Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Jesus, O Homem Mais Sabio Que Ja Existiu

Rate this book
Neste livro, Steven K. Scott procura revelar os tesouros escondidos na trajetoria do filho de Deus sobre a Terra, aproximando-o das experiencias do dia a dia pelas quais todos passam. Segundo o autor, conhecer a historia de Jesus a luz de seus valores como ser humano traz beneficios - alem de tornar as pessoas melhores, busca ensinar a construir relacionamentos mais profundos e a amar verdadeiramente aqueles a volta.

Paperback

First published March 17, 2009

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Steven K. Scott

57 books92 followers
Steven K. Scott is the best-selling author of The Richest Man Who Ever Lived, The Greatest Words Ever Spoken, and Mentored by a Millionaire.

After failing in nine jobs, he started reading a chapter of Proverbs every day–and the wisdom of Scripture changed his life. Scott and his business partners have built more than a dozen multimillion-dollar companies from scratch, achieving billions of dollars in sales.

He is the co-founder of Max International, Total Gym Fitness, and The American Telecast Corporation. He is a popular international speaker on the subjects of personal and professional achievement and the application of biblical wisdom to every area of life.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
48 (44%)
4 stars
36 (33%)
3 stars
16 (14%)
2 stars
5 (4%)
1 star
2 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Lima.
9 reviews2 followers
August 31, 2010
I thought in theory this sounded like a great book but after reading it half way through I put it down. It was very dry and boring. And every other sentence from the author was "this is how I made a billion dollars" also, a lot of celebrity name dropping, as well as, withholding. I wanted to see more of Jesus and his teachings and less of the author in the book.
7 reviews
Currently Reading
February 8, 2010
It is a good read. Mr. Scott reveals some different concepts and ideas that I have never thought about before.
Profile Image for Caitlyn.
230 reviews1 follower
Read
May 4, 2026
If I had a dollar for every time the author talks about how rich and successful he is, I would also be rich and successful 😂

I only read this because I own it and I’m trying to read all of the books I own (I have no idea how I ended up with it but the hardcover is pretty lol)
This book is weird, it has lots of good practical stuff in it but all the name dropping and talk of business was not my favorite. The ending also felt out of place
Profile Image for Anu Lal.
Author 21 books22 followers
November 11, 2014

In The Greatest Man Who Ever Lived, Mr. Scott invites his readers to understand the difference between a purpose driven life and a mission accomplished life. According to Mr. Scott, Jesus lived a “mission-accomplished life”. However, unlike Dr. Dyer, Steven K. Scott prioritizes the physical accomplishment of a mission or purpose, in position or wealth rather than a spiritual one. In Dyer, “mission-accomplished life” is a direct result of undertaking affirmations and not the physicality of achievement as we see in Steven K. Scott. Although I cannot say which method is more effective and practical, I could surely see the ingenuity of both these men in their respective works.

Ruling out the possibility of religious preaching, Steven K. Scott declares, “I’m not talking about religion or a religious experience, I’m talking about a relationship—entering into a committed union with God through Jesus, God’s Son” (329-30). The Greatest Man Who Ever Lived promises lessons from the life of Jesus, the greatest man who ever lived. It also prescribes communication techniques that are useful in daily affairs and in uniquely urgent contexts to reap successful results. The Greatest Man Who Ever Lived contains effective communication strategies for couples that can ease out any of the difficult circumstances that occur in families.

Most of the focus of The Greatest Man Who Ever Lived is rendered upon communication strategies, planning and mapping our visions for future, goals and how one can easily find the Right Way by following the ‘strategies’ employed by Jesus, one of the greatest teachers ever lived. Seventeen chapters delineate the principles that Steven K. Scott finds useful in order to achieve extraordinary success on a material level. However, the final six chapters are dedicated entirely to suggest that there is something beyond the mere physical realm of existence and success.

“Chapter-16” is a direct address on the subject of who Jesus is and why would someone Believe in him. In the process, he uses examples from the great book written by C. S. Lewis, titled Mere Christianity. It is in this chapter that Mr. Scott attempts to justify the basis of all his arguments. Although he has been elucidating “secrets for unparalleled success from the life of Jesus”, not once does he mention the credibility of Jesus in the beginning of the book. One might find in the earlier chapters the promises Jesus made, and the missions he accomplishes, but never a solid argument for the fact that he is the Messiah, up until Chapter-16. In The Greatest Man Who Ever Lived, Chapter-16 serves as a platform for the coming together of several historic arguments for and against the truth about Jesus’ claims. In Chapter-16, Steven K. Scott underscores that Jesus is who he claimed to be. Although the examples of success, he enumerates are almost always financial and physical, there are priceless pearls of wisdom—on communication soft skills, on Agape love (unconditional love with God at its centre) and positively clear analyses of what Believing means—that one can take home from The Greatest Man Who Ever Lived.
Get more here: http://anu-lal.blogspot.in/2014/11/th...Anu LalAnu LalPrabuddha: The clear-sighted
Profile Image for Baratang.
59 reviews14 followers
June 8, 2012
Steven gave me a project management model that would seemingly never fail. The book truly potrayed Jesus as the man and not only as the deity. The supporting evidence that Jesus could only have been nothing else except a son of God was alarming. I was transformed.
381 reviews
July 10, 2012
This was a very disappointing book. The author talked more about himself and his accomplishments than he did about Jesus.
Profile Image for Chad Stutzman.
118 reviews2 followers
August 4, 2013
Great book for anyone in business. He gives great examples and stories of how he applied the principles he learned from Jesus in his work life and his personal life.
206 reviews3 followers
April 5, 2017
This book was a great read. It taught me a lot about Jesus and helped correlate the message of how to be a greater person. However I found a lot of repeated phrases and run ons about his company that I became bored through some paragraphs.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews