- iUniverse
The Best Is Always... Still Yet to Come!: Seeing God in the Details of Daily Life
Key Metrics
- Keith Payne
- iUniverse
- Hardcover
- 9781462051960
- 9 X 6 X 0.81 inches
- 1.29 pounds
- Self-Help > Motivational & Inspirational
- English
Book Description
In the 20 years I've known Keith Payne as a sales professional, public speaker and friend, he has never failed to delight me. His wit, intelligence and plain horse sense come through brilliantly in these pages. To anyone wanting to maintain a positive outlook regardless of the circumstances I say: Read this book! Craig Bridgman, Colleague & friend for 20+ years.
Keith speaks with experience and passion about fully embracing and engaging life's race, overcoming it's many obstacles, while keeping eyes on the prize. If you want more out of life and you're looking for a mentor, you have to read this book!Kathleen Reed, Ministry Colleague & friend for 10+ years
You will enjoy Keith's inspirational wisdom and insight in this amazing collection of personal experiences and practical applications. I'm doubly blessed not only to read these, but to actually have witnessed some of them with him as well! Jeff Coleman, Ministry Colleague & friend for 20+ years.
In The Best Is Always... Still Yet To Come, author Keith Payne shares many slice of life vignettes drawn from his own experiences. His stories recall good times and bad, often with humor and sometimes with sadness, but always with an opportunity for you to make a practical life application. Drawing on wisdom and instruction from Scripture, Keith Payne seeks to encourage and inspire you to a better outlook and outcome, regardless of your circumstances.
Divided into weekly readings, these stories are designed to inspire you to be decidedly different and consider all of the life circumstances facing you-even the difficult ones-as opportunities to embrace a positive, faith-based outlook. By doing so, your attitude will blossom, and your smile and laughter will be contagious; you will have discovered that the best is always... still yet to come.
Author Bio
My lab studies how inequality shapes the human mind. We ask questions like: Why do people make more self-defeating decisions when inequality is high? Why does feeling poor sometimes have more powerful effects than actually being poor? Why do people sometimes act in prejudiced ways even when they intend to be fair?
We use the methods of experimental psychology to understand the cognitive and emotional mechanisms behind these pressing social questions. You can learn more about this research in my recent book, The Broken Ladder, from Viking Press.
Source: University of North Carolina
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