I’m behind on emails, on to-do lists, on Christmas shopping, on pretty much everything. It would be natural to blame it on juggling a 5-week-old and a 16-mo.-old, but the truth is that it isn’t them at all. We just completed another seminary course last week. This one was on the Pentateuch (in Greek) or The Torah (in Hebrew).
It helped us dig into Genesis, Exodus, Numbers, Leviticus, and Deuteronomy (first 5 books of the Old Testament). Even mature students of Scripture can tend to glaze over books like Leviticus or the details of the Jewish law, so this helped us read with a fresh new insights. This book shares a view of the Jewish Torah from a Christian perspective. We liked the class – it was the timing that was difficult, with a baby being born during week 5 of 10, plus 2 challenging papers that were due since Dylan arrived. Most free time went to school work, but now we’re done and on vacation, visiting Ben’s dad and step-mom, getting some r&r, which includes reading WHATEVER we desire! Here’s the latest:
Our friends Gwen and Gary from CA got me this devotional. I’d heard of it b/c a bunch of JV ladies were obsessed w/ it. It is a beautiful 365-day read of daily advice, as though Jesus were writing it to you. I’ve done it for 8 days consecutively, and I am hooked. Here is a little teaser and my favorite line from the book so far:
“I equip you to face whatever the day brings. This sacrifice of time pleases Me and strengthens you. Do not skimp on our time together. Resist the clamor of tasks waiting to be done. You have chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from you.” Jan. 2 (Luke 10:39-42)
A friend recently lost her mom and had lots of questions about heaven, which partially led me to this book. I am usually quite skeptical about near-death encounters and peoples’ claims on heaven or hell (we had an incident at English camp one year with the book “23 minutes in Hell…don’t get me started). However this book stretched my faith, my beliefs in radical occurrences, and went back to the foundation about what the Bible says about heaven. I read it in 3 hours, which is my kind of book during busy seasons of life!
I am almost done with this book, another easy read. This one is great because it attacks the sin of fear and anxiety in the American heart. It is a good reminder for all of us – being afraid of school shootings, Muslims or other races or religions, terrorists, cancer, dying, predators, natural disasters, illness, financial troubles, job losses, and so on. The author shows how we live in a world plagued by fear, and how God challenges us to be people of faith who are not shaken by things that are fully in the control of our sovereign God. If you look at the root of a lot of sin, fear is at the heart (laziness, anger, apathy, a lack of forgiveness), and this book helps us overcome this.
Lastly, this is a book that Ben is currently reading for the JV Council. They read great books that are current and relevant to the context of ministry, life in Christ, and what is happening in the world. This book addresses the social media phenomenon and how big changes occur through such a channel. One of JV’s main focuses in the coming years will be to use social media as a mass means of evangelism for the glory of God.