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The author employs poetry and literature to reflect on the meaning of retirement and whether death is an unmitigated calamity. He concludes it is not better to live forever, and that strangely, death enhances life, rather than negating it.
£4.50
Economic researcher, foreign correspondent, lobbyist – and seeker – the author has found that the way out of a dogmatic disbelief in spiritual reality lies in using and understanding the inner light. By Michael Marsh Pendle Hill Pamphlet #209
£4.00
Steps in practicing compassion toward those we do not know well in love, work, and religion are described and encouraged. By Nancy Alexander Pendle Hill Pamphlet #271
£4.50
Whether renewing one’s commitment to prayer or risking prayer for the first time, this essay approaches a difficult subject with a perfect mix of theory and practicality, seriousness and whimsy. By Sheila Keane Pendle Hill Pamphlet #339
£4.50
This deep thinker and ecumenist shares a meditation and prayer for each day of the month.
£4.50
The manager of funds for Quaker organizations and individuals reflects on Friends and the tension between money and ethics.
£4.50
Lifestyle and politics are integral expressions of what human beings are meant to be: loving, truthful, peaceful, and centered on God, and therefore the natural world and other people. By Jonathan Dale Pendle Hill Pamphlet #360
£4.50
The Society of Friends seek a “third way” toward economic choices compatible with religious principles.
£4.00