Showing posts with label Christian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian. Show all posts

Monday, July 1, 2013

The Bare Naked Truth

The Bare Naked Truth: Dating, Waiting, and God's Purity Plan
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So it's 12:17 in the morning, Pacific Time, and I shouldn't be awake. But I am. Unable to sleep, have to get up at six, am extremely tired, and my dad will be getting up soon to go bale hay. And just for the record, I haven't been sitting up reading. Actually, I finished this before Columbo ended tonight.

Title: The Bare Naked Truth
Author: Bekah Hamrick Martin
Publisher: Zondervan
Copyright Date: 2013

This ten-chapter purity book is a pretty quick, easy read. (I dislike the title though. I mean, seriously, do you have to get that awkward? Look, I know it's an awkward topic, but really. . . .) It covers ten common lies about waiting and boyfriends and debases them with the truth. It's God-honoring and humorous--but the humor gets on my nerves sometimes, since it seems like the author was trying too hard to put it in there. Most of all, I found that it reinforces the answer to this question (maybe without knowing it):

What the heck is the point of having a boyfriend when you're too young to be married, or obviously not planning to be married?

And you all know the short answer is . . .

There is no point.

It was an eye-opening experience (which was good, yet wasn't sometimes...), but I found that it didn't very well fulfill its purpose in convincing its readers to wait. Maybe that was just my opinion though. I might be giving away this book in September, so if one of my followers wins it, I would appreciate feedback on how well it convinces you to wait. (Being objective here: acting like you haven't already chosen to wait for your husband, if you've already decided to wait [yay!].)

eight stars. Good! Extremely edifying and a worthwhile read. I'll probably end up rereading it someday. {and I'm still not entirely sure if this should be a seven or an eight....}

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Get Lost: Your Guide to Finding True Love

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgwRWctBGWBScgHFCdrLU15bf62gKSWO3CLylXcT6a29PQO8GSScWcJP6aFM7mljlXibDOahq2isXHw6TZleekc0P9QZFtefaE1N2LMpBEvOYjjlyOj3LtVAahCZMIhf9GRdGhLLA88di0/s1600/womans-heart-lost-in-god.jpg
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I’m not going to give you the whole low-down of what it felt like to read Get Lost, because I’m not going to be that open. It’s convicting, yes. Easy to read, yes—except for when it’s convicting (as always, right?). And it’s about getting totally lost in God.

So that a man has to seek Him first in order to find you.

But it’s not focused on getting lost in God simply because doing so will send your super hero careening down the nearest interstate toward you. It’s focused on getting lost in God because that is what we are called to do.

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Dannah Gresh did this book extremely well. True stories (we all love those, right?)—even a partial back-story for the beauty of the cover (which a couple of you really liked . . . and yeah, I know it's June). Clear definitions from the original Hebrew and Greek words (agape, ahabah, phileo, etc.) to tell you what the referenced Scriptures really mean, as we can find them vague and confusing in English. Explanations of Solomon’s Song of Songs and the story behind it. And perhaps the best part of all of it: the ability to journal. After each chapter, Dannah puts note-pages for you to talk about what you’re reading. It’s one way to get some of those emotions out in the open, anyway.

Whoops, practically forgot to say this . . . the focal point of Get Lost is the 10-Day “Love Feast” . . . the time for getting lost in God and getting out of the Violent Craving for a guy and over yourself. But all of the book seems to be equally useful to me. Sincerely recommended.

I received this book for free in exchange for my honest review.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Love's Gentle Voice

by Julie Wayner
   This is not going to be a full-fledged book review; I'd just like to say a few wonderful things about this inspiring story of a woman's romances. Julie Wayner is her name, and her struggles to trust God through attempting to find her husband . . . very inspiring. She was so deep in the will of God. Even when she erred, she always went back to God, asked His forgiveness, and tried again. The image to the right says His Gentle Voice, but the copy in our house is called Love's Gentle Voice. Here is a link to where you can buy it:

http://www.amazon.com/His-Gentle-Voice-tender-story/dp/B0026Q81XY

   The only reason I read this book is because my sister, Hallie, was "adopted" by Julie and her second husband Hank. At Great Commission Bible Institute in Sebring, FL, each of the twelve attendees are "adopted" by a family in their church for the year. Julie gave a copy of her book to Hallie :)
   I strongly recommend it. It will only take you a day or so, so it's not much of an investment of time.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Perfectly Unique

