Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Books I have read in 2011

19. Becoming the Answer to our Prayers
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The most powerful statement in the book is: “We don’t do great things, we do small things with great love!” This is a very good book.
  • Paperback: 125 pages
  • Publisher: IVP Books (September 3, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 9780830836222
  • ISBN-13: 978-0830836222
  • ASIN: 0830836225
From Publishers Weekly
This latest publication from the new monasticism movement is the third book each for the two young Christian activist-authors, and it offers fresh insight on the well-worn topic of prayer. Some themes are repeated from earlier works, but the book deftly succeeds in drawing the reader out of the weeds of daily life and into a more spacious field. The text is structured around three New Testament prayers: the Lord's Prayer, Christ's intercessory prayer in Chapter 17 of the Gospel of John and Paul's prayer in the first chapter of Ephesians. From the very first pronoun of the familiar Lord's Prayer ("our"), the authors extract a compelling sermon on the power and centrality of community in Christian life and thought. The dominant theme--that prayer invites human beings into a partnership with God in answering prayer--is enlivened with earthy tales from the authors' own lives, wrenching stories of service and redemption from the people they know and lesser-known anecdotes from Christian history and sociology. Readers will never see prayer or community in quite the same way again. (Oct.)
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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

How do we communicate the gospel, and what do we communicate?

I think this is a brilliant article by “Jesus needs new PR”.  What is your opinion?

 

My thoughts on Mark Driscoll’s hell…

 

I watched it. And then I re-watched it. And then I woke up this morning and watched it again.
And I’m just going to share a few thoughts…
Now, before I do that, let me offer a disclaimer:

A) I don’t know Mark Driscoll personally. But I’ll be very honest: Mark’s public persona rubs me the wrong way. Seriously, I think the man could be discussing nursery rhymes and I’d somehow be just a little irritated by it. And while I do think that some of my frustrations are warranted, I do realize that a part of the reason that Mark’s public “voice” gets under my skin is my problem (not his). So I think it’s only fair to confess that upfront.