This paperback is a tale of journey that follows the protagonist on a religious and theoretical trip all the way through Peru. The paperback details a religious development in the late 20th century that realises holy heavenly power as the definitive guide. It follows the pretense that there are no accidental coincidences, and everything happens for a reason – and as such once we connect with heavenly power and realize religious development we are in a position to influence our coincidences in order to guide us to our destinies.
The tale opens with the storyteller becoming reacquainted with …show more content…
This is a fast-paced escapade in New Age terrain that might appeal to Indiana Jones fans. I can congratulate Redfield for at first self-publishing and still managing to sell amazingly, sparked by word of mouth. The Celestine Prophecy speaks to annoyance with reductionist philosophy and displeasure with greed. It offers seductively uncommon hopefulness about the future and human life. There is the pledge of an effortless, expected religious self-enhancement, which can be acquired devoid of the constitution, regulation and late satisfaction of conventional faith. And maybe most attractively, Redfield promises that the trouble and doubts of existence and worship in the late 20th century are only the birthing pains of the pending religious rebirth. Questions of survival and reason with which thinkers and artists and writers have struggled for the previous century are at this time given answers in frank, straight, everyday words, gift-wrapped in pledge of worldwide attainability and hope. The Celestine Prophecy touches genuine, extensively experienced trouble: tiredness of rationalism, ideological uncertainty, existential anguish, appetite for obscurity, and respect for deity, the longing for hope and reason and