I've always loved to read books. In fact, I'm quite unhappy if I do not have three or four or more I'm working on at any given time. One of the temptations I have to fight continually is the temptation to buy yet another book. I'm somewhat like Desiderius Erasmus, who is purported to have said,“When I get a little money, I buy books, and if any is left, I buy food and clothes."
Here are a few of the books I'm currently into and some of the things I'm learning:
What's So Great About Christianity by Dinesh D'Souza. D'Souza points out that the whole science versus religion story is a nineteenth century fabrication. To this day many people believe that the medieval church held that the earth was flat until modern science demonstrated that the globe is round. In fact, the ancient Greeks and medieval Christians knew this. Dante's medieval cosmology, for instance, was based on the idea of a spherical earth.
I'm enjoying D'Souza, especially because he explodes many such false ideas about Christian faith and history.
Women Pastors? The Ordination of Women in Biblical Lutheran Perspective, edited by Matthew C. Harrison and John T. Pless. I have written much about this topic, especially since there is a very strong opinion in our modern world that men and women are equal. These Lutheran theologians from around the world point out that this begs the question. That's not really the issue. The point is that clergy are appointed by Christ to be His public voice and Christ chose to become incarnate in the male gender. Why? So that he might demonstrate that His Father is the Giver and that through Him the heavenly Father gives forgiveness and grace. We of the church are the receivers, the Bride to whom Christ gives life and mercy. It is Christ's intent then that the public ministers who preach, teach and administer the sacraments be of the male gender so that by their very persons they demonstrate this gift of God's grace.
The Return of The Prodigal Son by Henri J.M. Nouwen. This is really Nouwen's reflections upon a reproduction of Rembrandt's The Return of the Prodigal Son. I'm dismally trained to study and reflect upon painting and know so very little about it. This is why I've been so grateful to Nouwen as he not only takes me into the mind of Rembrandt, but helps me to reflect upon the wondrous parable and learn how this applies to my life. For instance, he writes, "The joy at the dramatic return of the younger son in no way means that the elder son was less loved, less appreciated, less favored. The father does not compare the two sons. He loves them both with a complete love and expresses that love according to their individual journeys."
George MacDonald: The Best From All His Works, The Christian Classics collection, vol. 1. I won this volume in a draw at a writing group meeting. I accepted the book gratefully because I know of the influence MacDonald had on C.S. Lewis, one of my all-time favorite authors. I'm enjoying a couple of MacDonald's fantasy writings in this volume. Here's what he says in one of his unspoken sermons, published in 1886. "The life the Lord came to give us is a life exceeding that of the highest undivine man, by far more than the life of that man exceeds the life of the animal the least human. More and more of it is for each who will receive it, and to eternity. The Father has given to the Son to have life in himself; that life is our light. We know life only as light; it is the life in us that makes us see. All the growth of the Christian is the more and more life he is receiving."
There you have them, four that I'm currently into. What books are you reading? I'm always looking for good recommendations.
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