Friday, April 29, 2011

Faith and Fiction Saturday Round Table Discussion: What Good is God by Philip Yancey



The Faith and Fiction Round Table is a group that determined six books relating to faith and mostly fiction. We have discussions via email and then post our thoughts on the book.

What Good is God? by Philip Yancey is a collection of talks Yancey has given over the years that address the question, What Good is God? and the search for a meaningful faith.

For me with nonfiction so many ideas are presented I often latch onto one or two. I'd need to read the book again to get a better overall feel, but one of my favorite chapters, and apparently one of the group's favorite chapters was when Yancey spoke to a group of former sex workers. He really emphasized the humanity of each person in this chapter. I recently wrote a post about this on my personal blog, and I'm bringing part of it over for today's post.

I’ve been reading What Good is God? by Philip Yancey. As always, I love his gentle voice and the way he manages to invite readers in for questioning while also encouraging us. In a chapter about some time he spent with former sex workers, he talks about the mystery of a person. Again, this is such a good reminder for me. I find it hard to constantly live in the tension of staying open minded to people and making decisions drawn on past experience. When talking about nested dolls he writes, “It occurred to me later that each one of us, like the nested dolls, contains multiple selves, making us a mysterious combination of good and evil, wisdom and folly, reason and instinct.” We are not one of us just any one thing no matter how much our minds demand categorizations be made. We all have our own degree of mystery, capable of great love, great kindness, great cruelty.

I can think of times when I’ve formed my judgment about someone, only to later be moved when I see them differently…for the better or worse. Sometimes I fear our society makes up its mind too quickly. We judge by political affiliation, we judge by religious association, by gender, race, sexual orientation, class, blog platform, and more. We shove people into our own understanding of who they should be by these things, discounting the mysterious fullness of their personhood. The time to make up your mind about people is…never*.

*this is a quote from The Philadelphia Story.

Read the other posts from FnFRT participants:
Book Addiction, Book Hooked Blog, Books and Movies, Crazy for Books, Ignorant Historian, Linus's Blanket, My Random Thoughts, One Person's Journey Through a World of Books, Roving Reads, Semicolon, The 3R's Blog, Tinasbookreviews, Victorious Cafe, Word Lily

Amy

Giveaway: The Midwife's Confession by Diane Chamberlain



Yesterday I reviewed The Midwife's Confession, a book I really enjoyed. If you'd like to win a copy of this book and you live in the United States or Canada, just fill out the form!




Amy

Thursday, April 28, 2011

The Vampire Diaries Discussion: 2.20 The Last Day




So um, wow. Time for the ritual. Alaric comes and delivers this news and he is still alive. Yay! Elijah has an elixer he believes will save Elena's life, but Damon being...well Damon doesn't trust this and decides it's a much better decision to strip Elena of her own choice and force his blood down her throat. There is just no way for me not to see that as similar to rape, and I think with that choice there is no way a Damon/Elena pairing can ever happen on this show. But let me tell you how happy I was that Elena ACKNOWLEDGES that it was not romantic, it was not cool that Damon was so desperate to save her that he as good as killed her--that's not a good kind of love. (now if Gossip Girl writers would give me this with Blair and Chuck I'd really be happy) Also how awesome was it that Elena didn't want to become a vampire? I loved Stefan's honesty and the fact that he purposefully chose not to ever bring up the conversation with her...and that Elena knows she's too young to make such a huge decision, she wants to live. I'm usually not a huge fan of Elena, but lately I've been liking her a lot more.

So Damon, I still love him, decides to try to fix things and gets Katherine to tell him where the vampire and werewolf are and goes to rescue them. And they are....

Caroline and Tyler. How I love them. Tyler's back, looking so beautiful on my screen after such a long absence and what I love so much about Tyler/Caroline is how much they communicate without really saying anything. I loved their first encounter, the awkwardness, Caroline's jealousy! (I was kind of worried about this...I couldn't tell if Caroline was upset until now about Tyler leaving, so I'm glad it was explicit in this episode that it bothered her a lot), it was beautiful. And later, when they were locked up in the tomb and she told him she could never hate him...and his smile. I just love them a lot, and look forward to their story continuing.

Clearly the show is trying to turn Matt around, he finally questioned Caroline's mother about how Caroline seems the same as ever and why aren't they going after Damon? Then he does follow Damon and saves him from the manwitch! So Matt is getting better, but please Matt! Don't interfere with Tyler/Caroline!

Damon was bit by Tyler! We know this means death so it's going to be interesting to see how the show tries to save him. We know Damon isn't dying! And Jenna was turned! I have to admit that really surprised me, I didn't see it coming.

Klaus is freaky in a completely calm way.

And how much do I love that after Klaus takes Elena, Stefan calls Damon up and tells him, and Damon is all "I'll take care of it." Team Salvatore for the win <3

What did you think of tonight's episode?

Amy

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Review: The Midwife's Confession by Diane Chamberlain


Noelle, Tara, and Emerson are all really good friends. They've been close since college and have shared many of their significant life events. But when Noelle, the midwife, takes her own life, Tara and Emerson are shocked and soon learn that Noelle had many secrets. As they begin to investigate her life to find out why she killed herself, their discoveries will shock their own existence and the knowledge they have of themselves and the people they love.

I really enjoyed The Midwife's Confession, because the mystery is the kind that unfolds slowly. I was into it almost immediately and curious about what Noelle's secret had been. And there's more than one secret and many layers to uncover. But of course this isn't the only thing going on, there are things going on in the lives of each of the characters as well. The story is told in the first person point of view alternating between mostly Emerson and Tara and at times third person from Noelle's point of view, and a few other voices as well, but I don't want to give those away.

I really appreciated how I thought I could guess what was going on but it was switched up so the ending was a little bit unpredictable. I got really sucked into this book, I wanted to read it in a way I haven't been compelled by a book in a long time so it was a really nice break.

One of the ideas the book flirts with is whether or not you let the horrible things someone does define the whole of them. When you love someone, when you know the kindness they are capable of and the love and then you find out things about them...does it alter how you see them essentially? Even when the motivations are understood, I think it can be crushing to discover the very deep reality that we are all flawed and capable of great evil. I think discovering this particular truth after someone has passed on can be really difficult because there is no chance to hear their perspective.

The Midwife's Confession is a great compelling read about friendship, motherhood, family, and the secrets we keep.

Rating: 4.25/5
Things You Might Want to Know: a little sex, a little profanity
Source of Book: Received for review
Publisher: Mira

Amy

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

FIRST: In Grandma's Attic Series by Arleta Richardson

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!


Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


In Grandma's Attic
AND
More Stories from Grandma's Attic

David C. Cook (April 1, 2011)

***Special thanks to Karen Davis, Assistant Media Specialist, The B&B Media Group for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Arleta Richardson grew up in a Chicago hotel under her grandmother’s care. As they sat overlooking the shores of Lake Michigan, her grandmother shared memories of her childhood on a Michigan farm. These treasured family stories became the basis for the Grandma’s Attic Series.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:


Remember when you were a child, when the entire world was new, and the smallest object a thing of wonder? Arleta Richardson remembered: the funny wearable wire contraption hidden in the dusty attic, the century-old schoolchild’s slate that belonged to Grandma, an ancient trunk filled with quilt pieces—each with its own special story—and the button basket, a miracle of mysteries. But best of all she remembered her remarkable grandmother who made magic of all she touched, bringing the past alive as only a born storyteller could.

So step inside the attic of Richardson’s grandmother. These stories will keep you laughing while teaching you valuable lessons. These marvelous tales faithfully recalled for the delight of young and old alike are a touchstone to another day when life was simpler, perhaps richer, and when the treasures of family life and love were passed from generation to generation by a child’s questions and the legends that followed enlarged our faith. These timeless stories were originally released in 1974 and then revised in 1999. They are being re-released with new artwork that will appeal to a new generation of girls.


