

Well about 85% of the books contents are free online Sorry, but i think magi astrology is a scam THEY ONLY MAKE IT CONFUSING BECAUSE THEY WANT YOU TO BUY THEIR $300 BOOK!!!! I know a lot about MAGI so l can tell ALL tomorrow night I will but l can't tonight - i just posted an epic on my thread and i'm bushed. I almost just posted the word(s), "G'Luck!" I am sure it's my brain and not them but the info seems to lack structure. So, if someone can simplify it, I would be grateful too. Heart cakes - when I read the title I begun to chuckle because I have pretty much given up on Magi Astrology. is there one out there? and one to the "rules" and the "heart break" stuff and all that? oh and the transits? but sofar i've never read a comprehensive, simplified list. I hear of magical linkages, cinderella linkages, etc etc. Topic: can anyone simplify this magi astrology stuff? Can anyone simplify this magi astrology stuff? - Lindaland Welcome, Knowflakes, to Lindaland! ()Ĭan anyone simplify this magi astrology stuff? () Men: "Go and make a careful search for the child." Pagans, on a hunch, using astrology, have travelled hundred of miles to do just that, while religious leaders, with the advantage. I decided to build this sermon around a remark King Herod makes to the Wise but this theme I saved for Christmas Eve in the same series - is that the Wise Men do not follow the star - the star follows the Christ. God's innovativeness in planting within decidedly non-biblical worldviews a series of clues that lead to the feet of Christ is very good news in our current cultural moment with its resurgent paganism. First, I was struck by the way God both uses and subverts the Wise Men's paganism to draw them to himself. In exegeting the story of the Magi, two things in particular struck me as a revelation of God's glory. I wanted to behold with wonder and to proclaim with gladness that glory. This sermon came out of a series called "Everything Cries Glory." Rereading the Nativity story, I was moved by the revelation of God's glory amid the ignominy of weary parents, smelly stables, grubby shepherds, murderous kings. How to approach the ancient, well-loved, much used texts with both reverence and freshness? How to say something new without saying anything novel? I've been in the preaching business for 20 years, so I have a love/hate relationship with the big immovable boulders in the Christian calendar - Advent and Easter. Story Behind the Sermon (from Mark Buchanan) Here's a great sermon from one of our featured preachers-Mark Buchanan-that explores the story of the Magi and Herod through the lens of spiritual hunger.
