It purports to be a book of wisdom. Templeton takes ideas from the Bible (half or more of his anecdotes), Eastern religions, and general folk wisdom and spins them into lessons about how to live a good life. It's particularly bad because he distorts and rips out of context the Bible passages in many places and ignores Biblical teaching including critical points of the gospel, ultimately conveying that you can have a good life of personal fulfillment and material comfort as an end in itself if you follow his adages. Despite all that, there are some interesting ideas to consider, if you ignore the bankrupt overall worldview.