Product Details:

In Grandma's Attic:

List Price: $6.99
Reading level: Ages 9-12
Paperback: 144 pages
Publisher: David C. Cook (April 1, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0781403790
ISBN-13: 978-0781403795

More Stories from Grandma's Attic:

List Price: $6.99
Reading level: Ages 9-12
Paperback: 144 pages
Publisher: David C. Cook; 3 edition (April 1, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9780781403801
ISBN-13: 978-0781403801
ASIN: 0781403804


AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


In Grandma’s Attic – Chapter 1


Pride Goes Before a Fall

“Grandma, what is this?”


Grandma looked up from her work. “Good lands, child, where did you find that?”


“In the attic,” I replied. “What is it, Grandma?”


Grandma chuckled and answered, “That’s a hoop. The kind that ladies wore under their skirts when I was a little girl.”


“Did you ever wear one, Grandma?” I asked.


Grandma laughed. “Indeed I did,” she said. “In fact, I wore that very one.”


Here, I decided, must be a story. I pulled up the footstool and prepared to listen. Grandma looked at the old hoop fondly.


“I only wore it once,” she began. “But I kept it to remind me how painful pride can be.”


I was about eight years old when that hoop came into my life. For months I had been begging Ma to let me have a hoopskirt like the big girls wore. Of course that was out of the question. What would a little girl, not even out of calicoes, be doing with a hoopskirt? Nevertheless, I could envision myself walking haughtily to school with the hoopskirt and all the girls watching enviously as I took my seat in the front of the room.


This dream was shared by my best friend and seatmate, Sarah Jane. Together we spent many hours picturing ourselves as fashionable young ladies in ruffles and petticoats. But try as we would, we could not come up with a single plan for getting a hoopskirt of our very own.


Finally, one day in early spring, Sarah Jane met me at the school grounds with exciting news. An older cousin had come to their house to visit, and she had two old hoops that she didn’t want any longer. Sarah Jane and I could have them to play with, she said. Play with, indeed! Little did that cousin know that we didn’t want to play with them. Here was the answer to our dreams. All day, under cover of our books, Sarah Jane and I planned how we would wear those hoops to church on Sunday.


There was a small problem: How would I get that hoop into the house without Ma knowing about it? And how could either of us get out of the house with them on without anyone seeing us? It was finally decided that I would stop by Sarah Jane’s house on Sunday morning. We would have some excuse for walking to church, and after her family had left, we would put on our hoops and prepare to make a grand entrance at the church.


“Be sure to wear your fullest skirt,” Sarah Jane reminded me. “And be here early. They’re all sure to look at us this Sunday!”


If we had only known how true that would be! But of course, we were happily unaware of the disaster that lay ahead.


Sunday morning came at last, and I astonished my family by the speed with which I finished my chores and was ready to leave for church.


“I’m going with Sarah Jane this morning,” I announced, and set out quickly before anyone could protest.


All went according to plan. Sarah Jane’s family went on in the buggy, cautioning us to hurry and not be late for service. We did have a bit of trouble fastening the hoops around our waists and getting our skirts pulled down to cover them. But when we were finally ready, we agreed that there could not be two finer-looking young ladies in the county than us.


Quickly we set out for church, our hoopskirts swinging as we walked. Everyone had gone in when we arrived, so we were assured the grand entry we desired. Proudly, with small noses tipped up, we sauntered to the front of the church and took our seats.


Alas! No one had ever told us the hazards of sitting down in a hoopskirt without careful practice! The gasps we heard were not of admiration as we had anticipated—far from it! For when we sat down, those dreadful hoops flew straight up in the air! Our skirts covered our faces, and the startled minister was treated to the sight of two pairs of white pantalets and flying petticoats.


Sarah Jane and I were too startled to know how to disentangle ourselves, but our mothers were not. Ma quickly snatched me from the seat and marched me out the door.


The trip home was a silent one. My dread grew with each step. What terrible punishment would I receive at the hands of an embarrassed and upset parent? Although I didn’t dare look at her, I knew she was upset because she was shaking. It was to be many years before I learned that Ma was shaking from laughter, and not from anger!


Nevertheless, punishment was in order. My Sunday afternoon was spent with the big Bible and Pa’s concordance. My task was to copy each verse I could find that had to do with being proud. That day I was a sorry little girl who learned a lesson about pride going before a fall.


“And you were never proud again, Grandma?” I asked after she finished the story.


Grandma thought soberly for a moment. “Yes,” she replied. “I was proud again. Many times. It was not until I was a young lady and the Lord saved me that I had the pride taken from my heart. But many times when I am tempted to be proud, I remember that horrid hoopskirt and decide that a proud heart is an abomination to the Lord!”


***************************************

More Stories From Grandma’s Attic

Chapter 1


The Nuisance in Ma’s Kitchen

When Grandma called from the backyard, I knew I was in for it. She was using her would-you-look-at-this voice, which usually meant I was responsible for something.


“What, Grandma?” I asked once I reached the spot where she was hanging up the washing.


“Would you look at this?” she asked. “I just went into the kitchen for more clothespins and came back out to find this.”


I looked where she was pointing. One of my kittens had crawled into the clothes basket and lay sound asleep on a clean sheet.


“If you’re going to have kittens around the house, you’ll have to keep an eye on them. Otherwise leave them in the barn where they belong. It’s hard enough to wash sheets once without doing them over again.”


Grandma headed toward the house with the soiled sheet, and I took the kitten back to the barn. But I didn’t agree that it belonged there. I would much rather have had the whole family of kittens in the house with me. Later I mentioned this to Grandma.


“I know,” she said. “I felt the same way when I was your age. If it had been up to me, I would have moved every animal on the place into the house every time it rained or snowed.”


“Didn’t your folks let any pets in the house?” I asked.


“Most of our animals weren’t pets,” Grandma admitted. “But there were a few times when they were allowed in. If an animal needed special care, it stayed in the kitchen. I really enjoyed those times, especially if it was one I could help with.”


“Tell me about one,” I said, encouraging her to tell me another story about her childhood.


“I remember one cold spring,” she began, “when Pa came in from the barn carrying a tiny goat.”


“I’m not sure we can save this one.” Pa held the baby goat up for us to see. “The nanny had twins last night, and she’ll only let one come near her. I’m afraid this one’s almost gone.”


Ma agreed and hurried to find an old blanket and a box for a bed. She opened the oven door, put the box on it, and gently took the little goat and laid it on the blanket. It didn’t move at all. It just lay there, barely breathing.


“Oh, Ma,” I said. “Do you think it will live? Shouldn’t we give it something to eat?”


“It’s too weak to eat right now,” Ma replied. “Let it rest and get warm. Then we’ll try to feed it.”


Fortunately it was Saturday, and I didn’t have to go to school. I sat on the floor next to the oven and watched the goat. Sometimes it seemed as though it had stopped breathing, and I would call Ma to look.


“It’s still alive,” she assured me. “It just isn’t strong enough to move yet. You wait there and watch if you want to, but don’t call me again unless it opens its eyes.”


When Pa and my brothers came in for dinner, Reuben stopped and looked down at the tiny animal. “Doesn’t look like much, does it?”


I burst into tears. “It does so!” I howled. “It looks just fine! Ma says it’s going to open its eyes. Don’t discourage it!”


Reuben backed off in surprise, and Pa came over to comfort me. “Now, Reuben wasn’t trying to harm that goat. He just meant that it doesn’t … look like a whole lot.”


I started to cry again, and Ma tried to soothe me. “Crying isn’t going to help that goat one bit,” she said. “When it gets stronger, it will want something to eat. I’ll put some milk on to heat while we have dinner.”


I couldn’t leave my post long enough to go to the table, so Ma let me hold my plate in my lap. I ate dinner watching the goat. Suddenly it quivered and opened its mouth. “It’s moving, Ma!” I shouted. “You’d better bring the milk!”


Ma soaked a rag in the milk, and I held it while the little goat sucked it greedily. By the time it had fallen asleep again, I was convinced that it would be just fine.


And it was! By evening the little goat was standing on its wobbly legs and began to baa loudly for more to eat. “Pa, maybe you’d better bring its box into my room,” I suggested at bedtime.


“Whatever for?” Pa asked. “It will keep warm right here by the stove. We’ll look after it during the night. Don’t worry.”


