Crazy Dangerous by Andrew Klavan (A Review)

I picked this book up late one evening to read thinking that I’d read it during the evenings all week this week and ended up reading it before work the next day. I just couldn’t put it down. Crazy Dangerous is one of the most engaging, adventure paced Young Adult novels I have ever read.

The main character Sam lives a believable, yet fast paced adventure. He’s a likable guy who just wants to be liked and be part of a group… any group. He makes some pretty dumb decisions along that end up costing him. Mysteriously in the mix of all the action he picks up the motto, “Do right, fear nothing” off a small statue in his Father’s office and presses on with the motto to get himself and others out of some pretty tight jams.  A little bit of heroism and virtue go a long way in helping him to protect a friend and save his town from destruction.

I enthusiastically recommend this book to anyone interested in reading a well written, well told adventure story. It is about the best I have ever read in Christian Fiction. You can score a copy at Amazon.com for a little more than ten bucks. I give it Five Stars.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson as part of the BookSneeze program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

THE SERVANT KING (from the Jesus StoryBook Bible).

We love reading this Storybook Bible to the kids. Here is another animated story from The Jesus Storybook Bible by Sally Lloyd Jones.

Disclosure of Material Connection: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

 

Our Favorite Sins by Todd Hunter (A Review)

Have you ever wrestled with a sin issue? You knew that you had to change, but change seemed impossible. Or maybe you’ve been attending a bible study or even church service and while you feel educated at the end of the event you know somehow that transformation doesn’t just come with education. Something more needs to happen.  Then this book is for you.

In his book, Our Favorite Sins, Todd Hunter undertakes the topic of fighting sin and does it in an ancient, yet relevant way. I think he is on to something. Many of us in the mainline protestant churches have been quick to dismiss many of the traditional church seasons and disciplines simply because we’ve considered them to be the “Catholic” thing, without giving much thought to the actual benefits of say fasting or praying the hours.  It’s a great book and well worth a read and I think it will help anyone who is seriously interested in dealing with the sin in their lives.

I really enjoyed reading Our Favorite Sins. I had the pleasure of reading it on my Kindle Touch and found myself unable to put it down.  I highly recommend it to anyone interested in growing in a relationship with Christ.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson as part of the BookSneeze program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

October Baby: Coming to a Theater Near You!

So I had the chance to check out a new movie the other night with my wife. We went to go see the movie October Baby (due in Theaters on March 23rd). We were initially worried that we were in for a long night of b-rated christian acting but were pleasantly surprised by the quality of the production.

The theme of the movie centers on a young woman named Hannah, who finds out through a medical condition that her parents are not her birth parents and she suffers from her condition as a result of a failed abortion. That is to say that her birth mother attempted to get an abortion, but ended up delivering a live baby instead. Hannah then sets out on a journey to figure out who she is, where she came from, and who her real mother is.

I was impressed with the authenticity with which the abortion issue was discussed. The themes of grace and forgiveness continued to resurface.  I appreciate the fresh perspective on an otherwise tension filled issue. My wife and I will be back opening weekend to take it all in again. Check out some of the video’s below and the website to get more information and see if it’s worth your time.

 

Lottie Moon (A Biographical Sketch): Conclusion

The life of Lottie Moon cannot be summed up in the matter of a few pages of history. Thankfully her legacy lives on alive and well in Southern Baptist life. Lottie set foot in the world during a unique time for women and for missions.  She was born into an age when the world was changing: the south was forced to let go of its slaves and look to them as brothers, women were fighting to have a voice in the public forum, and the missions movement was in a delicate infancy as the second generation of missionaries were taking their place on the field.

Lottie Moon forced the Southern Baptist Convention to think through its convictions about the role of single women in missions. On many occasions, because of the lack of men on the field Lottie not only was responsible to lead men to Christ, but to disciple them in some way as well.[1] Her exploits on the field and need for prayer and financial support from America helped women to organize and rally around the cause of missions.

Though the mission movement was underway in Southern Baptist Life, when the time that Lottie Moon came along, it was not well funded. The Cooperative Program would not come into existence until 1925.[2] Lottie found a way to rally women to fund missions and keep the movement alive for subsequent generations.

