Steps to Heaven: How to Learn to Love People
6.99 €
In stock
"Steps to Heaven" is an honest and lively conversation about how to preserve the human within in a world increasingly overwhelmed by noise, fatigue, and inner emptiness. In his conversations, Archpriest Andrei Tkachev speaks not about abstract religiosity, but about the most painful and important issues: why families fall apart, how to stop living in anger, why people need the memory of their ancestors, why thoughts define their entire lives, and how not to lose oneself amidst the endless information noise.
This is not a theology textbook or a collection of ready-made consolations. The book is written for those tired of falsehood, meaningless external well-being, and constant inner tension. For those who want to understand how to live honestly, deeply, and truly—without pathos and self-deception.
The author speaks simply, at times harshly, but with rare human warmth. He connects gospel meanings with real life: he reflects on marriage, raising children, internal discipline, burnout, the fear of death, and responsibility for one's thoughts and actions. The book doesn't have a preachy tone, but rather feels like a conversation with an intelligent and experienced person who understands how difficult it is to maintain inner strength today and shows where to find it.
This book doesn't demand instant change or promise easy solutions. It offers a path of gradual inner progress, step by step, from self-honesty to a more whole, peaceful, and humane life.
This is not a theology textbook or a collection of ready-made consolations. The book is written for those tired of falsehood, meaningless external well-being, and constant inner tension. For those who want to understand how to live honestly, deeply, and truly—without pathos and self-deception.
The author speaks simply, at times harshly, but with rare human warmth. He connects gospel meanings with real life: he reflects on marriage, raising children, internal discipline, burnout, the fear of death, and responsibility for one's thoughts and actions. The book doesn't have a preachy tone, but rather feels like a conversation with an intelligent and experienced person who understands how difficult it is to maintain inner strength today and shows where to find it.
This book doesn't demand instant change or promise easy solutions. It offers a path of gradual inner progress, step by step, from self-honesty to a more whole, peaceful, and humane life.
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