“And we aren’t bringing your bed out here,” Ma added, anticipating my next suggestion. “You’ll have enough to do, watching that goat during the day.”


Of course Ma was right. As the goat got stronger, he began to look for things to do. At first he was content to grab anything within reach and pull it. Dish towels, apron strings, and tablecloth corners all fascinated him. I kept busy trying to move things out of his way.


From the beginning the little goat took a special liking to Ma, but she was not flattered. “I can’t move six inches in this kitchen without stumbling over that animal,” she sputtered. “He can be sound asleep in his box one minute and sitting on my feet the next. I don’t know how much longer I can tolerate him in here.”


As it turned out, it wasn’t much longer. The next Monday, Ma prepared to do the washing in the washtub Pa had placed on two chairs near the woodpile. Ma always soaked the clothes in cold water first, then transferred them to the boiler on the stove.


I was in my room when I heard her shouting, “Now you put that down! Come back here!”


I ran to the kitchen door and watched as the goat circled the table with one of Pa’s shirts in his mouth. Ma was right behind him, but he managed to stay a few feet ahead of her.


“Step on the shirt, Ma!” I shouted as I ran into the room. “Then he’ll have to stop!”


I started around the table the other way, hoping to head him off. But the goat seemed to realize that he was outnumbered, for he suddenly turned and ran toward the chairs that held the washtub.


“Oh, no!” Ma cried. “Not that way!”


But it was too late! Tub, water, and clothes splashed to the floor. The goat danced stiff-legged through the soggy mess with a surprised look on his face.


“That’s enough!” Ma said. “I’ve had all I need of that goat. Take him out and tie him in the yard, Mabel. Then bring me the mop, please.”


I knew better than to say anything, but I was worried about what would happen to the goat. If he couldn’t come back in the kitchen, where would he sleep?


Pa had the answer to that. “He’ll go to the barn tonight.”


“But, Pa,” I protested, “he’s too little to sleep in the barn. Besides, he’ll think we don’t like him anymore!”


“He’ll think right,” Ma said. “He’s a menace, and he’s not staying in my kitchen another day.”


“But I like him,” I replied. “I feel sorry for him out there alone. If he has to sleep in the barn, let me go out and sleep with him!”


My two brothers looked at me in amazement.


“You?” Roy exclaimed. “You won’t even walk past the barn after dark, let alone go in!”


Everyone knew he was right. I had never been very brave about going outside after dark. But I was more concerned about the little goat than I was about myself.


“I don’t care,” I said stubbornly. “He’ll be scared out there, and he’s littler than I am.”


Ma didn’t say anything, probably because she thought I’d change my mind before dark. But I didn’t. When Pa started for the barn that evening, I was ready to go with him. Ma saw that I was determined, so she brought me a blanket.


“You’d better wrap up in this,” she said. “The hay is warm, but it’s pretty scratchy.”


I took the blanket and followed Pa and the goat out to the barn. The more I thought about the long, dark night, the less it seemed like a good idea, but I wasn’t going to give in or admit that I was afraid.


Pa found a good place for me to sleep. “This is nice and soft and out of the draft. You’ll be fine here.”


I rolled up in the blanket, hugging the goat close to me as I watched Pa check the animals. The light from the lantern cast long, scary shadows through the barn, and I thought about asking Pa if he would stay with me. I knew better, though, and all too soon he was ready to leave.


“Good night, Mabel. Sleep well,” he said as he closed the barn door behind him. I doubted that I would sleep at all. If it hadn’t been for the goat and my brothers who would laugh at me, I would have returned to the house at once. Instead I closed my eyes tightly and began to say my prayers. In a few moments the barn door opened, and Reuben’s voice called to me.


“Mabel,” he said, “it’s just me.” He came over to where I lay, and I saw that he had a blanket under his arm. “I thought I’d sleep out here tonight too. I haven’t slept in the barn for a long time. You don’t mind, do you?”


“Oh, no. That’s fine.” I turned over and fell asleep at once.


When I awoke in the morning, the goat and Reuben were both gone. Soon I found the goat curled up by his mother.


“Will you be sleeping in the barn again tonight?” Ma asked me at breakfast.


“No, I don’t think so,” I said. “I’ll take care of the goat during the day, but I guess his mother can watch him at night.”


Grandma laughed at the memory. “After I grew up, I told Reuben how grateful I was that he came out to stay with me. I wonder how my family ever put up with all my foolishness.”


Grandma went back into the house, and I wandered out to the barn to see the little kittens. I decided I wouldn’t be brave enough to spend the night there even if I had a big brother to keep me company!

Monday, April 25, 2011

Review: The Reluctant Detective by Martha Ockley

Faith Morgan, a newly ordained clergywoman, is checking out a new parish when on her first visit, the priest is killed while administrating communion. Because she is also a former policewoman, Faith quickly finds herself involved in the investigation to find the murderer while also tending to the needs of the church. Her own faith is tested as she sees more and more the cruel things man can do to each other. Matters are further complicated by the fact that her ex-boyfriend is also the policeman in charge of the case.

I have to admit I was drawn to this book because it featured a woman in the clergy. This is so rare in books and especially books in the Christian fiction market. It's definitely a field where women are still less than fully accepted and I'm always curious to read their points of view in stories. Of course, this was in no way the focus at all in Faith's story which made it even more refreshing. I really ended up enjoying this book a lot.

As a mystery, it was pretty good, I didn't guess the killer way in advance, though I did have my suspicions. (I feel like once you read a few mysteries, there are ways to guess who the killer is early on) But even with that, I genuinely enjoyed the character of Faith and her personal story was really interesting. She came to embrace faith later in life and her decision to leave the police force for her faith was the reason she split with Ben her ex. This conflict was so well drawn and easy to feel. I think it's pretty good skill on the part of the author when you find yourself rooting for a romance even though you know it's a bad idea for both characters at the time. I think/hope Ockley has plans to further develop that in the series. It's an excellent point of conflict. And it's not as simple as "I'm a person of faith, you're not." There were real things that happened and fundamental differences in how they approached their work that drove them apart.

I also loved the way Faith approached her own faith. This is not a book framed by evangelical Christianity so she draws comfort from ritual and liturgy. She's also very open and caring and not at all self-righteous. Also, it should be noted that this is an English book...so there is language some might consider to be cursing and also they drink alcohol with no guilt.

Overall, I really enjoyed this mystery and the character of Faith and I look forward to reading more in the future!

Rating: 4.25/5
Things You Might Want to Know: Christian fiction
Source of Book: Review copy received from publisher
Publisher: Kregal

Amy

FIRST: The Reluctant Detective by Martha Ockley

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!


Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


The Reluctant Detective

Monarch Books (March 1, 2011)

***Special thanks to Cat Hoort and Noelle Pedersen of Kregel Publications for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



Martha Ockley lives in the North-East of England and has close links with the church, having grown up as the daughter of a minister. She is a full-time author, writing both fiction and non-fiction.


Visit the author's website.


SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

Faith Morgan has lived her whole life in Birmingham. Her two careers, first as a policewoman, then as an inner-city parish minister have kept her close to her family, but also painfully close to her past. Now the picturesque country village of Little Worthy needs a new vicar. But Faith’s g trip to Little Worthy to consider if this is God’s will becomes a long-term commitment when the current vicar falls over dead during a communion service.

Faith suspects murder. And when the police are called in, Faith’s past follows her to Little Worthy in the shape of former partner and former boyfriend, Detective Inspector Ben Shorter.

Ben never understood her calling , but he will need her help if he is going to solve this. How will Faith balance her present calling with her past training, and her feelings for Ben? And is Faith in danger herself?



Product Details:

List Price: $14.99
Paperback: 224 pages
Publisher: Monarch Books (March 1, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1854249851
ISBN-13: 978-1854249852

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


“You know I don’t like to complain.” Pat Montesque screwed up her soft cheeks into a fierce smile. “But I’ll tell you, Elsie, I was a tad put out. I’ve always done the altar arrangements – since before Vicar Alistair came. You need a good substantial block of colour and there she was putting up a great waxy lily and a couple of twigs. Striking simplicity! I ask you!”