Lottie surrendered her life to the mission field upon hearing a plea that the workers were few. She then spent her entire life echoing the same cry. She called for men to be men on the mission field. She blazed a way for single women to answer the call. She made a plea to whoever would listen or read her words and rallied women to organize around praying, collecting money and sending workers into the harvest.

Given her work and her life it is fitting that the offing the Southern Baptist collect in Lottie Moon’s name takes place in December. She was born in December of 1840. She was born again in December of 1858. She entered into eternity in December of 1912. Every December since 1918 an offering has been taken in her name. Today though dead, she still echo’s the words of the Savior in Matthew 9:37, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few.” [3]

 


[1] Kotter, David. “Answering Lottie Moon’s Cry: A Call for Dialogue on the Role of Women in Missions.” The Journal for Biblical Manhood and Womanhood 13, No. 2 (Fall 2008): 30.

[2] Sorrill, 31.

[3] All Scripture quotations in this paper, unless noted otherwise are from the The Holy Bible: English Standard Version, (Wheaton: Crossway Bibles, 2006).

 

Lottie Moon (A Biographical Sketch): From Pingtu to Eternity

Now undistracted by love interests and partially influenced by the Crawford doctrines, Lottie entered into a season of impatience.[1] She was increasingly familiar with the culture and frustrated at the progression of her work with the girls’ school. She began to feel pigeonholed into teaching seemingly ignorant children because of her gender.[2] Compounding the sense of missionary claustrophobia was the fact that T. P. Crawford was now trying to exert more and more control over the women at the mission. These issues converged on Miss Moon in such a way as to force her to a decision. She either would return to America or she would press inland to a more fruitful field. She chose for the gospel sake to press in land.[3]

In the fall of 1885, while Crawford was back in America to spread his wildly controversial views and opinions, Lottie set off for the interior. Without Crawford around to stop her and the unenthusiastic approval of her peers, she marched four days inland to Pingtu[4] Catherine Allen notes, “She was thought in her own times to be the first woman of any mission to establish an inland mission station by herself.”[5]

During this time, Moon’s identity was shifting. At times she would identify herself with the people of the interior as “we natives.”[6] She now lived a more itinerate and individualistic lifestyle, renting rooms in Pingtu and maintaining her residence in Tengchow.[7] When absent from the interior she would lament that her heart was in Pingtu.[8]

In the year 1887 she began to contemplate a furlough back to the United States.[9] Her plans were postponed however when three men from a village about ten miles outside of Pingtu knocked on her door searching out the “new doctrine” that Lottie was teaching.[10] Her normal practice was to teach only women and children, yet without any men to send, Lottie filled the role.[11]

This event was cataclysmic for Lottie. She delayed her furlough. She began making more urgent appeals to the Mission Board to send men to the mission field. While she was already active in encouraging women to form around the cause of missions and made appeals for special offerings, it was following this event that she suggested that Southern Baptist women set aside  a  week of prayer and offering for missions.[12] She wrote, “I wonder how many of us really believe that it is more blessed to give than receive.”[13] This first mission emphasis of its kind for Southern Baptists tied together an appeal for prayer, money, and missionaries.[14]

By October of 1889 a church had been established in the village outside of Pingtu and an ordained Baptist missionary baptized the first eleven members.[15] Twenty years later the church’s Chinese pastor, Li Shou Ting had baptized more than a thousand converts.[16] However the years in between and since were full of persecution and famine. [17]

The former mission sight was languishing in disarray as Crawford began rebuffing the mission board for not agreeing with his views. The FMB was in debt. Yet a great many more missionaries were needed for the work that Lottie Moon had started. She diligently wrote articles encouraging the SBC to send thirty more missionaries to North China.[18] It was harvest time in Northern China and SBC needed to send workers.

Even before this time Lottie had been diligent to keep up communication with the home front and had developed a large support network of women. Her articles were published in various publications and journals and fame of her work spread among the women of the SBC.

