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The New Evidence That Demands A Verdict Fully Updated To Answer The Questions Challenging Christians Today

Josh McDowell

The New Evidence That Demands A Verdict Fully Updated To Answer The Questions Challenging Christians Today Josh McDowell Amazon Price: $19.79
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 98 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

good reading 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 4 people found this review helpful.

This is a readable book for the lay person. Very thought provoking. It is written in the comman man's language.

This book changed by life 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 4 people found this review helpful.

This is easily one of the best Christian books in print today. This book took my faith to the next level, and reinforced it with clear undeniable FACTS. It's a tough read, as the format isn't for relaxing bedtime reading, but you won't regret time spent studying this fantastic book.

Logic in Short Supply Here 1 out of 5 stars.
2 of 3 people found this review helpful.

Sorry fundamentalists to rain on the parade here, I noticed the average rating for this book was 4 stars. That says a lot in itself about folks' abilities to reason clearly (or not).

McDowell (and other Christian apologists like him) tend to browbeat believers (apologetics are almost never read by outsiders), using a lot of ink to present arguments that, if one steps outside the religious conditioning involved, seem rather silly. Never mind what avowed atheists think, we're talking here merely of sheer lack of common sense. The "enemy" for fundamentalist apologists isn't necessarily those atheist arch skeptics, it's even worse- the enemy is simple logic.

Take, for example, McDowell's many arguments in defense of the supposed "infallacy" of the Scriptures. McDowell does what all evangelical apologists do, and tosses out various scriptures supporting this view, never once realizing that this is a circular argument. One simply cannot use a source text as "proof" of it's own assertions. What's funny is, his preaching buddies on the evangelical TV circuit also use the same tactics and don't realize these simple logical errors make this whole effort highly amusing to non-believers. Actually, you'll see fundamentalist apologists use this tactic for ALL of their literalist readings, trying to convince outsiders with the "evidence" being ultimately only that source material itself :-).

Let me give another example that is my own personal favorite. McDowell (and others) like to quote the old "trilemma" argument from C.S.Lewis that supposedly gives you only 3 choices: Jesus was either God, lunatic, or liar- take your pick. But he has to be one of the three, and we know he wasn't a liar or lunatic...er...but hold on...
Now, most skeptics easily see through the numerous holes in this line of reasoning, but for some reason apologists like McDowell dutifully repeat these old chestnuts, seemingly unable to examine the assertions carefully at all.
First of all, why only these three choices? It's a false trilemma. One can easily come up with other possibilities of who Jesus was, and modern biblical criticism has presented many different portraits (doing so considering the weight of historical material much more rigorously than McDowell is able to).
Furthermore, let us note that, according to some of the Gospel passages, even Jesus' own family thought he was nuts (early in his preaching career) and wanted to seize him and take him home :-). So the "lunatic" angle, ironically, was evidently considered by his OWN FAMILY...Now I don't think the lunatic angle really describes Jesus well, but there is no question his preaching promoted a lot of different reactions, which the fundamentalists gloss over in their simplistic summaries.

Probably the most logical picture of Jesus as his own contemporaries saw him is as a Jewish Rabbi, or "teacher". One sees him addressed as such many times in the Gospel accounts. Contrary to McDowell's reasoning (and C.S. Lewis' as well), the idea of Jesus as a human "teacher" (or perhaps an apocalyptic prophet, or both) is pretty much how his contemporaries viewed him. Theological views which see him walking around as the 2nd Person in the Trinity should properly be seen as add-ons coming several centuries later, which even the Catholic Church now admits.
So much for the "analysis" (I use the term loosely) by McDowell and Co...

I could go on and on, but no need to. McDowell's arguments, which are typical of the whole field, are supposedly intended to convince outsiders, but in reality are written for true believers. It is pretty much brain-washing intended for "insiders"; the outsiders don't bother. And it does it's purpose well, serving to give well-meaning folks a false sense of security that their literalist beliefs are on solid ground intellectually. That probably sums up the great majority reviewing the book here.
It does take some effort for an avowed fundamentalist to separate from religious conditioning to see some of the logical flaws, and it is the rare one who will make that effort. When they do, apologists like McDowell loose their grip. Are there any "heroes" in the fundie crowd here that are willing to take this leap? After all, Christianity is much larger than your current fundamentalism...



Editorial Review:

Evidence I & II--The classic defense of the faith: Now fully updated to answer the questions challenging evangelical faith today.

The New Evidence maintains its classic defense of the faith yet addresses new issues.