Elsie Lively tut-tutted sympathetically. She was looking at her dear Arthur’s grave: probably thinking it needed a bit of a tidy, thought Pat. But then it was so difficult to get down on your knees at her age and well nigh impossible to get back up.

“Naturally I pointed out it wouldn’t do – not in that space. Who’s going to notice a single lily? The altar would be as good as bare. He said it was a misunderstanding. She’d only meant to help. Men!” She philosophized aloud. “What they don’t know about women! And as for men of the cloth…”

“Charitable.”

“What did you say, dear? Didn’t quite catch that.” Pat leaned down to the small, bent woman at her side with all the gracious condescension of a church officer to a valued lay member.

“Charitable – man of the cloth; a good thing.”

Dear Elsie. Always stating the obvious.

Pat was distracted. A stranger was getting out of a little blue car by the gate. It was one of those snub-nosed Japanese things they were forever advertising on the commercial channels.

“Now, who’s that?”

The newcomer was a young woman in her early thirties with glossy brown shoulder-length hair and a healthy outdoor tan. She was dressed in a crisp fifties-looking cotton shirt dress in dove grey. As she turned, the sun caught a discreet cross pinned to her lapel. The churchwarden’s nose twitched. It couldn’t be! The bishop wouldn’t do that to them – would he?

Faith Morgan looked down the path from the wicket gate. A couple of elderly ladies were standing by an evergreen bush, cataloguing her from head to foot. This was supposed to be a low-key visit – she was only investigating options, she told herself. It might lead to nothing but still, it wouldn’t do to get off on the wrong foot with the locals.

The parish church of St James’s in Little Worthy rose sturdy and enduring with its sunlit graveyard at its feet. According to the guidebooks, stones in the tower had been part of a church here since Saxon times. Faith felt a wash of pleasure and peace. This place of worship had served its community for nearly a thousand years. There could hardly be a greater contrast to the gritty, uncertain, challenging chaos of the urban parish she was thinking of leaving. A pang of guilt interrupted her moment of euphoria. The face of her mentor, Canon Jonathan, came to mind, fixing her with one of his wry looks. His tart comment echoed in her head: Little Worthy, Faith? A congregation of eight – if you’re lucky – with an average age of seventy; a fund-raising nightmare to crush the heart of a saint!

Her eyes searched the roof line. Bound to be Grade I listed. Maintaining Saxon masonry couldn’t be cheap. It all seemed in good shape. Besides, there were always the heritage funds…

The bells began another peal, and the whiff of vanilla from a nearby shrub struck her with a breath of nostalgia. She had been here more than once as a child with Ruth and Dad on his bell-ringing outings. Those convivial summer Sundays with the dads and their kids and the occasional mother. After church they would go to the pub across the green – still called The Hare and Hounds, she noted happily. The dads would take off their ties and swap stories while she and Ruth sat outside with their lime shandies on benches of sun-warmed wood. You can never go back, she mused, so what was she doing back here?

She rallied. There was nothing wrong with peaceful continuity. Decency deserved to be cherished too.

There was a little time yet before the service began. Faith avoided the main approach and followed a gravel path around the back of the church. A creamy cloud of ivory clematis cascaded over a grey stone wall. Beyond, a solitary pony raised its chestnut head to gaze mournfully at her from a field of weeds. Some way off squatted a group of ramshackle farm buildings.

There was a well-worn track leading from the vestry door. Through a clump of limes she glimpsed the corner of what she thought must be the vicarage.

A dark-haired young man in jeans and a rumpled striped shirt strode out of the church. He had an angular face and the coltish appearance of not having quite grown into his bones. Behind him, a distinguished-looking fifty-something clergyman in surplice and cassock filled the doorway. That must be the incumbent, Alistair Ingram, thought Faith, wondering if she should introduce herself. He called out to the retreating youth, who turned back briefly to make a dismissive pushing gesture with both hands. She was about to step forward when she registered the youth’s expression: disdain, fury, and something else. Triumph? Faith turned away, embarrassed. It felt like a private matter; she shouldn’t be spying. She retraced her steps and entered the church.

The transition from sunlight to cool interior blinded her briefly. In a pool of clarity, Faith saw a service sheet held out in a meaty hand. It belonged to a cheery-looking man in a red waistcoat and a moss-green tweed jacket. He was smiling at her as if they knew one another.

“Fred Partridge,” he pronounced in a carrying voice. “Churchwarden. Pleased to have you with us.” He winked conspiratorially as he turned to greet a couple coming in behind her.

Faith slid into an unoccupied pew. There were twenty or so worshippers scattered about. Not a bad turnout for a small country church on the fifth Sunday in Lent. Her eyes settled on the little bent woman who had been outside as she arrived. She was arranging her hymnal and prayer book on the shelf before her with delicate, twisted hands. Her fine silver hair was folded into a thin bun secured by a network of old-fashioned two-pronged pins.

A presence blocked the light from the door. The formidable-looking lady who had been sizing her up as she arrived was standing in the aisle looking at her with speculating grey eyes. She was solid, with a healthy complexion, probably in her late sixties or early seventies, dressed in what Faith’s mother would refer to as “good clothes”.

“You’ve met my fellow churchwarden, I see,” she said. She had a round face and a hint of Morningside gentility in her voice. “I’m Patricia Montesque, the other one,” she stated brusquely.

Faith gave her best smile and held out her hand to have it clasped briefly in paper-dry fingers.

“I’m pleased to meet you. Faith Morgan. I’m visiting for the weekend – my sister lives locally. I have fond memories of Little Worthy. We used to come here when I was a child.”

“So you like our little church?”

“Isn’t it beautiful?” Faith responded warmly. “So well proportioned, and a lovely, comfortable feel about it.”

They contemplated the nave together.

“That’s a striking arrangement,” Faith remarked, indicating the display of lilacs and ivory viburnum by the altar. It was a deliberate ploy. Pat Montesque seemed the kind who was almost certain to do the flower arrangements. She was right. The churchwarden’s face relaxed into a narrow smile.

“Not one of my best, I’m afraid. I was rather rushed. But lilacs do give a lovely block of colour.” She inclined her perfectly coiffed head in a faintly regal manner. “So you’ve family in the area, then?”

“I was born in Winchester…”

“Winchester! Barely twenty minutes away. You’re almost a native.”

“Almost.”

“I’m just a newcomer, of course – hardly been here twenty years!” Pat Montesque gave a hard little laugh. “Not like dear Elsie Lively there.” She nodded in the direction of the silver-haired lady with the bun. “She’s Little Worthy born and bred. Ran the post office for half a century. A close-knit lot, the old families – but we have a very friendly parish here,” she ended firmly.

Faith remembered the post office. They had sold old-fashioned sweets: shell-shaped sherbets and Parma violets. She could almost smell the sugar. Ruth always chose liquorice; not because she particularly liked the taste, but for the way it stained her tongue black.

“So you haven’t met our vicar, Alistair?”

Faith was surprised by the challenge. Pat flicked a significant look at the cross pinned to her dress. So I’ve been rumbled, Faith thought.

“I haven’t had the pleasure,” she said.

“He’s a good pastor. A bit of a liberal, some thought when he first came, but he’s sound enough in the essentials. And very good with the finances.” Pat paused. “He’s leaving us, you know.”

“I had heard something of the kind,” murmured Faith. To think she had meant to slip in and out with being noticed. She should have known better. Rural parishes always had a Pat Montesque.

“Mmm. A bit of a dicky heart. He looks wonderfully well, but…” Her tone implied something more.

A petite woman with smooth, long fair hair, wearing a simple cotton dress came out of the vestry.

“…decided to take early retirement,” continued Pat.

The blonde had striking long-lashed blue eyes and a neat-featured prettiness that retained an element of youthful innocence, although she might have turned forty – it was hard to tell. She saw the churchwarden looking at her, and gave a little girl lost smile before leaning over a pew to exchange greetings with a young mother trying to hold a squirming toddler in her lap.

Pat turned back to Faith apparently as an afterthought. “You’ll be staying for coffee after the service?” Without waiting for a response, she was gone.