At the same time the women of the SBC were beginning to organize around the cause of missions. Though she would return to the United States a few times during her career, it was her writing more than her presence that helped fuel a movement that would lead to the organization of the Women’s Missionary Union and the creation of the Christmas time offering that bears her name.[19]

The last years of Lottie’s life were given in service to China. Near the end of her days in North China she would face war, famine, and persecution, yet she held strong. In 1912 a now elderly seventy-two-year-old Miss Moon was stricken with a mentally debilitating illness. An infection had set in at the base of her skull. For weeks she had been giving her food away to others in the midst of famine. She was becoming severely malnourished and was obsessed with the thought that fellow missionaries and her Chinese friends were starving. [20]

In a valiant attempt to restore her to health the missionaries on the field agreed to send Lottie back to America.  However, on December 24, 1912, Lottie Moon passed into eternity. News of Lottie Moon’s death spread rapidly among the now organized WMU and a call to honor Lottie through sacrificial giving was set in place.  Just six years after her death Annie Armstrong the former secretary of the WMU proposed that the annual Christmas Offering be named after Lottie Moon.[21]


[1] Allen, The Legacy of Lottie Moon, 149.

[2] Hyatt, 104.

[3] Ibid., 105-106.

[4] Allen, The Legacy of Lottie Moon, 149.

[5] Ibid.

[6] Hyatt, 110.

[7] Allen, The Legacy of Lottie Moon, 149.

[8] Hyatt, 110.

[9] Hefley, James C., and Marti. By Their Blood: Christian Martyrs of the Twentieth Century. 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books, 1996), 62.

[10] Hyatt, 111.

[11] Ibid.

[12] Hefley, 62.

[13] Ibid.

[14] Bobby Sorrill. “The History of the Week of Prayer for Foreign Missions” Baptist

History and Heritage 15, No. 4 (Oct. 1980): 29.

[15] Lawrence, 161.

[16] Tucker, 237.

[17] Miller, 37.

[18] Hyatt, 112-113.

[19] Tucker, 237-238.

[20] Allen, The Legacy of Lottie Moon, 151.

[21] Allen. The Legacy of Lottie Moon, 151.

Surprised By Oxford (A Review)

You have to love a story where the main character runs off to grad school a staunch feminist agnostic only to return home years later as a born-again evangelical Christian. You might guess that such a transformation would take place in an environment saturated with evangelical Christians, but could you ever imagine such a thing taking place in the halls of academia? Such is the story of Surprised by Oxford. It is the account of one woman’s journey to Christ in an academic setting.

I enjoyed reading this book. I had the pleasure of reading it on my Kindle Touch
and found myself unable to put it down. I’d end up having to step out for an appointment and would let the kindle read to me while I drove.

Mrs. Webber writes with a witty and engaging style. She pulls the reader in with her vivid description of senses and feelings that one would expect of a master in story telling. She recalls events in detail and brings the reader along on her personal journey to faith in Christ.

I was greatly encouraged by this book and I highly recommend it to anyone interested in reading a personal account of spiritual transformation.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson as part of the BookSneeze program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Lottie Moon (A Biographical Sketch): Navigating Theological and Missiological Controversy

Lottie was back in America for less than a year, she sailed for China again in November of 1877. However the time she had spent in America was time enough for her to renew some sort of contact with Crawford Toy. [1]  Toy was a language professor who she new well from her days at the Albemarle Female Institute. He was now a professor at the newly formed Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Some suppose that he possibly proposed marriage to Lottie during the early days of the Civil War, but the war had intervened.[2]

A flurry of letters were exchanged between Toy and Lottie once she was back on Chinese soil and momentarily it seemed as though Lottie Moon and Crawford Toy would be married. However, a stark theological difference appeared to be in the way. Toy had embraced Darwinian Evolution and this seemed at odds with Lottie’s understanding of the Scriptures. Lottie sought to understand things from Toy’s perspective and read the books he sent her; however, she could not be reconciled to Toy’s beliefs.[3] For Lottie, Toy’s liberalism, especially his non-historical view of Genesis was a deal breaker and the wedding never took place.[4] With her sister Edmonia back in the United States and her marriage plans cancelled, Lottie Moon had cut all ties to the Western World and fully immersed herself in mission work.[5]

Before Lottie had returned to the United States it was apparent that there was tension on the mission field.  T. P. Crawford and James Boardman Hartwell were both assigned to the Tengchow district and were at odds with one another over business issues and mission policy. Crawford had business dealing with natives from Hartwell’s church and made demands for the church to discipline its member. However, Hartwell’s church insisted on censuring Crawford instead and a feud between the two men and their churches ensued. [6]

