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Angels
Angels: A Visible and Invisible History | Peter Stanford
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'an intriguing exploration of the many roles that angels have played in spiritual life.' - The Sunday Times: Nick Rennison 'In a 2016 poll, one in 10 Britons claimed to have experienced the presence of an angel, while one in three remain convinced that they have a guardian angel. These are huge numbers and mean that, on some counts, angels are doing better than God.' In the secular, sceptical, post-Christian world of the West, continuing faith in angels is both anomaly and comfort. But what exactly are angels, and why have so many in different times and contexts around the globe believed in them? What is their history and role in the great faiths and beyond their walls? Are angels something real, a manifestation of divine concern? Or part of the poetry of religion? And can they continue to illuminate a deeper truth about human existence and the cosmos? These are not new questions. They have been asked over millennia, right up to the present day, as writer, journalist and broadcaster Peter Stanford explores in Angels, his latest investigation into the history, theology and cultural significance of religious ideas. 'There is no better navigator through the space in which art, culture and spirituality meet than Peter Stanford' Cole Moreton, Independent on Sunday
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Mistermandolin
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I enjoyed his books on Heaven and Judas and this one adopts a similar format: a multi-disciplinary history both accessible and very readable. This is one of those ‘sophisticated-folksy‘ books that informs as well as entertains and which will, I‘m sure, repay a return visit sometime. And for those who wonder where the angels have ‘gone‘: well Stanford covers that base too. I won‘t give the game away, except to say that they may walk among us still.