Could this place feel like home? Could these people ever be her people?

Faith studied the faces around her – silver-haired Elsie; the doting mother shadowing her small determined son as he ventured out down the aisle; the ruddy-faced man with the jacket too short in the sleeve, who couldn’t be anything else but an English farmer; a single black family with mother and father and a boy and a girl dressed in smart Sunday clothes. Faith’s eyes drifted up into the barrelled roof. There was such comfortable familiarity about the space. Why should that make her feel guilty?

Guilt. Purpose. Being of use. From the very first, Faith had always known that she wanted to be part of some greater purpose. That desire had led her into the police force. And, for a while, she thought she had found her place: to serve and protect; to bring the guilty to account; to protect the weak. That was what had first brought her and Ben together.

Running away, Faith?

I am not.

Ben always seemed to engage life so directly; he was unflinching, so sure of himself.

She was daydreaming. She could see Ben staring her down. Taking refuge, Faith? Never thought you were a coward.

You know I’m not, she protested the thought.

The rhythm of the old argument circled in her mind; the argument they had recycled so many times. It had moved them further and further apart, until she had left him – Ben, her lover, her mentor, her inspiration, once.

I can’t hold on to your certainties any more.

He had been so hurt. She couldn’t make him understand that it wasn’t about him. It had been something so personal; each step on her path to the ministry had seemed undeniable.

Her eyes came to rest on a stained-glass window panel leaning against the wall in the shadows beyond the pews. She guessed it must have been taken down on its way for repair. A glass section was cracked through and the leading twisted. The echo of the panel’s shape above was boarded up. A haloed lamb stood on a stretch of gaudy emerald grass. The Victorian artist had given the lamb a smiling, enigmatic expression. The Lamb of God.

Running away from reality.

That’s what he’d called it. To Ben, it had been a betrayal. And was he right? Was she seeking refuge from the world?

She looked around the congregation. These were people, individual persons, with their complicated lives, their struggles, their fears, their sins, their souls.

An intelligent, capable woman past thirty – with a degree, no less – buying into this delusion… for what? Ben always challenged her. They’d been a good team, once.

What am I doing?

Finding out.

That voice was somehow neither her own nor Ben’s. God and she often spoke like that. He would enter the conversation in her brain – not exactly unexpectedly. She had a sense he’d always been there. But since she had taken this turn – embraced this risk and embarked on the ministry – the sense of a presence, of an enduring and constant friend, had grown.

Finding out. The sense of opening horizons warmed and excited her. But then, what about Ben? He had moved back to Winchester more than a year ago.

And why should that matter one way or the other? He had his world now and she had hers.

The organist finished up with a self-important chord. The vicar was standing before them. Faith pulled her thoughts back to concentrate on the service.

Alistair Ingram took a step towards the altar draped in its Lenten purple, and the choir embarked on the Agnus Dei. Faith suppressed a smile as Pat Montesque’s forceful soprano rose above the rest.

“Lamb of God,

You take away the sin of the world.”

The vicar’s voice was clear and impressive. Faith wondered briefly if her own lighter tones could ever carry the words so well. Then she was caught up in the familiar comfort of their meaning.

“Jesus is the Lamb of God,

Who takes away the sin of the world.

Blessed are those who are called to his supper.”

Alistair Ingram spread out his arms to encompass his congregation. Sunlight, tinted by the stained glass in the window behind him, painted pastel blue and red on the white linen runner laid on top of the purple cloth.

“Amen.”

He picked up the communion cup and drank.

The toddler escaped from his mother and made a break for freedom past the communion rail, his feet pattering in quick uneven steps. What perfect timing. There had to be a life metaphor in that. Faith was pondering how children brought life into a church when her ears registered the choking rasp from the direction of the altar.

Alistair Ingram was staring out at nothing, his eyes wide, his chest heaving. Faith saw in slow motion. The chalice dropped from his hands. It hit the edge of the table. Wine flowed out red over the white cloth and stained the purple black. The empty cup rolled off the altar and struck the stone flags.

Alistair Ingram was no longer standing before them. Clutching at his chest and tearing at his vestments, he sat heavily on the steps.

The mother caught her son up in her arms. She turned his head into her shoulder, covering his face. Alistair slumped sideways. Faith realized that she was standing in the aisle, then she began to run towards the chancel steps.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Happy Easter!

I hope you all have a wonderful Easter weekend, if you celebrate!

The promise of new life is a promise that never gets old for me....on a shallow note, what's your favorite kind of Easter candy?


Amy

Thursday, April 21, 2011

The Vampire Diaries Discussion: 2.19 Klaus



So we finally meet Klaus in the flesh! And he's...kind of boring. But that's just me.

Let's talk instead about the true love of my life...ELIJAH. In real vampire life, Elijah probably would have grabbed Elena and fed on her without thinking, but since this is just a vampire TV show, he did not. And he still helped her because he just wants to kill Klaus, who is, it turns out, his brother! This show is full of surprises. Which leads me to my favorite surprise...

THE AZTEC CURSE IS FAKE. Thank the gods. Seriously, that never made sense to me, so I'm glad they cleared things up and that in reality Klaus really just wants to continue his long loveless life and create a new breed of vampire/werewolf creatures who will rule the earth and destroy all mankind. Just a minor problem, I'm sure it eased Elena's burden to learn this. Elijah thinks they can kill Klaus and not kill Bonnie at the same time.

Jenna knows the truth! I was moved by this discussion and revelation, I can only imagine how alone Jenna felt being the only one who didn't know and feeling like the children were trying to protect her. I think having her in the know is really going to help things, and also it was getting ridiculous.

Damon and Andi...um yeah that last scene was brutal. I actually thought Damon might kill her and it was just really icky to watch. Andi was so completely lifeless the whole time as well, I hope she stays away. I was kind of relieved that Stefan gave Damon a hard time for his treatment of her.

Stefan and Damon fought over Elena. Oh boys, I love you best when you work together but I know there's a lot of HISTORY. Meanwhile, Elena was off solving her own problem, go Elena!

Overall, a fun show but is was sorely lacking in Caroline, Bonnie, and Tyler. And I guess Alaric is not actually dead, which was an interesting surprise.

Your thoughts?


Amy

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

FIRST: Revise Us Again by Frank Viola

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!


Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


Rivise Us Again

David C. Cook; New edition (April 1, 2011)

***Special thanks to Audra Jennings, Senior Media Specialist, The B&B Media Group for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Frank Viola is a frequent conference speaker and author of numerous books on the deeper Christian life and church restoration, including Reimagining Church, Finding Organic Church, Jesus Manifesto, (coauthored with Leonard Sweet), and the best-selling From Eternity to Here.

Visit the author's website.


SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:


Revise what it means to live the Christian life. As believers, the Word of God gives us a script for experiencing life as God intended. Yet our environment, our culture, and our religious traditions often distort our scripts. We are all in constant need of revising the scripts that we live by.

Author Frank Viola believes we need to revisit and revise what it means to live the Christian life. Drawing from his rich background in ministry, Viola shares how believers can benefit from rescripting their lives in ten key areas. Written in a conversational tone and filled with practical insights, Revise Us Again is ideal for any reader who longs to follow God's original script for living.



Product Details:

List Price: $16.99
Hardcover: 176 pages
Publisher: David C. Cook; New edition (April 1, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9781434768650
ISBN-13: 978-1434768650
ASIN: 1434768651

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


GOD’S THREE-FOLD SPEAKING

REVISING THE LORD’S VOICE

There’s a very obscure passage in the Old Testament that sheds light on how God communicates His mind to His people. It’s found in Jeremiah 18:18:

The teaching of the law by the priest will not be lost, nor will counsel from the wise, nor the word from the prophets.

The ancient Hebrews divided the Old Testament up into three sections. The first section is called the Torah, or the Law. It includes the first five books of the Bible. The steward of the Torah is the priest.


The second section of the Old Testament is the Prophets. It includes the major and minor Prophets and the historical books. The steward of the Prophets is, of course, the prophet.


