Archive for September, 2008

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Getting Old to the Glory of God

Friday, September 26th, 2008

A Call for the Endurance of the SaintsWhat will you be like in 10 years?  20?  Will you be closer to the person you want to be, who God wants you to be?  Or will you grow weary? Perseverance is a matter of day-to-day decisions.  The person you will be in 10 years is the person you are becoming today.  This book can help immensely in our quest to run and not grow tired.

John Piper and Justin Taylor have edited the procedings of the Desiring God conference of February 2008 into this slim volume they have subtitled A Call for the Endurance of the Saints.  In it you will encounter profound, lifechanging wisdom from Jerry Bridges, John MacArthur, Randy Alcorn, and Helen Roseveare, as well as Piper and Taylor.  Of particular note are the transcripts of two panel discussions among these wise saints and Randy Alcorn’s description of how he and his family persevered in the face of unjust persecution in the form of an $8.2 million dollar judgement against him for peaceful protest of an abortion clinic.

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God is Love

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

Francis Chan, pastor of Cornerstone Church in Simi Valley, CA has written a book critiquing 21st century Christianity in America.  What sets him apart from dozens of emergent authors is, Chan loves the Church and has a high view of God.  The Crazy Love book is a call to fall in love with God.  And once you do, Chan assures us, you will never be the same.  Because when you’re wildly in love with someone, it changes everything.  We highly recommend it!

See also Tim Challies’ review here.

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There is No Me Without You

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

Caution:  this book may change your life!

There are 4 million orphans in Ethiopia today.  1.5 million of these are due to HIV/AIDS, the rest to famine, tuberculosis, hepatitis, and other maladies from which people rarely die in the west.  With only 75 million inhabitants, Ethiopia simply does not have enough adults to care for these children.  To make matters worse, out of 190+ independent countries in the world,  Ethiopia is at or near the bottom of any list of economic indicators you care to choose.

A few years ago Haregewoin Tefarra was a happily married middle class woman in Addis Ababa.  Then she lost her 54-year-old husband to a heart attack and shortly thereafter her adult daughter to AIDS.  Shunned by many friends and family members due to the severe stigma carried by AIDS in Ethiopia, Haregewoin felt as if her life had ended.  She applied to the local church to be a hermit and live in a shed in the graveyard, close to her dead daughter.  A wise priest had a better idea.  Would she take in an orphan girl?  Why not, she reasoned, her life was over.  It wouldn’t matter one way or the other.  A few days later the priest brought her a teenaged boy with the same entreaty.  I may as well let him stay, she thought, my life is over anyway.  Since then over 400 orphans have passed through her doors.  She has poured out her heart and they have given her back her life.

This is the story of one woman’s fight to save the children of her country.  Without training, without government support or funding, without help from any human source, Haregewoin has tirelessly struggled to save a handful from life on the streets, prostitution, AIDS and death that surely awaited them otherwise.  Here also are the stories of a few families who, like the author and her husband, have adopted some of these orphans into their homes in middle-class America.

Melissa Fay Greene is an award-winning journalist who has published several social-conciousness raising books and numerous articles in notable periodicals from the New York Times to Goodhouskeeping.  She is passionate about her topic and so can be forgiven for her occasional leftist rants and simplistic solutions (big drug companies = bad, Bush administration = bad).  We’ve all heard about the AIDS orphan tragedy in Africa, but its easy to think of it as “way off over there”.  This book puts a human face on the problem and brings it home.  You must read this book - but be prepared to be changed.