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Jason Harris

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May 2013

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writer | pastor | theologian | academic

Pastimes include reading, photography, and coffee.

Average rating: 4.22 · 18 ratings · 7 reviews · 3 distinct works
The Doctrine of Scripture: ...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 9 ratings — published 2013
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Theological Meditations on ...

4.60 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2012 — 2 editions
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Resolution: Making your res...

4.25 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2014 — 2 editions
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

How do I decide my star ratings?

Don't you hate how subjective the star rating system is? Some people think three stars is a good rating while others feel a four star rating is a terrible insult.

I was so pleased to discover a number of years ago that goodreads has come up with a solution for this. Here's how to find it:

1) Go to the book page of a book you have not rated.
2) Mouse over the stars under the book image (don't click).

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Published on July 01, 2022 07:02 Tags: rating, rating-books, star-rating
To the Lighthouse
Jason Harris is currently reading
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The Rebel
Jason Harris is currently reading
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Dancing for Joy: ...
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Jason’s Recent Updates

Jason Harris is on page 84 of 285 of To the Lighthouse
To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
To the Lighthouse
by Virginia Woolf
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Jason Harris is on page 188 of 320 of The Rebel
The Rebel by Albert Camus
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Jason Harris started reading
To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
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Year in Books
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The Rebel by Albert Camus
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Come Thou Long-Expected Jesus by Paul Wesley Chilcote
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More of Jason's books…
John      Piper
“What is the essence of evil? It is forsaking a living fountain for broken cisterns. God gets derision and we get death. They are one: choosing sugarcoated misery we mock the lifegiving God. It was meant to be another way: God's glory exalted in our everlasting joy.”
John Piper

E. Nesbit
“There is nothing more luxurious than eating while you read—unless it be reading while you eat. Amabel did both: they are not the same thing, as you will see if you think the matter over.”
E. Nesbit, The Magic World

“Many people today acquiesce in the widespread myth, devised in the late 19th century, of an epic battle between ‘scientists’ and ‘religionists’. Despite the unfortunate fact that some members of both parties perpetuate the myth by their actions today, this ‘conflict’ model has been rejected by every modern historian of science; it does not portray the historical situation. During the 16th and 17th centuries and during the Middle Ages, there was not a camp of ‘scientists’ struggling to break free of the repression of ‘religionists’; such separate camps simply did not exist as such. Popular tales of repression and conflict are at best oversimplified or exaggerated, and at worst folkloristic fabrications (see Chapter 3 on Galileo). Rather, the investigators of nature were themselves religious people, and many ecclesiastics were themselves investigators of nature.”
Lawrence M. Principe, The Scientific Revolution: A Very Short Introduction

“In order to understand early modern natural philosophy, it is necessary to break free of several common modern assumptions and prejudices. First, virtually everyone in Europe, certainly every scientific thinker mentioned in this book, was a believing and practising Christian. The notion that scientific study, modern or otherwise, requires an atheistic – or what is euphemistically called a ‘sceptical’ – viewpoint is a 20th-century myth proposed by those who wish science itself to be a religion (usually with themselves as its priestly hierarchy).”
Lawrence M. Principe, The Scientific Revolution: A Very Short Introduction

Charles Haddon Spurgeon
“Free will I have often heard of, but I have never seen it. I have always met with will, and plenty of it, but it has either been led captive by sin or held in the blessed bonds of grace.”
Charles H. Spurgeon

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Ambassador International, a division of Emerald House Group, is a Christian publishing company founded in Belfast, Northern Ireland in 1980 by Samuel ...more
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