4 Quotes & Sayings By Richard Beck

Richard Beck is a leading authority on social and motivational psychology. He is a leading author on the subject of motivation and self-esteem. A best-selling author of books on motivation, Beck has been featured in major media broadcasts and printed articles, including the New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Chicago Tribune, and others. Beck is a regular speaker at major conferences throughout the United States and abroad Read more

He has been quoted in Newsweek Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, Psychology Today, The Wall Street Journal, Fortune Magazine, U.S. News & World Report, and others. His books have been translated into every major language in the world.

Being a parent is joyful, but it's also haunted by...
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Being a parent is joyful, but it's also haunted by the specter of loss. Richard Beck
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The danger of refusing to reflect upon the psychological dynamics of faith and belief is that what we feel to be self evidently true, for psychological reasons, might be, upon inspection, highly questionable, intellectually or morally. Too often, as we all know, the 'feeling of rightness' trumps sober reflection and moral discernment. Further, we are often unwilling to listen to others until we are, to some degree, psychologically open to persuasion. The Parable of the Sower comes to mind. . Richard Beck
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In short, the Lord's Supper was the realization of new social and political arrangements, the embodiment of the social leveling seen in Jesus' ministry, most profoundly in his acts of table fellowship. Importantly, as we have seen, these new social arrangements could only be achieved if the emotions of social stratification were confronted, eliminated, or reinterpreted. In his body metaphor, Paul dramatically reframes these heretical emotions, the emotions of contempt, disgust, honor, and social presentability. Rather, than signaling exclusion and division - the natural expulsive impulse inherent in these emotions - Paul suggests that these emotions should signal just the opposite in the Kingdom of God: honor, care, and embrace. . Richard Beck