So Long, Insecurity: Youve Been a Bad Friend to Us
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2011 Retailers Choice Award winner!Perhaps one of the biggest issues all women face is their own insecurity. Beth Moore, one of today?s most admired and trusted Christian writers, wants women to be free from the insecurity trap. So Long, Insecurity will strike a chord with women everywhere, as Beth speaks truth into the lives of readers, showing them how to deal with their innermost fears, rediscover their God-given dignity, and develop a whole new perspective?a stronger sense of self. Women of all ages and backgrounds will resonate with this message of security and discover truths that will free them emotionally and spiritually and lead them to a better life as they walk with God. From Publishers Weekly Prolific Bible teacher and womens ministry leader Moore (Get Out of That Pit) moves away from her characteristic dead-on expositions of scriptural principles in her newest; the topic is insecurity, and the content, she admits, is close to an autobiography. Moore, always transparent with her own personal struggles, is refreshingly so throughout this text. Readers will be chortling in laughter one moment and sucking air the next as Moore exposes the many faces of female insecurity. The author names and claims each one, then defuses every bit of power these nonsensical inner voices possess by countering their lies with Gods truth. Women, no matter what their age, battle against advertisings siren call for unattainable physical perfection; the habit of making a mans love the ultimate validation; and the worldly definition of success as money, power, and status. Moore uses personal essays, womens true confessions, expressive prayers, and lots of commonsense suggestions to jar women out of their insecure rut. Readers will delve into this work and find themselves comfortably uncomfortable, and this is a very good thing. (Feb.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Review So Long, Insecurity: Youve Been a Bad Friend to Us Beth Moore. Tyndale House, $24.99 (350p) ISBN 978-1-4143-3472-1 Prolific Bible teacher and womens ministry leader Moore (Get Out of That Pit) moves away from her characteristic dead-on expositions of scriptural principles in her newest; the topic is insecurity, and the content, she admits, is close to an autobiography. Moore, always transparent with her own personal struggles, is refreshingly so throughout this text. Readers will be chortling in laughter one moment and sucking air the next as Moore exposes the many faces of female insecurity. The author names and claims each one, then defuses every bit of power these nonsensical inner voices possess by countering their lies with Gods truth. Women, no matter what their age, battle against advertisings siren call for unattainable physical perfection; the habit of making a mans love the ultimate validation; and the worldly definition of success as money, power, and status. Moore uses personal essays, womens true confessions, expressive prayers, and lots of commonsense suggestions to jar women out of their insecure rut. Readers will delve into this work and find themselves comfortably uncomfortable, and this is a very good thing. (Feb.) --Publishers Weekly, December 14, 2009 From the Inside Flap Dear Friend,We?re insecure. You and me and every woman. Lately I?ve been realizing more and more that chronic insecurity is a cultural epidemic, but almost no one is talking about it. And it ticks me off.We?re insecure about everything from our looks to our worth as women, from our relationships to our futures, and everything else in between. You name it, and we?re probably insecure about it.Let?s be honest here. Insecurity makes us miserable. It cripples us. It makes fools of us. It makes us feel worthless. Insecurity has been a bad friend to us. The bottom line is that it?s self-sabotage.Girlfriend, listen to me. Our insecurities are lying to us. It doesn?t h
2011 Retailers Choice Award winner!Perhaps one of the biggest issues all women face is their own insecurity. Beth Moore, one of today?s most admired and trusted Christian writers, wants women to be free from the insecurity trap. So Long, Insecurity will strike a chord with women everywhere, as Beth speaks truth into the lives of readers, showing them how to deal with their innermost fears, rediscover their God-given dignity, and develop a whole new perspective?a stronger sense of self. Women of all ages and backgrounds will resonate with this message of security and discover truths that will free them emotionally and spiritually and lead them to a better life as they walk with God. From Publishers Weekly Prolific Bible teacher and womens ministry leader Moore (Get Out of That Pit) moves away from her characteristic dead-on expositions of scriptural principles in her newest; the topic is insecurity, and the content, she admits, is close to an autobiography. Moore, always transparent with her own personal struggles, is refreshingly so throughout this text. Readers will be chortling in laughter one moment and sucking air the next as Moore exposes the many faces of female insecurity. The author names and claims each one, then defuses every bit of power these nonsensical inner voices possess by countering their lies with Gods truth. Women, no matter what their age, battle against advertisings siren call for unattainable physical perfection; the habit of making a mans love the ultimate validation; and the worldly definition of success as money, power, and status. Moore uses personal essays, womens true confessions, expressive prayers, and lots of commonsense suggestions to jar women out of their insecure rut. Readers will delve into this work and find themselves comfortably uncomfortable, and this is a very good thing. (Feb.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Review So Long, Insecurity: Youve Been a Bad Friend to Us Beth Moore. Tyndale House, $24.99 (350p) ISBN 978-1-4143-3472-1 Prolific Bible teacher and womens ministry leader Moore (Get Out of That Pit) moves away from her characteristic dead-on expositions of scriptural principles in her newest; the topic is insecurity, and the content, she admits, is close to an autobiography. Moore, always transparent with her own personal struggles, is refreshingly so throughout this text. Readers will be chortling in laughter one moment and sucking air the next as Moore exposes the many faces of female insecurity. The author names and claims each one, then defuses every bit of power these nonsensical inner voices possess by countering their lies with Gods truth. Women, no matter what their age, battle against advertisings siren call for unattainable physical perfection; the habit of making a mans love the ultimate validation; and the worldly definition of success as money, power, and status. Moore uses personal essays, womens true confessions, expressive prayers, and lots of commonsense suggestions to jar women out of their insecure rut. Readers will delve into this work and find themselves comfortably uncomfortable, and this is a very good thing. (Feb.) --Publishers Weekly, December 14, 2009 From the Inside Flap Dear Friend,We?re insecure. You and me and every woman. Lately I?ve been realizing more and more that chronic insecurity is a cultural epidemic, but almost no one is talking about it. And it ticks me off.We?re insecure about everything from our looks to our worth as women, from our relationships to our futures, and everything else in between. You name it, and we?re probably insecure about it.Let?s be honest here. Insecurity makes us miserable. It cripples us. It makes fools of us. It makes us feel worthless. Insecurity has been a bad friend to us. The bottom line is that it?s self-sabotage.Girlfriend, listen to me. Our insecurities are lying to us. It doesn?t h