Lottie walked a fine line between the rival missionaries and did a great deal to keep the peace on the mission field. Possibly unaware of the extent Crawford’s private business, Lottie was, “loyal to Crawford.”[7] She would invoke the wrath of Hartwell later when she moved into his China residence after it had been vacant for some time while he was on an indefinite furlough in America. Despite the difficult situation, Miss Moon kept the peace by remaining maintaining her membership at Crawford’s church while also supporting Hartwell’s North Street congregation.[8]

Somewhere in the middle of the opposition between Crawford and Hartwell was the issue of paying native pastors. Crawford was vehemently in opposition to natives receiving funds from the Mission Board. He would later write and deliver a paper entitled, “The Advantages and Disadvantages of the Employment of the Native Assistants.”[9] This issue would eventually cause Hartwell to break ranks with the Foreign Mission Board, accusing the board of being unscriptural; he would make his appeal for missionaries to be supported by churches alone. At a time when unity was much needed, Crawford became an active force for schism within the denomination as well as its mission board.[10]

Miss Moon began an earnest inquiry into the Chinese culture and developed her own sense of missionary strategy. One element of particular interest was the issue of dressing like the culture. Other mission agencies were shaving heads and dawning authentic Chinese garb with much success, while others close to Lottie were critical of Chinese dress.[11] Lottie would eventually navigate a position that would allow for her to dress like the Chinese and embrace their culture as long as it was not contrary to the Scriptures.[12]


[1] Ibid.,112-119.

[2] Irwin T. Hyatt. Our Ordered Lives Confess: Three Nineteenth-Century American Missionaries in East Shantung. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1976), 98.

 

[3] Hyatt., 98-99.

[4] Mohler.

[5] Hyatt, 99.

[6] Allen. The New Lottie Moon Story, 105.

[7] Ibid. 106.

[8] Allen, The New Lottie Moon Story, 106-107.

[9] Ibid. 120.

[10] Ibid., 196-197.

[11] Hyatt, 101-102.

[12] Philip A. Pinckard. “Lottie Moon.” Lecture, MISS 5330 Christian Missions Workshop from the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, New Orleans, LA, January 5, 2012.

 

Review: 101 Bible Adventures

I really like this book. 101 Bible Adventures is a great devotional type book for younger children to read with their parents and older children to read on their own. The format is well thought through and leads readers on a journey through 101 stories of the Bible.

My favorite aspect about the book is that it that the stories come straight from the scriptures (New Living Translation). Each section also includes a brief introduction setting up the story, a key verse, a single frame cartoon related to the story, and most importantly a “Now What” section that ties the story into everyday life for the reader. I find the cover and art work especially appealing to younger boys.

Overall I really like the book. It suits the audience it is targeted to well. The stories are within normal attention spans, the artwork is neatly done, and the packaging is done in a way that isn’t off-putting to girls, but is engaging to boys. I’m reading it to my children and looking forward to the day when my son can read through it on his own.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a copy of this book free from Tyndale House Publishers as part of their Tyndale Blog Network. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Lottie Moon (A Biographical Sketch): From the Southern US to Northern China and Back Again

During the Civil war, Lottie lived a much quieter life than her famed cousin by the same name who was a spy for the confederacy.[1] Lottie spent a majority of war time tutoring in the rural South. She stayed on with wealthy families and tutored for a short time in Alabama, South Carolina, and Georgia.[2] It is rumored that she may have helped her sister Orianna Moon in Charlottesville as a nurse to injured soldiers.[3] Near the end of the war, Lottie was back home at Viewmont. Catherine Allen writes about the tensions that filled the air during those days:

Raiders and rumors of raiders panicked the residents of Viewmont. Word came that nearby Darter’s Mill was in flames and that Viewmont would be next. The household spun into action. They loaded all food and clothing onto a wagon… Mrs. Moon gathered all the family silver and jewels. She thrust the treasures into Lottie’s trembling arms with orders to bury them in the orchard. Then the frightened family awaited their doom. But the raiders never came. The dust kicked up by a traveling heard of sheep caused a false alarm.[4]

After the War, Lottie was invited to help establish a school for girls in Danville, Kentucky. It was in Danville that Lottie would meet and befriend Miss A.C. Stafford, a Presbyterian. It was not long before the school came to a financial impasse due to handing out too many scholarships and was taken over and renamed by the Presbyterians.[5]