The New Evidence is destined to equip believers with a ready defense for the next decade and beyond

Open the Door: A Journey to the True Self

Joyce Rupp

Open the Door: A Journey to the True Self Joyce Rupp Amazon Price: $12.21
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Open the Door by Joyce Rupp 5 out of 5 stars.
6 of 6 people found this review helpful.

I am using this book with a group of 8 women. They pray with the material and then we meet once a week to discuss it and use the group sharing ideas in the back of the book. Would highly recommend it.

Open the Door: A journey to the true self 5 out of 5 stars.
4 of 13 people found this review helpful.

Certain type of people can enhance their prayer life with this type of well thought out format like this book.

Editorial Review:

The long-awaited book from best-selling spiritual guide Joyce Rupp, creatively leads readers to explore how the image of the door can guide them in a process of discovering their true self.

Joyce Rupp brings new life to the ageless spiritual image of the door, weaving insights from East and West with the wisdom of contemporary spiritual writers, poets, and novelists in a practical format that is just right for contemporary readers. Structured as a daily prayer guide for everyday use over six weeks, each day offers a thematic reflection, a guided meditation, an original prayer, a thoughtful question, and a related scripture quote. A built-in guide for small groups makes this the perfect resource for groups of all kinds as well as individuals.

The Richest Man Who Ever Lived: King Solomon's Secrets to Success, Wealth, and Happiness

Steven K. Scott

The Richest Man Who Ever Lived: King Solomon's Secrets to Success, Wealth, and Happiness Steven K. Scott Amazon Price: $13.57
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 69 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Editorial Review:

In this short, powerful book, multimillionaire and bestselling author Steven K. Scott reveals King Solomon’s breakthrough strategies to achieve a life of financial success and personal fulfillment.

Steve Scott flunked out of every job he held in his first six years after college. He couldn’t succeed no matter how hard he tried. Then Dr. Gary Smalley challenged him to study the book of Proverbs, promising that in doing so he would achieve greater success and happiness than he had ever known. That promise came true, making Scott a millionaire many times over.

In The Richest Man Who Ever Lived, Scott reveals Solomon’s key for winning every race, explains how to resolve conflicts and turn enemies into allies, and discloses the five qualities essential to becoming a valued and admired person at work and in your personal life. Scott illustrates each of Solomon’s insights and strategies with anecdotes about his personal successes and failures, as well as those of such extraordinary people as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison, Oprah Winfrey, Bill Gates, and Steven Spielberg.

At once inspiring and instructive, THE RICHEST MAN WHO EVER LIVED weaves the timeless truths of one of our greatest works of literature into a detailed roadmap for successful living today.

Managing Your Emotions: Instead of Your Emotions Managing You

Joyce Meyer

Managing Your Emotions: Instead of Your Emotions Managing You Joyce Meyer Amazon Price: $13.59
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 21 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

God Gave You Emotions On Purpose! Our emotions play a vital role in living happy, healthy, successful lives. All emotions, from love and joy, to anger and fear, have an important part to play in understanding ourselves and others. They help us discover the wonders of this life as well as warn us when we are in danger. But this diversity of feelings is meant to complement our life, not determine it! In this life-transforming book, Joyce Meyer reveals powerful truths from God's Word that will help you learn to manage all of your emotions in the right direction. Through hilarious illustrations and real-life applications, Joyce delivers the keys to keeping your emotions in the proper place while allowing the Spirit of God to lead and direct you. Dynamic scriptural insights are included on topics such as: -How not to be led by feelings. -Co-dependency. -Forgiveness. -Mood swings. -Healing for damaged emotions. -Depression. -And much more! Don't allow your feelings to determine your destiny! Instead, manage your emotions to compliment and enhance your attitude for a joyful, victorious life!

How to Read the Bible: A Guide to Scripture, Then and Now

James L. Kugel

How to Read the Bible: A Guide to Scripture, Then and Now James L. Kugel Amazon Price: $12.89
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Total reviews: 31 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

Scholars from different fields have joined forces to reexamine every aspect of the Hebrew Bible. Their research, carried out in universities and seminaries in Europe and America, has revolutionized our understanding of almost every chapter and verse. But have they killed the Bible in the process?

In How to Read the Bible, Harvard professor James Kugel leads the reader chapter by chapter through the "quiet revolution" of recent biblical scholarship, showing time and again how radically the interpretations of today's researchers differ from what people have always thought. The story of Adam and Eve, it turns out, was not originally about the "Fall of Man," but about the move from a primitive, hunter-gatherer society to a settled, agricultural one. As for the stories of Cain and Abel, Abraham and Sarah, and Jacob and Esau, these narratives were not, at their origin, about individual people at all but, rather, explanations of some feature of Israelite society as it existed centuries after these figures were said to have lived. Dinah was never raped -- her story was created by an editor to solve a certain problem in Genesis. In the earliest version of the Exodus story, Moses probably did not divide the Red Sea in half; instead, the Egyptians perished in a storm at sea. Whatever the original Ten Commandments might have been, scholars are quite sure they were different from the ones we have today. What's more, the people long supposed to have written various books of the Bible were not, in the current consensus, their real authors: David did not write the Psalms, Solomon did not write Proverbs or Ecclesiastes; indeed, there is scarcely a book in the Bible that is not the product of different, anonymous authors and editors working in different periods.