The third division of the Old Testament is called the Wisdom literature or “the Writings.” It includes Psalms, Ecclesiastes, Proverbs, Job, and the Song of Solomon. The steward of the Wisdom literature is the sage, or wise man.


These three sections of the Old Testament represent the three major ways in which God communicates His mind to His people.

Where We’ve Been


One of the greatest obstacles to laying hold of God’s mind is our religious background. Virtually every Christian has at some point been given a narrow lens through which they interpret Scripture, the Lord, and the Lord’s speaking.


Therefore, it’s critical that we understand that we all have been given such a lens. The following list shows how incredibly powerful our religious backgrounds are in shaping these lens.1 The list is obviously tongue-in-cheek, but I believe the truth is not far off.


Suppose that you are traveling to work and you come to a stop sign. What do you do? Well, that depends on your religious background. For example …


1. A fundamentalist, taking the text very literally, stops at the stop sign and waits for it to tell him to go.


2. A Christian who follows the traditions of his denomination does not bother to read the sign, but she will stop if the car in front of her does.


3. A seminary-educated evangelical preacher might look up stop in his English lexicon and discover that it can mean: (1) something which prevents motion, or (2) a location where a train or bus lets off passengers. The main point of his sermon the following Sunday on this text is: When you see a stop sign, realize that it is a place where traffic is naturally clogged; therefore, it’s a good place to let off passengers from your car.


4. A legalist does one of two things. She takes another route to work that does not have a stop sign so she doesn’t run the risk of disobeying the law. Or she may stop at the stop sign and pray, “Thank you, oh Lord, for your commandment to stop.” She waits three seconds according to her watch and then proceeds. She also keeps a condemning eye out to see if others run the stop sign.


5. A New Testament scholar notices that there is no stop sign on Mark Street, but there is one on Matthew Street and Luke Street. He then concludes that the ones on Luke and Matthew Streets were copied from a sign on the street that no one has ever seen called “Q” Street.


6. A prophetic preacher of end-time theology notices that the square root of the sum of the numeric representations of the letters S-T-O-P (which are sigma tau omicron pi in the Greek alphabet), multiplied by 40 (the number of testing), divided by 4 (the number of the earth) equals 666. Therefore, she concludes that stop signs are the dreaded mark of the beast, a harbinger of divine judgment, and must be avoided at all costs.


7. A Charismatic/Pentecostal will stop only if he feels led of the Spirit and the sign is a rhema word and not a logos word.


8. A prosperity preacher will stop at the sign, make a positive confession about stopping, and offer “the prayer of Jabez,” concluding that God must make her rich.


9. An Arminian believes that if he runs the stop sign he will lose his salvation. So with fear and trembling he works hard at stopping at every stop sign.


10. A Calvinist believes that God has predestinated her reaction to the sign. If she runs the stop sign, she was never saved to begin with. If she stops, she was elected before creation.


11. A Southern Baptist believes that God wants him to stop at the sign, but he will still be saved if he does not. For if you once stopped, you have always stopped.


12. Upon seeing the stop sign, a libertine begins to sing “Hallelujah, I’m free,” pushes her foot down on the pedal, and runs the stop sign at full throttle. She then gets run over by a Mack truck.


13. A liberation theologian believes that stop signs should stop only those who are of the elitist, wealthy class. But the poor are free to run them whenever they wish.


Silly, yes, but this list makes a point. We all have a lens that we inherited from our religious background. And we are conditioned to interpret the Scripture, the Lord, and His speaking through that lens.

How God Communicates His Mind


The Torah contains the foundations on which the community of God’s people are built. The Torah includes God’s enduring moral principles—the standards that spring from His very nature. These standards do not change nor can they be compromised. In the Old Testament economy, the priest was the person who taught the Torah.


The Prophets section often seems to contradict the Torah. The prophet is the person who enters the community of God’s people and causes an abrasive, disruptive upheaval of what the community believes or practices.


The prophet challenges the people’s response to the Torah, which is often a legalistic or libertine response.


In reality though, the prophet really doesn’t contradict the Torah. He contradicts the people’s response to it. We are fallen creatures and sometimes turn the standards of God into dead rituals. At other times we misapply or disregard them altogether. The prophet is needed at such times.


The Wisdom literature contains something that we Christians often do not have a great abundance of—wisdom. Wisdom is knowledge gained through experience. It also includes a predictive element.


Because of his long experience, a wise person can detect patterns. He’s able to foresee outcomes (Luke 11:49; Prov. 22:3).


A wise person may make a statement like this: “What you just said sounds really good, but it’s not going to work, and here’s why …”


The instrument of the Wisdom literature is the sage, the wise old man with the gray head. The sage is sought after for his wisdom because he has the experience of life. As a result, he can peer into the future.


The priest is authorized by the authority of the Torah that contains what God has previously spoken. The prophet is authorized by the present burden of the Lord that the Holy Spirit lays upon him. The sage is authorized by his experience and the fruit of his wisdom, which can be evaluated by the future outcome of his counsel (Luke 7:35).


Put another way, the Torah looks to the past and asks, “Is this scriptural? Is this right?” The prophet looks to the present and asks, “What is God saying to us right now? What is His present leading?”


The sage looks to the future and asks, “How will our present actions affect the future? Is this decision wise or foolish?”


To put it in the language of the Bible: The priest asks, “What do these stones mean?” (Josh. 4:6). The prophet asks, “Is there any word from the LORD?” (Jer. 37:17). And the sage asks, “Where can wisdom be found?” (Job 28:12).

The Inherent Dangers of Each


Each form of God’s speaking has its own dangers if not attended to by the other forms. If a church is conditioned to recognize the Lord’s will through only the form of Torah, it will become ritualistic at best or judgmental, self-righteous, and legalistic at worst. It will need the prophetic word as well as the word of wisdom to balance it.


A church that recognizes the Lord’s will via only the lens of the prophet will be unstable and erratic at best. At worst, it will be deceived. This is because a prophet’s revelation can be bogus. Thus, a prophetic word should be tested by its faithfulness to what God has already said (i.e., Torah) and by its future outcome (i.e., wisdom).


If a Christian or a church recognizes the Lord’s will through only the lens of wisdom, it will be given over to human reasoning and empty philosophy. True wisdom will always be faithful to what God has already said (i.e., Torah), and it will be responsive to the in-breaking of an authentic prophetic word.


Consequently, we should embrace all three forms because God provides guidance through each.


Unfortunately, our religious backgrounds condition us to recognize the Lord’s will through only one form. Those who have a fundamentalist background tend to recognize the Lord speaking through only the Torah. Guidance must contain a standard or principle of God, which usually has a chapter and verse attached to it. But this narrow lens blinds them from recognizing God’s guidance through the other modes.


Those who come from a Charismatic/Pentecostal background tend to recognize the Lord’s voice through only the prophetic word. It must be peppered with, “I sense the Lord saying” … “I have a word from God” … “The Lord showed me” … “Thus saith the Lord.” Appeals to Scripture or wisdom have very little registration.


Those from mainline denominations tend to recognize God speaking through whatever sounds reasonable. Wisdom is their language. What God has said in the past often carries little weight. And prophetic revelation is suspect.


Put differently, those who prefer Torah-speaking are thinkers. Those who prefer prophetic-speaking are feelers. And those who prefer wisdom-speaking are doers. Three temperaments, three denominations, and three forms of God’s speaking.


It’s worth noting that our temperament is connected to our religious background. We are typically drawn to the denomination or movement that matches our temperament. Doers tend to gravitate toward denominations like Baptist. Feelers tend to gravitate toward the Charismatic/Pentecostal movement. And thinkers tend to gravitate toward fundamentalist denominations, Presbyterian, or Anglican churches. Parachurch organizations and many large movements usually combine two of these temperaments, typically thinkers and doers or feelers and doers. I admit these are generalizations; however, I believe they are very close to reality.


Whether we realize it or not, our religious background is a major hurdle that stands in the way of laying hold of the mind of Christ individually and corporately.


Accordingly, God in Christ by the Spirit discloses His will through all three modes.

