Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

New Books for the month of May

Books I'm reading this May

Perfecting Ourselves to Death
The Pursuit of Excellence and the Perils of Perfectionism
by Richard Winter

Crazy Love
Overwhelmed by a Relentless God 
by Francis Chan

Forgotten God
Reversing our Tragic Neglect of the Holy Spirit
by Francis Chan

What is a Healthy Church Member
by Thabiti Anyabwile

Titus by the Apostle Paul
Paul's brief letter to Titus teaching the inseparable link between faith and practice, belief and behavior. This truth is the basis for Paul's critique of false teaching as well as his instruction in Christian living and qualifications for church leaders.

1 and 2 Timothy by the Apostle Paul
First Timothy is a warning against false teachers as well as clear call for the church to live out in tangible ways the ethical implications of the gospel.
Second Timothy is a bold call for perseverance in the gospel in spite of suffering. Paul calls on his young coworker to continue the fight of faith, even as Paul approaches the end of his own life.


Have any comments about any of these books?  Please share them!  I'll post mine soon...

New Books for the month of March

Holy Subversion
Allegiance to Christ In an Age of Rivals
by Trevin Wax
Click here to read sample pages

The Knowledge Of The Holy
by A.W. Tozer 

Morning and Evening
Daily Readings
by Charles Spurgeon

Perfecting Ourselves To Death
The Pursuit of Excellence and the Perils of Perfection
by Richard Winter

Depression
A Stubborn Darkness
by Edward T. Welch

God's Passion for His Glory
Living the Vision of Jonathan Edwards
by John Piper

Click here to read it FREE on pdf

I Thank God for Good Books and Amazing Pastors

A Look Inside Mohler's Study:

Al Mohler - Study Video from Together for the Gospel (T4G) on Vimeo.
(I was in Mohler's study last Fall - it REALLY is amazing!!!  I pray my future husband has such a study one day...)

Ohhh how badly I want to attend T4G 2010!  Featuring Mark Dever, Ligon Duncan, C.J. Mahaney, and Albert Mohler with Thabiti Anyabwile, John MacArthur, John Piper, and R.C. Sproul,  in Louisville, KY April 13-15th.  Words fall short of my desire to attend this conference!

At our core: Worldview

I have been enjoying CrossTalk Where Life & Scripture Meet by Michael R. Emlet, and I was particularly struck by Emlet's insights into the centrality of man's worldview.  Emlet writes, "Each person (or community) asks and answers foundational questions about the nature of life, consciously or subconsciously. The answers we give to these questions characterize our “worldview,” our “take” on the nature of reality” (p 67).  The most revealing approach to understanding a person is understanding their worldview.  A worldview describes a consistent (to a varying degree) and integral sense of existence and provides a framework for generating, sustaining, and applying knowledge.  However, just as a man's worldview takes a lifetime to develop, it will take thought and consideration to seek it out.

Brain Walse and J. Richard Middlton propose four basic worldview questions:
1. Where are we? That is, what is the nature of the world in which we live?
2. Who are we? Or, what is the essential nature of human beings?
3. What’s wrong? That is, why is the world (and my life) in such a mess?
4. What’s the remedy? Or, how can these problems be solved?

As I serve in full-time student ministry these questions are not overt, but concealed within each conversation.  They are the questions I ask myself; therefore prompting many of the questions I verbalize.  They are important, not so that I can learn the worldview of each student as an end in itself, but because only through understanding their worldview can I minister to them.  I step into their world by understanding how they see the world, by getting behind the lens they wear each day.

On pages 67-68, Emlet states:
These questions – and how we answer them – form the narrative backbone of our lives. They shape the way we interpret life events, from the mundane (no milk in the refrigerator for the breakfast cereal) to the horrific (loss of children in a car accident). They shape our view of ourselves and others. They shape our vision of what constitutes a meaningful life, even a meaningful moment. They shape our beliefs, emotions, and decisions every day. Everybody has an overarching story he or she lives by, moment by moment. Everybody is a meaning marker with categories for making sense of life. Reality does not come to us unfiltered by always through the lens of our perception. The real question is, What lens will we use? What story, what narrative will we use to see the world and interpret our lives?*
Not only must worldviews be investigated and understood, but often they must be challenged and changed.  Dr. J. Ligon Duncan III, Senior Minister of First Presbyterian Church in Jackson contrasted the biblical worldview with 10 “isms” that are at odds with Christianity. His list reveals some of the dangerous beliefs wrongly incorporated into today's worldviews:

1. Life does not revolve around self.
Individualism: The self is the prime reality.
2. Truth exists and matters.
Relativism: there is no such thing as absolutes or morality.
3. What you believe informs everything you do, and what you do shows what you really believe.
Secularism: Religion must be kept out of all public spheres.
4. Real tolerance is not (and cannot be) based on relativism. All roads do not lead up the mountain!
Pluralism: All views, values, and lifestyles must be accorded equal standing.
5. Not everything that works is right.
Pragmatism: Whatever works is right.
6. Not all change is good.
Progressivism: Change is always good and progress is inevitable.
7. Our technology does not give us the ability to solve every human problem.
Rationalization (or Technophilia) Technology can solve all our problems
8. This material world is not all that there is.
Naturalism: Reality is material.
9. Freedom does not mean doing what I want to do.
Antinomianism: Freedom is right and it means I can do whatevery I want to do.
10. You are worse than you think you are. You are what you are alone, when no one sees you.
Privatism: Private life and public life have no necessary connection.

We could all benefit from asking ourselves Walse & Middlton's four questions... and considering where we fit with Duncan's comments.  Perhaps we have grown too accustom to our own lens and fail to question our worldviews stringently enough...

*Joe B. Green, “The (Re-)Turn to Narrative” in Narrative Reading, Narrative Preaching: Reuniting New Testament Interpretation and Proclamation

Attempting to be an Avid Reader

The books I aspire to read/finish over Christmas break:

Future Grace by John Piper
Death by Love by Mark Driscoll
Respectable Sins by Jerry Bridges
18 Words by J.I. Packer
Overcoming Sin & Temptation by John Owen
Keep In Step with The Spirit by J.I. Packer
Humility by C.J. Mahaney

That's a staggering number of pages, but I can smile because I already know that the content will be beautifully rich and refreshing. Here's to sitting by the fire with a glass of eggnog and a stack of books as I take it one page at a time...