Such findings pose a serious problem for adherents of traditional, Bible-based faiths. Hiding from the discoveries of modern scholars seems dishonest, but accepting them means undermining much of the Bible's reliability and authority as the word of God. What to do? In his search for a solution, Kugel leads the reader back to a group of ancient biblical interpreters who flourished at the end of the biblical period. Far from naïve, these interpreters consciously set out to depart from the original meaning of the Bible's various stories, laws, and prophecies -- and they, Kugel argues, hold the key to solving the dilemma of reading the Bible today.

How to Read the Bible is, quite simply, the best, most original book about the Bible in decades. It offers an unflinching, insider's look at the work of today's scholars, together with a sustained consideration of what the Bible was for most of its history -- before the rise of modern scholarship. Readable, clear, often funny but deeply serious in its purpose, this is a book for Christians and Jews, believers and secularists alike. It offers nothing less than a whole new way of thinking about sacred Scripture.

Seven Sacred Pauses: Living Mindfully Through the Hours of the Day

Macrina Wiederkehr

Seven Sacred Pauses: Living Mindfully Through the Hours of the Day Macrina Wiederkehr Amazon Price: $12.89
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 8 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Making the Ordinary Sacred 5 out of 5 stars.
4 of 4 people found this review helpful.

Seven Sacred Pauses is a wonderful spiritual tool to help us remember the sacredness in each hour of the day. Macrina Wiederkehr has lived the monastic rhythm of the days and is able to give lay people the opportunity to recognize and honor the Divine all around us. I really find her meditations very helpful and can easily adapt them to the seasons of my life. I have given it as gifts and use it various groups from my prayer shawl ministry to EFM class. Velma Frye's accompanying CD is a terrific addition and the songs/chants serve as a shorthand to remembering the meditations.

Editorial Review:

Author and retreat leader Macrina Wiederkehr opens the monastery door and invites readers to come in and learn how the practice of consciously pausing for prayer at the seven sacred moments of each day can make their daily passage through time a more sacred pilgrimage.

Using scripture, poetry, reflections. personal stories, and quotes from a rich array of spiritual teachers, Wiederkehr helps readers become more attuned to living in the present moment and develop a kindred spirit with the rich tradition of the sacred hours. Seven Sacred Pauses is a wonderful gift to those who seek to find balance in their busy days and to bring the practice of the Divine Hours home to their own hearts.

An Introduction to the New Testament

D. A. Carson, Douglas J. Moo

An Introduction to the New Testament D. A. Carson, Douglas  J. Moo Amazon Price: $26.39
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 24 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Pure Academics 2 out of 5 stars.
1 of 8 people found this review helpful.

This is one of my text books for school. I have to hand it to the authors they really did some research to put this book together. So why did I give it such a low rating? It was a mind-numbing read. Though I was able to glean some interesting stuff from it, it was mainly all academic knowledge. If that's your cup of tea then you will love it. For me, I prefer books that will help me grow closer to God in righteousness, love, and truth. This just didn't do it for me.

Dry 2 out of 5 stars.
0 of 5 people found this review helpful.

This was one of the texts for a recent seminary course and it's perhaps one of the most boring texts I've encountered in my academic studies. Not only do the authors fail to hold the reader's interest, the layout of the text on the page is hard on the eyes. Overall it's just a chore to read. There are so many better textbooks out there (and that's what this is in the worst sense of the word) I can't imagine why anyone would choose this one!

Editorial Review:

An updated and expanded edition of a standard textbook on the New Testament for first- and second-year seminary students.

What Jesus Meant

Garry Wills

What Jesus Meant Garry Wills Amazon Price: $22.46
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 72 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

As the religious rhetoric of the culture wars escalates, New York Times bestselling author and eminent scholar Garry Wills explores the meaning of Jesus’s teachings

In what are billed as "culture wars," people on the political right and the political left cite Jesus as endorsing their views. Garry Wills argues that Jesus subscribed to no political program. He was far more radical than that. In a fresh reading of the gospels, Wills explores the meaning of the "reign of heaven" Jesus not only promised for the future but brought with him into this life. It is only by dodges and evasions that people misrepresent what Jesus plainly had to say against power, the wealthy, and religion itself. Jesus came from the lower class, the working class, and he spoke to and for that class. This is a book that will challenge the assumptions of almost everyone who brings religion into politics—"Christian socialists" as well as biblical theocrats.