The Mind of Christ


In 1 Corinthians 12:1–2 (NKJV), Paul writes:

Now concerning spiritual gifts, brethren, I do not want you to be ignorant. You know that you were Gentiles, carried away to these dumb idols, however you were led.

Notice that Paul mentions “dumb idols.” What exactly is a dumb idol? It’s not an idol with a low IQ. A dumb idol is an idol that doesn’t have the power of speech. It’s a mute idol.


Before the Corinthian believers came to Christ, they were following pagan gods that didn’t possess the power of speech. These gods were mute. They were dumb. Paul goes on saying the following (this is my paraphrase of verses 3–6):

Remember how you served mute idols? Well, now you serve a God who speaks, and He speaks through you and your fellow members of the body of Christ. For example, when you say, “Jesus is Lord,” God’s own Spirit is speaking through you. There are varieties of spiritual gifts, but it’s the same Spirit. There are varieties of ministries, but it’s the same Lord. And there are varieties of effects, but it’s the same God who is working through them all. The one true God speaks through a variety of different ways via His one body.

Notice that God communicates in a variety of ways, but it’s the same God who is doing all the speaking. And God does that speaking through His body, i.e., a local assembly.


Consequently, the mind of God can be made known through only a corporate body of believers.


Jesus Christ has the power of speech. He’s not a dumb idol. And when He speaks, He reveals the mind of God. But Christ never reveals His whole mind through an individual. It takes a body of believers to lay hold of His mind together.


Hence, Paul says in 1 Corinthians 2:9–10:

However, as it is written: “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him”—but God has revealed it to us by his Spirit. The Spirit searches all things, even the deep things of God.

Consider the following words:


Eye has not seen. He’s speaking of a single eye. A solo eye has not seen.

Ear has not heard. An individual ear has not heard.

And it has not entered into the heart of man. A single heart hasn’t received.

Now listen to Paul in 1 Corinthians 2:16 (NKJV):


For “who has known the mind of the LORD that he may instruct Him?”


This is an absurd question. But notice the singular: “Who has known the mind of the Lord that he [singular] may instruct him?”


The answer is obvious. No individual has God’s mind. But then Paul makes this remarkable statement: “But we [plural] have the mind of Christ.” We, corporately—as His body—possess the mind of Christ. Incredible.


The mind of Christ is discoverable. Jesus Christ is not a dumb idol. He has the power of speech. He desires to speak and reveal His thoughts. But the mind of Christ is a corporate discovery. It’s a corporate pursuit. It’s not the property of any individual. It’s the property of the body of Christ working together to secure it.


As a result, all three ways of God’s speaking in Christ (Torah, prophetic, and wisdom) should be held in tension. The reason? Jesus Christ incarnates all three modes.


Jesus Christ is the real Priest as well as the Torah itself.

Jesus Christ is the real Prophet as well as the prophetic word.

Jesus Christ is the real Sage as well as wisdom itself.

Our Lord reveals His will to and through a local community of believers when they are seeking to lay hold of His mind together. The local assembly, which includes all the believers, is the vehicle through which God has chosen to disclose His mind. Through some believers, He speaks as Prophet. Through others, He speaks as Priest. Still through others, He speaks as Sage.

The speaking may sound different, but it’s the same Christ working through each one.


The Lord helps us to revise our ears so that we may learn to hear the voice of the Shepherd through each one of His sheep.




©2011 Cook Communications Ministries. Revise Us Again by Frank Viola. Used with permission. May not be further reproduced. All rights reserved.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Music Fills in the Gap -- Reflections on Music and Story

"Where words fail, music speaks." Hans Christian Andersen

I am a lover of story in its many manifestations and that includes music. I'm an especially huge fan of music that works together with something else, like say images to create that story.

I am in awe of storytellers, otherwise known as composers, who fill in the blanks, who create the emotional ambiance, who record the memories, who communicate without words.

I've said it before, and it holds true...music unlocks story for me. When I'm reading a book, I often create a sort of soundtrack in my mind to go with the book. It often builds for me a stronger emotional connection to the book, it somehow helps bring to life the places and the people on the page.

I've discovered I especially love film scores for this. Yes I know they are attached to a specific story, but it doesn't matter, I can recycle them. And best of all since they are instrumental, I can listen to them while I read (music with words I find very distracting for some reason)

I am especially attracted to sad or tragic sounding music. For example, last fall I was very attached to Rachel Portman's score for Never Let Me Go. It is so ACHINGLY beautiful that it took several listens for me not to just tear up every time. The only downside to this was that when I finally watched the film, I just wanted to listen to the music, I already had a relationship with it.

While instrumental music works best, sometimes I do like popular music. I wonder sometimes if this is a result of being a daydreamer and someone who already lives so much inside my head. I can't listen to audio books when I drive, because I love music, and also because this a time when I'm forced to reflect on whatever stories I'm already reading. There have been times when I've finished a book, and didn't actually process it until I was in a different place...my car, work, wherever.

But to me music fills in the gaps, it breathes the emotion that sometimes even the most precise words cannot. While we are comfortable tying music to the visual arts, I wonder why we don't talk more about how music could enhance our reading experiences.

I've seen some other book bloggers make soundtracks for the books they read, so I know I'm not alone in drawing a relationship between the printed page and music. Do you find that music can benefit your understanding of a story, or do you find yourself associating the mood of certain music to the stories you love? Are you a lover of music or is it take it or leave it for you?

Amy

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Let's Catch Up!

I know it's been awhile since I just had a chatty post. In fact, I've been a bit MIA from the whole blogging thing for awhile. I've still been reading some blogs and a few books, but not very active. During this time, I've learned something important about myself, that I need to allow myself times where I just shut down. It's funny, because it's almost like being an introvert on the internet...I cannot keep producing content 24/7, I need times where I'm just an observer or not even present at all to recharge.

Another problem I've been having lately is that I can't seem to finish books. I mean I start them and they're wonderful and I think they're great but then I can't finish them. I've never had so many unfinished books in my life! I'm not exactly sure what the mental block is, but I really don't think it's that the books aren't good...I just can't finish them for some reason. Sometimes I think this problem results from too much choice and is in fact the downside of having so many books.

But...in other news, it's hot like summer here. I cannot believe it's already mid-April, HOW DID THIS HAPPEN? My blogiversary came and went and I haven't done a thing for it. I'm not going to BEA this year, which is coming up at the end of May and while I'm sorry to miss meeting some people going for the first time, I'm also relieved not to take on the financial obligation. OH! And my brother got engaged and is getting married this summer which is super cool and fun! My oldest niece turned ten (how did this happen?) recently and the youngest five. Time blazes by doesn't it?

Also, I've recently started tutoring again and I had forgotten how wonderful it is to be able to actually help people with reading. It's fab.

Enough about me! Tell me about you! What good books are you reading? Summer plans? Going to BEA? Do tell.

Amy

Friday, April 15, 2011

Faith and Fiction Saturday: We Need Better Review Outlets

I've been wanting to write some time about the lack of reliable and quality fiction review sources for Christians.

I believe there is a need for this, and while blogs can help, they are certainly only a small effort. Book blogs are fantastic, but they generally reflect a personal bloggers tastes and one person cannot cover all that's out there. For example, I love quality faith driven work, but I also have a great fondness for vampire literature, dystopian work, and other fiction.

While there are some great book review sources for Christians, they generally focus on nonfiction. And the fiction they review is general market, and trust me they review very little fiction. OR they focus exclusively on Christian fiction.

For someone like me, who believes there is quality Christian fiction, and issues of interest to believers in unexpected general market books, there are no satisfactory review outlets. The question is why?

I think many Christians still find fiction useless or a waste of time. They look down on Christian fiction as being lesser and when they cover fiction it's usually something that was written by an author who is known to have faith or a book that has already received acclaim in the general market. A perfect example of this is that Christianity Today awarded Anne Rice's Of Love and Evil the fiction book of the year award. No offense to Ms. Rice, but this was a clear sign that few actual fiction books had been read in consideration, 2010 was a rich year for faith based fiction.

