Review - Side by Side - by Edward Welch

Side by Side - by Edward Welch.

Having read some of Ed's previous books, I was looking forward to reading this one. Side by Side is an excellent book to learn how to walk with fellow believers and use our gifts to serve one another in love.  Ed's experience in handling these situations comes through clearly in this book.

The book is divided into two main parts: being needy and being needed. The first part guides you in sharing your burdens; the second part guides you in bearing the burdens of others. We benefit from the thinking that the author has done from counseling for over 30 years.

God has given us each other. The church is the display of his glory and manifest wisdom on earth.  We walk together. We live life together. This is how we are to be about the biblical mandate of living the "one-another" life.

Part 1, begins in the right place, with us. It talks about why our life is hard and the circumstances that bear on us. Then he goes straight to the heart - "in the heart we find the very essence of who we are". Moves from emotions of the heart to the idols of the heart.  Chapter three is excellent on thinking about suffering and our response to it.  Its not an in-depth analysis on the subject but focuses on reminding the essentials for the context of this book. He then models scripture and shows why and how we need to cry out for help - first to God and then other people.

Part 2 has tons of nuggets along the way. Like I said before Ed surely seems to have thought through this and done this before. We get to glean and learn from his experience. He has some good examples of how to talk to others. Chapter 9 is all about asking the right questions to get to know others. One thing that I have benefited from (and have been sorely lacking personally) is to see the good in others.  Part 2 starts with the basic "moving toward one another" and incrementally grows toward the serious topic of "talking about sin". Two main topics suggested in our walk with others are suffering and sin, suffering being the easier part and sin being the one that needs to be handled with much wisdom, love and care.

This books reads with simple constructs and makes it easy to think as you read along. Some of the content is not new in its "data" value but the "wisdom" is in the way its addressed and applied to this context. I've had many "aha", "why didn't I think of that" and other moments. For a while, I thought every elder should read this book but now I think every Christian should read this book! I'm grateful for this book and its author.

Review - One to One Bible Reading - by David Helm

One to One Bible Reading - by David Helm

This book is concise and to the point. The goal of this book is to give you fair motivation and the tools that you need to do "vine work".  There is no talk about programs and structures in this book. Its plain and simple one-to-one bible reading discipleship.

The person across the table? Non Christians (Evangelism), New Christians (Discipleship) and established Christians (Growing Leaders).
Two Methods of Bible reading - Swedish (simple) and COMA (a bit more involved). Both are excellent methods and David gives some examples of how to use them.

This book is a super fast read. I would encourage you to pace yourself and let the material sink in, especially in the first part of the book.  The second part of the book is your reference for the rest of your life on one-to-one bible reading. This one is going into the reference section of my library.

Read this book. Think carefully through the simple reasons why we need to be doing one-to-one bible reading. Go forth. Do it!



Review - Hiroshima - by John Hersey

Hiroshima - by John Hersey

Exceptional journalism by John Hersey and well written too! August 6th, 1945, the bomb dropped and changed the world we live in forever. The gut wrenching ordeal of the common folk in Hiroshima is documented with care. John strikes a balance between being too gory and conveying the gravity of the pain inflicted.

The book follows a set of different everyday folks from differing economic and social constructs as they lived life in Hiroshima. It starts on the day the bomb dropped and follows them loosely through for an year. The aftermath of the bomb, its destructive power and its effects are horrifying. The change in the lives of the people, the delay in governmental support and the tenacity of the human spirit to live through is quite touching.  This account was published in the New Yorker magazine in 1946. 

The author went back after 40 years and added another chapter to his book. Its very interesting how the events of this day shaped the lives of the folks that John Hersey followed. Its a quick read but the content is sobering. Like the cover says - Read it!

Review - How to Read a Person Like a Book - By Nierenberg, Calero, Grayson

How to read a person like a book
- by Gerard I. Nierenberg (Author), Henry H. Calero (Author), Gabriel Grayson (Author)

If you are interested in adding another facet to your skills on the art of negotiation, this book will help you in doing exactly that.

Human Kinetics has been around for a while and has a lot of  study and research to back its claims.  The authors have used that research and knowledge in their business and consulting relationships to "read" the person(s) at the other end of the negotiating table. This book is a result, tried and true gestures and attitudes that help you read a person.

This book is not just for business negotiators. I find it very valuable to use even when I talk to persons one or one, in a social gathering, etc. It makes my life a bit easier if I can "read" a person and see if they are really interested in what I have to say, Vice versa, if they "seem" to be genuine in their speech, etc.

This book goes through various gestures and how those relate to certain attitudes. Facial gestures, hand gestures, feet gestures and how you carry your self as a whole.

I've thoroughly enjoyed this book, now I have to make sure to try and memorize/remember what the myriad of gestures mean!

A new chapter - My Time & Books

There has been a quiet frustration in my bones for the past few years. Seemed like I was fighting for time, fighting to do what I liked, enjoyed, cherished to do. I seem to have an avid desire to read books. And I have realized that when am not doing what I love that frustration grows and gnaws at me.

At the start of this year I resolved to systematically read a book a week. I was skeptical knowing what I know about me but thankfully I have gotten to a stage where I am doing exactly that (or very close to that).

It got me thinking, I need to capitalize on this new found surge and give it more structure and legs so I can maintain this and sustain it. I need to keep on top of it so I dont fall of the proverbial wagon. A burning sensation in my wallet drove me to research if there was a way to get the latest books at discounted price.

Long story short, yes there is! .. and that's one of the reasons why I resurrected my super old blog. Oddly enough this was the intent of my blog all along but I started saving my notes somewhere along the way in different cloud based services.

I revert now and will be posting reviews of the books that I read here, on amazon and elsewhere.


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How Should We Then Live

How Should We Then Live - by Francis Schaeffer.