But Wills is just as critical of those who would make Jesus a mere ethical teacher, ignoring or playing down his divinity. Jesus without the Resurrection is simply not the Jesus of the gospels. Wills calls his book a profession of faith in the risen Lord, the Son of the Father, who leads us to the Father. He argues that this does not make people embrace an otherworldliness that ignores the poor or the problems of our time.

What Jesus Meant will no doubt spark debate about our understanding of Jesus and the Scriptures, especially as we head into midterm elections that will certainly prompt many heated discussions on the role of religion in our society.

The Purpose Driven Church

Rick Warren

The Purpose Driven Church Rick Warren By: Zondervan
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 126 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Sudy Book 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 2 people found this review helpful.

I purchased these for my Graceful Ladies Bible Study group, at their request. We haven't begun, yet, but we are anxious to get started.

Good book 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

I enjoyed this book better than the Purpose Driven Life. Good sound strategies or a seeker service style program.

What can you say 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

I have read this book many, many times. The only things about it that I don't like are all the references to growth it contains. The dustcover has so many references to growth it sickens me, but Warren probably didn't write that and the publishers know who will be reading.

The book is great at helping a church ask questions that need to be asked and helping a church to find a paradigm that would be pleasing to God. Regardless of what type of church you are in this book will be of some benefit to you. If you've got a problem with the paradigm of being purpose driven then you've got a problem with scripture.

completely satisfied 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

This was my first experiance with Amazon and I was completely satisfied .The book was just like new ,I don't think it had ever been read .It was sent fast and packaged good .I would buy again .
Thanks for a good first time experiance .

The Lost Books of the Bible

The Lost Books of the Bible Amazon Price: $9.99
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Total reviews: 34 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

A Fascinating Companion to the Bible Itself 3 out of 5 stars.
26 of 28 people found this review helpful.

This book contains many writings that were simply left out of the final version of the Bible. The inside flap notes that the church suppressed many of these documents. Nevertheless, these writings do not provide any information that is truly spectacular by 21st Century standards. These documents were likely omitted because they did not fit into the neat chronology of the Bible, showed women in a stronger role than was acceptable in medieval times, or suggested that Christ made mistakes as a youth.

"The Acts of Paul and Thecla" describe a woman who helped spread the word of God. The document clearly shows her as a strong woman and a true disciple. Church elders of the medieval period probably felt that a story of a strong female was inappropriate for women of that period. The events surrounding her persecution are filled with miracles. She survived attempts to kill her through burning and attacks by wild beasts. In the end, she disappeared into a crack in a rock that was created by God. God then closed the opening behind her.

The first part of the book describes the birth of the Virgin Mary and her marriage to Joseph. The book also contains writings that describe the adolescent years of Jesus and the magical powers of the cloth used to wrap him as a baby. Some events show Jesus in a less than perfect light. These writings nevertheless describe a part of the Gospel that is not widely known.

Some parts of the book flow easily while other writings are difficult to follow. The books of Hermas provide an example of easy reading and tedious reading. "The First Book of Hermas," tells an interesting story. He passes near a great beast, one hundred feet long with locusts coming out of its mouth. Hermas was not killed by the beast as he had faith that the Lord would protect him. The third book talks of mountains and stones that are used to build a tower. Only after struggling through this document does the reader learn that the tower is a metaphor for the house of God.

The end of the book contains multiple letters from Pontius Pilate and Herod. Herod talks about how he is paying the price for killing John the Baptist. Pilate sends letters to Tiberius Caesar, which recount his reasons for crucifying Jesus. His letters also discuss the miracles surrounding Jesus such as the raising of Lazarus, and the earthquake following the crucifixion. These documents note that Tiberius subsequently killed Pilate for his role in the crucifixion.

Like the Bible itself, this book is a compilation of ancient writings. Also like the Bible, the documents are presented in two vertical columns per page. This book is a fascinating companion to the Bible. It provides insight to events surrounding the New Testament that are mostly unknown. Bottom line: a semi tough read but well worth the effort.

Editorial Review:

Suppressed by the early church fathers who compiled the Bible, these apocryphal books have been shrouded in silence for centuries. Here are the Apostles' Creed, the girlhood and betrothal of Mary, the childhood of Jesus-told in all their warmth, intimacy and humanity. Translated from the Original Tongues, with 32 illustrations from Ancient Paintings and Missals.

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