I believe this is a huge disservice we are doing to the imaginations of believers. Fiction is a powerful tool, but there are too many books out there for the average reader to begin to know where to start. There are books that introduce complex ideas of faith and religion that will never be touched by Christian review sources because they come in the wrong packaging. And there are thought provoking and beautifully written Christian fiction books that will be dismissed as trash because of who they are published by. There is a real need for a review source that will find these books and share them with their audience.

The INSPYs were my first effort to work to bridge the gap. This post is my second. I would love to see more Christians take fiction seriously and I would love to see a really strong Christian review outlet take up this burden. Oh and if anyone wants to know...yeah I'm available for this job. :)

(writing this post today was inspired by the comments left on Mike Duran's very excellent post yesterday)

ETA:
I think from comments that people are misunderstanding what I'm saying here. I'm looking for this:
1) A review source written by Christians that reviews a wide array of BOTH general market and Christian fiction books...not just Christian fiction. :)

Amy

CFBA Book Spotlight: Blood of the Prodigal by P.L. Gaus

About the Book: For Jonah Miller, shunned by his Old Order sect and cast into the wider world, the summer begins with his decision to kidnap his ten-year-old son from the home of the bishop who had exiled Miller a decade earlier. In his desperation to retrieve the boy, the bishop appeals for help to the only "English" men the sect would ever approve.

Professor Michael Branden and Pastor Caleb Troyer had been looking forward to the kind of sleepy rural summer they had enjoyed as boyhood friends growing up in the small college town of Millersburg. Instead, they plunge into the normally closed Amish culture to find the boy. When the kidnapping leads to murder, they can no longer keep the case from the law. Working sometimes at cross purposes with his friend Sheriff Bruce Robertson, Professor Branden digs through the past to uncover truths that many would prefer to leave undisturbed. Little does he suspect that even the anguished bishop, torn by an insoluble moral dilemma, tragically does not tell everything he knows about the case. Suddenly the vast tangle of Amish and Mennonite settlements that sprawl among several thousand small farms and homesteads seems less bucolic than unknowable and impenetrable.

As they inquire delicately among the peaceful ones, Branden and Troyer learn that the troubles of Jonah Miller began far earlier than the kidnapping, with his Rumschpringe - the customary wild year before taking Amish vows. But his grand Rumschpringe had exploded into a decade of drugs, whiskey, and women, in the company of people no Amish person should meet.

In the tradition of Tony Hillerman, P. L. Gaus depicts a culture that successfully stands outside the mainstream yet interacts with it in complex and fascinating ways, a culture that is every bit as susceptible to the undertow of the human spirit as any we might know.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

The Vampire Diaries Discussion: 2.18 The Last Dance


Um, wow. Another action packed show tonight! Warmed up my little Damon/Bonnie loving heart when she smacked him good in the beginning...will they ever happen? Guess not based on Damon's 1,000,000th declaration of love to Elena at the end. I'm getting ahead of myself! Let's discuss a few key points.

Bonnie
So Bonnie is super strong and has the ability to kill Klaus, but...because Klaus was possessing Alaric, they let all their secrets out. He planned to try to kill Bonnie and attacked Jeremy but my Salvatore boys are no dummies and quickly figured it out. Meanwhile, Bonnie has had to say a million times that this is a sacrifice she's willing to make. I found the scenes between her and Elena really touching. It was nice to see two girls having this conversation instead of Stefan or Damon saying for the millionth time that they are going to protect Elena at all costs. Glad Jeremy actually mentioned that he knows he has a bad track with girlfriends and I was crossing my fingers this wasn't some kind of foreshadowing...and well it might have been but even while it appeared Bonnie died, she didn't! I was pretty sure it was a spell she cast on herself, since they didn't show us the convo between her and Damon, but I still was really touched by the scene and the dramatic music and I felt for Elena. But yay, Bonnie isn't dead!

Elena revives Elijah
Okay so I was really excited about this because I enjoy Elijah and all the reasons why were confirmed in the preview. :) I also like that Elena is making a choice for herself...I'm getting tired of her being the ultimate damsel in distress and I'm hopeful that she'll be allowed to make some smart choices that save them.

Damon/Elena
I still would like to see a Damon/Bonnie relationship because I think Damon needs to be with a girl who's strong and can hold her own. And in my opinion that's Bonnie (or Katherine). And well, they have mad chemistry. And while I'm enjoying Jeremy with Bonnie, he needs to trust her power and ability to make decisions for herself. But I'll probably never get to see Damon/Bonnie because he is hopelessly in love with Elena. He will always choose her. Sigh. But I know this triangle is the fuel of the show and it's fine with me, I really watch it for the fun plot.

Caroline/Matt
I HATED what happened last week with Matt. Hated! I don't like Matt and now I like him even less. Caroline is my favorite and I hate seeing her be deceived by someone she loves. I want Tyler back.

How did you feel about tonight? Looking forward to the arrival of the real Klaus?


Amy

The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin -- Some Thoughts

Hundred Thousand


It's probably well known to you all that I have a bit of an aversion to epic high fantasy books. I always really really want to like them, because I'm really fond of the sort of people who do. They usually seem delightfully nerdy in all the right ways and super smart and on the edge of what's considered cool by society and all of that. And passionate. People who love fantasy have this kind of no excuses passion for it that I just adore. I guess I want to be like that so I wish I liked fantasy. Oh and it seems that people who like fantasy really enjoy getting into the meat of a story and talking about IDEAS and all that jazz.

But whenever I try to read one, I just...can't. There are usually too many things for me to think about, too many names like Aaaeeddywna that I can't pronounce and then get confused because there's also Eeeadwyna. There are all these creatures and new places and rules and languages and in no time I'm bored because my mind can't conjure the imaginary world where the story lives.

But I wanted to give it another try, so I begged, pleaded, and threatened my book club to do it with me in the form of one of last year's most acclaimed fantasy novels, The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms. This book got GREAT reviews, made a lot of year end lists, and is also published by Orbit, so I was sure it was going to be FANTASTIC. Also, someone said there was RELIGIOUS stuff in it and you know I love that. I was sure this was going to be so good and all of my book club was going to be thanking me for dragging them into my high fantasy adventure with me and we were going to have this great discussion about how we were all wrong about fantasy it's really amazing and then we were going to pledge to read another epic fantasy by the end of the year and I was so sure so so so sure that I was going to actually give The Lord of the Rings another try before I die.

Friends, it didn't happen. The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms was a very readable book in that I quickly turned the pages, but I now cannot tell you a single thing it was about. I think there was a character whose mother was murdered so she went to this other kingdom to see her grandfather and he wanted her to duke it out with some of her cousins (I think) to see who should get the inheritance and rule the kingdom. And I think this main kingdom was like THE kingdom in that they controlled everyone else so she really needed to win because otherwise her homeland would be decimated. (I had flashbacks to Star Wars but I have no idea if that's relevant) But somehow there were these gods who had started the world but were now slaves and they all wanted to have sex with her which was totally creepy and one of them, of course the dark lord, she could barely resist and oh yes having sex with him MIGHT KILL HER. I started wondering at this point if I was actually reading a paranormal romance. And then a whole bunch of other stuff happens and a big secret is revealed and that changes everything. Also, there was a matriarchal society where the girls coming of age was killing a man before he raped her or something traumatizing like that. I'm not even kidding.

Our book club conversation was about 20 minutes of those who actually read it talking about how we had no clue what was going on half the time, before happily moving on to talk about upcoming trips and books we want to read and my endless job search. And I have to concede that I just don't think fantasy is for me. I like urban fantasy and I like YA paranormal romance, and stuff like Harry Potter, but for some reason I just cannot seem to really get into these books that take place in an entirely made-up place. I have to concede that I will never be one of those cool people who love fantasy and that makes me sad. This, of course, is not the fault of the genre, but something about the way I'm wired.

I will say this book was much better than it could have been--I found it very readable, I just didn't retain a whole lot and was never fully immersed in the world. And also you should not take this as a slam on the book, but rather as the perspective of someone who doesn't normally read fantasy. So no hating okay?

Do you read fantasy? Is there a genre you wish you loved that you don't read?


Amy