by Annie F. Downs
   Emily and I started discipleship meetings back in September/October, and this is the book we've studied from then until now. Perfectly Unique: Praising God From Head to Foot by Annie F. Downs felt a little, well, immature at first, but as I got into it further, I really, really liked it.
   The age range is "teen nonfiction": well, it's female teen nonfiction. Like I said, you might cringe--with me it was usually her humor. The humor at times almost feels as if she was struggling to put it in there. Well, not struggling exactly, but you get the idea--trying too hard. And one of the things she said in one chapter bothered me. Paraphrased, it went something like this: "I wonder if there will be food in heaven." What happened to the Wedding Supper of the Lamb?
   There are twelve chapters in the entire book, each followed by a "Chew On This," which gives questions to ponder, Scripture readings, meanings to look up, and assignments for the next few days. From the second to the eleventh chapter, each focuses on a different part of the body--literally "from head to foot". The first chapter is titled "All of You"; the twelfth, "From Head to Foot." I like how she did this, telling us how we can love God and serve Him with every portion of us, from our minds to our mouths to our hands and feet (yes, even feet have a purpose!).
   I think I got more out of this study than I normally would have, probably because Emily held me more accountable than if I had been on my own. Convicting, an easy read, funny, cute, edifying . . . what more could there be? However, I wouldn't recommend this to an already-very-spiritually-mature young woman, as its subject might be too elementary for them. Twelve to sixteen or seventeen, and you should be good :)

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Christy

Becca Anne's Request
Language. 3. Like Left Behind, this first-person narrative is not shy about saying that they swore; however, I don't recall them using swear words, unless it was maybe once or twice.
Violence. 4. Some is described, but in the major portion of violence, the act itself is not; only afterward.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Grace By Which I Stand

God showed me something last night.

He showed me that next to Him I am nothing.

But I am everything to Him!

Monday, October 29, 2012

Divine

Emily's Request
Language: None. 
Violence: On a 1-10 scale (1 being low, 10 being high), I would give it a 5 or so. It does have a couple of nasty-implying scenes, though the novel is not graphic in wording. 
Sexual: On the same scale, a 5-7, depending on your own views. Again, it is not at all graphic. At all. At all at all. So that should not concern you. However, it does tell that it was done. 
Rating as a book: PG-13. 
Rating it would be as a movie: If they made it into a movie they would likely include some nasty scenes (as secular moviemakers). It would be an R easily. As Christian moviemakers, at least a PG; probably PG-13. 
Therefore: Mature teenagers are the youngest I would allow to read this.

  Karen Kingsbury is hailed as the most inspirational Christian writer on the market. She resides in the Pacific Northwest--or, more precisely, about four hours away from me in Seattle, Washington (unless she's relocated). With nearly thirty books published, she's very successful. She's even had one of her novels made into a movie.
  Yet until Divine, I never agreed with the "fact" of her ability to inspire. I didn't get how she could be so successful when her novels were badly written. With unidentifiable characters. And so little Christianity in them that I thought that if not for a few morals they couldn't even qualify.
  The characters, the plot, and the level of faith are what I've been grading my novels by in this blog. That's purely for fictional books, of course; once I get to nonfiction I'll have to change my thesis (oh, what a joy that will be). But. I'll try to be helpful:
  The subject of Divine is centered on a modern-day retelling of Mary Magdalene. That in itself is very curious. Mary Magdalene is one of the most popular women in the Bible, with her wild love for Jesus, her loyalty to Him. In fact, suspicions have been raised over the possibility that she might have married Jesus. Which is not true, obviously; still, she was incredibly close to Christ. She is also, apparently, widely held to have been a prostitute, something I don't think I realized until reading this novel (or, more accurately, reading the preface). And, oh yes, she had cast out of her seven demons.
  Similarly, Mary Madison, the Mary Magdalene of the story, fought with seven struggles. Fear, lying, addiction, faithlessness, promiscuity, suicidal thoughts, self-inflicted pain. Yet now she is "the most powerful woman in Washington, D.C." with her shelters for abused women, her counseling degree, her charity(s), and her repeated speeches before the Senate to promote the passing of a bill she endorses. Oh, and she's knockout gorgeous. Sound like a cliche?
  It's not.
  Oh, it's not. Her mother lived with her on the streets. Jayne Madison was a harlot even though Mary didn't know it at the time her mom was taken from her. At that time was Mary sentenced to the same life--a horrible life that will tie your stomach up in knots and make you afraid. After her sentence of prostitution ends, various occurrences continue to shove her in the direction of the devil. She, who was open to God as an innocent ten-year-old, now proceeds to tell Him He's not real.
  But in this novel Kingsbury expresses something I have never heard her express before. She writes as a true Christian--a "little Christ"--should. She glorifies God. If you shed tears while reading books on a regular basis, you might want to either have tissues on hand, or go somewhere you're alone, while reading this. Even if you're like me and don't often cry during reading hour, your throat will probably clog up.
  Of course there are minor errors which only a grammar cop like myself would critique. Such as on several occasions telling the story for the characters instead of allowing them to tell it themselves. Or slight cliches. Or shallow personalities who need a bit of humanity to pick them up. But overall it was amazing. Her life exhibited the truest love of all--the love of Jesus.