipping for orders valued at $200 or more!
Shopping Cart: now in your cart 0 items
Search:  
Top » Catalog » Family » 9781505113617 »

How to Live a Good Life Following New Testament Ethics / Vaclav Rajlich
[9781505113617]

$32.95
Products Qty: 1

AVAILABLE 23 APRIL

How do I live a truly good life? That, in many respects, is the question we all must ask ourselves and answer. As always, even in our post-Christian society, Christ is the answer, and we discover him in the New Testament.

Drawing heavily from Pope Saint John Paul II’s encyclical Veritatis Splendor and other trusted sources, author Václav Rajlich identifies four pillars of ethical reasoning: prohibited acts, prescriptions, priorities, and providence/grace (the 4Ps) to show how readers can practically use these teachings to live a good life.

Accessible, practical, and firmly rooted in the teaching and life of Christ, How to Live a Good Life Following New Testament Ethics is an essential guidebook both for contemporary Christians as well as sincere seekers looking to answer that most fundamental of questions.

About the Author

Václav Rajlich is a Catholic layman and a professor of Computer Science at Wayne State University in Detroit, though he grew up in the Czech Republic. Experiences in Rajlich’s life set the stage for much of what he has written. An internationally recognized researcher in software engineering, he has authored over 100 peer-reviewed research papers and a textbook, Software Engineering: The Current Practice (CRC Press, 2012).



$32.95
There are currently no product reviews.

Suggested Books:



You Are That Temple / Kevin Vost Psy D


Rediscovering Our Lost Fullness / Andrew Comiskey


Inspiration! Where Faith Fuels Human Genius Boardgame
This product was added to our catalog on Saturday 13 April, 2019.
Reviews

Click below for the latest catalogues:



Subscribe
Email:
Categories
Tell A Friend
 
Tell someone you know about this product.
Information