Showing posts with label christianity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christianity. Show all posts

Monday, March 3, 2014

REVIEW: Captivated: Beholding the Mystery of Jesus' Death and Resurrection

Captivated: Beholding the Mystery of Jesus' Death and ResurrectionCaptivated: Beholding the Mystery of Jesus' Death and Resurrection by Thabiti M. Anyabwile
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I was brought into a church building for the first time when I was three days old.  I am now 52 years of age.  I am still learning the meaning of Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection.

For these reasons I am excited to have the chance to review "Captivated: Beholding the Mystery of Jesus' Death and Resurrection" by Thabiti M. Anyabwile.  I was provided a copy of the paperback by Cross-Focused Reviews in exchange for my honest opinion of the book.

This is a short book, of five Easter-season sermons given by 'Pastor T', compiled in book form, that gives us different facets of Christ's intercession and sacrifice.

Is there No Other Way?
We have only to look around us to see that worldly influences have distracted so many people, young and old alike.  Jesus gave a very human response to his situation when He asked His Father if there was any other way the Father's plan could be accomplished.  It is very encouraging for someone like me to know that Jesus knows my weaknesses (because He has experienced them Himself) and that He loves me anyway.

Why Have You Forsaken Me?
Have your hopes ever been pinned on something that, in the end, does not happen?  What a letdown!  Of course for most of us, such a feeling of isolation comes at a less serious time than shortly before our deaths.  How hard it seems for us as parents to watch our children go down a path that will lead to hurt feeling or injuries, but know that this is something they must experience in order to progress.  How hard it is for us, as children, to not receive the help we expect from our parents.  What an incredible sacrifice made by God the Father and Jesus for our benefit.

Where, O Death, is Your Victory?
Because Jesus and His Father made this incredible sacrifice and unbelievable gift to everyone, we are able to go to heaven after our physical bodies have died.  But, being human, most of what we see is the 'separation' from our loved ones and we tend to view death as what it takes away.

In March, 2011, I travelled from Kentucky to Utah to visit my 87 year old mother.  Given the infrequency with which I was able to visit, it was clear that this would be the last time I would see her on this earth.  when I left her room for the last time, she was in and out of consciousness.  I bent down to whisper in her ear, "Mom, I love you.  God loves you."

Although, I know of no one who has expressed this theme more eloquently than Chad Watson, a man in my state who expressed his reliance on and gratefulness for God's plan ... after his wife and 8 of his 9 children died in a fire earlier this year.

Why do You Seek the Living Among the Dead?
If this life was all there was, death would indeed be even more of a tragedy than it already is.   The only thing that could be worse would be spending eternity outside of God's presence.

We are not our physical characteristics:  our eye and hair color, height and weight.  We are not our physical conditions: good health, illnesses or injuries.  Those can grow old and pass away.  Our spirits, or who we are, need not be found in the same place as our muscles and tendons.  We may seek for the living among the dead, like the women looking for Jesus' tomb that Sunday morning, but we will not find them there.

Do You Not Know These Things?
This chapter was different for me.  To use a cooking analogy, if the first four chapter-sermons were the ingredients, the fifth chapter contains the directions.  I was glad to have someone finally define the word epistemology, which I had seen many times before in Christian literature, but it was always assumed the reader would know what it meant.

How do you know what is true, what is right?  There are many ways to gain proof.  There is only one way that is infallible.

~~~oOo~~~

Pastor T obviously knows his Bible and can find and use the words to help people find their way in their walk with God.

This is not a book you can read once and put up on the shelf to gather dust.  Personally I would like to have a week or two to study each chapter, to go through and learn (memorize?) the Bible verse references, and to pray about it.  Whether you are non-Christian, newly baptized or a scriptorian, this book as something for you.


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Tuesday, January 21, 2014

REVIEW: Stepping Out in Faith

Stepping Out in Faith: Former Catholics Tell Their StoriesStepping Out in Faith: Former Catholics Tell Their Stories by Mark Gilbert
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

(Disclaimer: I received a copy of this book for free from CrossFocusedReviews.com in exchange for my honest review.)

Being outside a faith community is hard. Being inside a faith community takes work. Switching or leaving a faith community? Ouch!

"Stepping Out in Faith" is a collection of eleven stories of people who were Catholic. To further their walk with God, each felt it necessary to leave the Catholic church. Each story, from a wide variety of individuals (male, female, married, single, widowed, etc) gives a sincere, 'authentic' voice to what can be a very traumatic event (changing faith groups).

I suppose I should say at this point that I have never been Catholic. I've been to a Catholic church once or twice and talked to a priest on one occasion. I consider myself Christian. I consider people who are Catholic to be Christian. Several of the contributors to this book believe Catholics are not Christian in terms of adherence to the Holy Bible. The only thing that 'raised my eyebrow', as it were, was when the authors say the Catholic church claimed it was the only way to God (which the authors did not believe), and then later most or all of them say that what they found was the only way to God.

Overall, I give this four out of five stars. The book can be a valuable tool for someone thinking of switching faith communities or churches. It challenges people not considering switching faiths to practice what they preach as well. This book is well worth the read.

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This book is counting towards the following 2014 Reading Challenges:



Friday, April 12, 2013

Jesus


Who is Jesus?

To Christians, He is the Son of God, one of the Holy Trinity.

I got to wondering who Jesus was to people of other religions.

According to Wikipedia, Muslims consider Jesus a Muslim prophet and the Messiah.  They believe he was born into this world by a virgin birth, but did not taste of death as we humans know it.  Allah is supreme and has no equals or partners.  There will be a day of judgment where Jesus returns to the earth to defeat the anti-Christ.

Again, according to Wikipedia, Jews, like Muslims to not believe that God has an equal.  However, unlike Christians and Muslims, they do not believe Jesus is the Messiah, because He did not fulfill the traditional Messianic prophecies of Judaism, and could not because these events have not yet happen.

I came to write this after wondering what Jesus and Muhammed would say to each other if they had a chance to sit down together and talk.  Of course, anything I would post would be my opinion of what these men would say/have said, and I certainly do not wish to offend anyone's beliefs.

If I have misstated beliefs of my Muslim or Jewish sisters and brothers, please accept my apologies and leave a comment respectfully setting me straight.  Frankly, I was surprised to find certain threads of commonality linking the different religions.  Not enough, of course, to stop arguments and fighting, but the ideological similarities are there nonetheless.

For myself, I was raised in a Christian church, and while I do not always attend, I do consider myself to be a Christian.  There is something called "The Golden Rule" (in Christianity) and most traditions have a similar saying.  By all means, leave a comment expressing your spiritual beliefs, whatever they may be.  I look forward to reading them, and maybe opening some discussion.  Lastly, please respect the opinions of others even if they differ from your own.