Soon a new opportunity presented itself in Carterville, Georgia for both Lottie and Miss Stafford to begin a new school for girls there. The women set to work and were surprisingly met with great success. Yet, just as things seemed to be progressing at the new school, Lottie’s’ mother fell sick and Lottie quickly returned home to Viewmont just in time for her mother’s passing.[6]

While back in Viewmont for her mother’s funeral, Lottie had a great deal of time for discussions with her younger sister Edmonia. Edmonia was contemplating missionary service in China.[7] Secretly Lottie and Edmonia had been supporting the mission work in China conducted by Mrs. Martha Foster Crawford, the wife of T. P. Crawford. Now it seemed that through correspondence and application that an opportunity opened up for Edmonia to go as a single woman missionary to China in an effort to reach Chinese women.[8]

January of 1873 Lottie Moon was in a private dialogue with the Foreign Mission Board Corresponding Secretary H. A. Tupper about the possibility of her appointment as a single female missionary. A month later, Lottie’s pastor at Cartersville, R. B. Headden, returned from an associational meeting anxious to preach a message calling for more workers on the foreign mission field.[9] When He shared the message with the Cartersville congregation there was a prayer in his heart that God might call at least one from among the congregation to volunteer service. To his surprise and amazement both Lottie Moon and her dear friends Mss A. C. Stafford responded to the call.[10] Miss Moon expressed, “I have long known God wanted me in China. I am now ready to go.”[11]

Charlotte Digges Moon was officially appointed by the Foreign Mission board on July 7, 1873. She began to make plans for her departure by visiting friends and family. Finally on September 1st of 1873, Lottie Moon set sail from San Francisco for China.[12]

The trip from China was eventful. Not far into the ocean voyage, Lottie was plagued with seasickness which lasted twenty-five days until the ship arrived in Japan. After a fair amount of time visiting in Japan, Lottie set out for Shanghai. However, shortly into the voyage the ship encountered a hurricane and only after the passengers and crew had resigned themselves to the prospect of a watery grave was the ship returned safely back into the Japanese harbor. Then when Lottie boarded another ship to take her to the missionary province another typhoon attempted to keep her from her destination. Finally, on October 25, nearly two months since she set out, Lottie Moon arrived in Tengchow.[13]

Lottie was excited to be reunited with her younger sister Edmonia. Edmonia had been in China for almost a year-and-a-half before Lottie arrived and had made quick progress with the language. Lottie, a language scholar, was a little slower to catch on, but still a quick learner. She soon mastered the local dialects.[14] Lottie soon progressed to reading Chinese literature and history, mastering the language better than most.[15]

Even before Lottie mastered the languages she began taking trips to the surrounding villages with Mrs. Crawford and Edmonia. Just a few short months after her arrival, with the aid of a Chinese woman, Lottie was working on her own. Initially she was met with opposition and was often called names like “foreign devil.” Eventually she learned the culture and was able to operate with a polite directness that earned her favor and credibility with the locals.[16]

Ever since Edmonia had arrived in China she had struggled with culture shock. The Crawford’s were unaccustomed to welcoming new missionary members to the team and there was no formal means of transitioning into missionary life. Edmonia was thrown into the mix to sink or swim and by 1876 it was apparent the Edmonia was sinking. Shortly after her arrival in China, she began to suffer a variety of illnesses. First, she was unable to travel with the other women and was confined to work in the mission compound. Then she was sent to Japan to see if a change of scenery would aid in her recovery. While in Japan it was apparent that she needed to go home to Viewmont and Lottie was quickly recalled from China to aid her sister. The Moon women arrived back in Viewmont on December 22, 1876 just in time for Christmas.[17]


[1] Allen. The New Lottie Moon Story, 47.

[2] Allen. The New Lottie Moon Story, 47.

[3] Lawrence. 52.

[4] Allen. The New Lottie Moon Story, 49.

[5] Lawrence. 55-56.

[6] Ibid. 58-59.

[7] Lawrence, 61-62.

[8] Allen. The New Lottie Moon Story, 63-65.

[9] Ibid. 68-69.

[10] Lawrence, 63.

[11] Ibid.

[12] Allen. The New Lottie Moon Story, 70-71.

[13] Allen. The New Lottie Moon Story, 79-82.

[14] Ibid. 92-93.

[15] Lawrence, 78

[16] Allen. The New Lottie Moon Story, 94-96.

[17] Allen. The New Lottie Moon Story, 96-111.