Notes - Still Bored in a Culture of Entertainment

Bored - "To bore" means to weary "by being dull, uninteresting or monotonous". Boredom is often accompanied by feelings of lethargy, irritation and anger.  A link exists between the increase of narcissism and selfcenteredness with the concurrent increase in boredom.

(1) Remember the Bigger Picture - What is the bigger picture that gives meaning and framework for the smaller sometimes boring details? Everything around you is God-given.
(2) Delight in the simple and the ordinary (Stop and smell the roses) - Ecclesiastes concludes that the simple, ordinary everyday routines of eating drinking and work seen in the bigger framework of living in relationship to God - bring the deepest enjoyment and satisfaction. "A man can do nothing better than to eat and drink and find satisfaction in his work. This too I see is from the hand of God, for without him, who can eat or find enjoyment?" - Ecclesiastes 2:24-25.
(3) Cultivating Wonder - Wonder meaning intense intellectual interest - Wonder is a capacity which we, by effort, must keep alive as a part of the way we are made.
(4) Developing a Passion - Develop habits of self discipline and delayed gratification. Involves relationships.
(5) Active Engagement not just Passive Expectation - Finding interest and joy in life involves active engagement with the world. Need to be fully engaged and engrossed in some activity. The prerequisite for happiness is the ability to get fully involved in life.
(6) The Experience of "Flow" - An integration and harmony of the mind, body and emotions. The most rewarding activities are those that are not passive but active, those in which our minds and often our bodies are stretched to the limit. To be highly fulfilling - (a) Intense Concentration (b) Clear goals (c) immediate feedback.  Intense Involvement, so involved, totally absorbed. The key is being actively involved and using highly developed abilities. The flow experience that results from the use of skills leads to growth. In God's creation we can find so much to take an interest in, but it takes effort and self-discipline for us to stop long enough to look and marvel ...

Earth's crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God;
But only he who sees, takes off his shoes --
The rest sit around and pluck blackberries.
- Elizabeth Barrett Browning. (Aurora Leigh, Seventh book)

- Unless we gain the art of silence and insight, the ability for non-activity, unless we substitute true leisure for our hectic amusements, we will destroy our culture - and ourselves.  Leisure is a time of withdrawal from our ordinary routines to renew our priorities and our perspective on life. - Josef Pieper.

- Pursue friendship, art, literature, natural beauty, religion and philosophy.

- Reflect on and reflect the character of God. - If we are to reflect his character we cannot remain unmoved, untouched and bored with him or his creation. Often we have a very underdeveloped sense of his glory and our sinfulness. We are to be people of deep feeling and passion, aware that our feelings need to be redeemed from their distortion and deadness and given full rein in the service of their Maker.

- Christian Maturity involves learning to delay gratification, to groan, to rejoice in hope and to wait eagerly and patiently for the fulfillment of God's many promises of restoration and renewal.
- God wants us to develop our gifts and capacities and use them to the full.
- We are to work against sin in every area of our life. In any part of life where the destructive power of sin has taken hold, it will take effort and prayer to reverse the trend.

- When you hear someone saying, with a yawn, 'What am I to do - I'm no longer interested in anything?" - Kierkegaard's response - take any Christian commandment and try to practice it in his life. - "For it is clear that in effort, if it be sincere, will reintroduce you into reality, where the true conflicts manifest themselves, where the lines of the force of the spiritual and moral life appear, where the drama of a calling instantly sharpens: not even a second of boredom becomes possible any longer. And your complaint will be that you have only one life to lead."

- We are called to be faithful in every small task that God gives us.

- Summary - 
(1) To contemplate the character of God and his creation.
(2) Confess getting our priorities wrong and pursuing of false god.
(3) To creatively counteract some of the tedious and boring tasks of life.
(4) To find the help and companionship we need from those in our community.

- As we see more and more things from God's point of view, we find that there is rarely any time to be bored!


- Gleaned from Still Bored in a Culture of Entertainment by Richard Winters

The God Who Is There

D.A. Carson's - The God Who Is There 

In February 2009, Don Carson presented a 14-part seminar entitled “The God Who Is There” at Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis. This series will serve the church well because it simultaneously evangelizes non-Christians and edifies Christians by explaining the Bible’s storyline in a non-reductionistic way. The series is geared toward “seekers” and articulates Christianity in a way that causes hearers either to reject or embrace the gospel. It’s one thing to know the Bible’s storyline, but it’s another to know one’s role in God’s ongoing story of redemption. “The God Who Is There” engages people at the worldview-level.

See all the videos for The God Who is There at The Gospel Coalition
Click here if you are interested in the accompanying book.

 
The God Who Is There - Part 1. The God Who Made Everything from The Gospel Coalition on Vimeo.

God in America - PBS

Inside the tumultuous 400-year history of the intersection of religion and public life in America -- from AMERICAN EXPERIENCE and FRONTLINE. This six-hour series examines how religious dissidents helped shape the American concept of religious liberty and the controversial evolution of that ideal in the nation's courts and political arena; how religious freedom and waves of new immigrants and religious revivals fueled competition in the religious marketplace; how movements for social reform -- from abolition to civil rights -- galvanized men and women to put their faith into political action; and how religious faith influenced conflicts from the American Revolution to the Cold War.

See all the episodes here: http://www.pbs.org/godinamerica/view/


Watch the full episode. See more FRONTLINE.

Leonard Ravenhill

Ravi Zacharias has said this about Leonard Ravenhill:
The truth is, even though I am known now as an apologist for the Christian faith, dealing with the intellectual issues of Christianity, I really owe an passion for God, for prayer and for true revival that initially began in me, to Leonard Ravenhill. He, by God’s grace, was the catalyst that has caused the passion to know God to continue to this day.


via Denny Burk's Blog