Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Bible Revival: Recommitting Ourselves to One Book - A Review

"If there is anything truly necessary for life and godliness, it is already recorded in the Word of God." - Bible Revival, Kenneth  Berding

I was excited to read Bible Revival:.  This a topic I believe truly needed in our day of pluralism and post-modern worldview of foundationless viewpoints.  Unfortunately, the tone set in the preface and first chapter changed my view.

Before I get into what I believe Berding got wrong, I'd like to start with what I feel he got right.  First, I think he points to the necessary need for systematic study of the scriptures for growth.  For example, in chapter 1, he makes the following statement:  "Someone who comes to know Christ later in life and devotes himself to reading and learning God's Word will quickly surpass the person who relies upon the passive "learning" that he thinks he acquired from hanging around the church when he was young."  Berding addresses the need to commit to studying the scriptures in order to grow in the faith.

Second, he reminds us that part of the reason for studying the scriptures and memorizing passages is for use in daily life.  He relays the following statement from a single mom in his church, "She told me, 'During those difficult years, I always had a verse somewhere in my mind to fall back on. When my water heater broke, I was reminded that God cared for me in my need because I knew it from His Word.'"

Third, he does give practical examples and techniques for study.  For example, he draws some practical questions to ask when approaching a passage, he uses examples from Puritan life to study, and he encourages interaction with other believers.

That said, I had some very strong challenges to his book.  My biggest challenge is he almost advocates for a view of the Scriptures that, in some ways, ignores the GOD of the scriptures. He, for all practical purposes, ignores the requirement of the Holy Spirit to illuminate the Scriptures, and he assumes the Bible, in and of itself, is all that is needed (contrast this to Jesus' words in John 5).

Second, he speaks as an academic whose life is studying the Scriptures.  Since he has devoted his life to studying the Scriptures, all should give the same level of commitment.  This isn't practical.  Yes, we all need to study the Word for ourselves - and we need to be deliberate about it - but his level of commitment isn't practical. A troubling quote came from chapter 1, addressing single mothers who have spent many, many hours caring and providing for her children, "does she sleep at all at night? Then let her cut into some of that sleep and read her Bible." These are impractical, guilt-laden words.  I'm sure she has time to study the scriptures, but this isn't the way to go about it.

Third, the following quote from the preface negated everything that follows, "My paternal grandfather, who never came into personal relationship with Jesus Christ, read his Bible regularly and had many passages committed to memory." This tragic, misplaced statement negates his entire argument before it begins.

I'm giving this book 2 stars, but I am only giving it this rating because I appreciate what he's trying to do.  At the end of the day, my advice is this: skip this book and find a church that values, teaches, lives, and is shaped the Scriptures in a gospel community.

Note: I received a review copy of the book from the publisher.  I was required to provide an honest, not necessarily favorable, review, and the opinions expressed are mine.

Friday, April 11, 2014

Guiltless Living - A Review

"It's not that we focus on sinning so much as it is that we focus on the glory and grace of God." - Guiltless Living, Ginger Hubbard

Guiltless Living is an honest, realistic, hopeful narrative dealing with the aspect of remaining sin in our lives.  The answer, however, isn't necessarily what one might expect, based on the title.

This book isn't normally one I'd choose to read.  First, it's written by a women; I tend to read books written by men for men.  Second - and, yes, I know we're not supposed to judge by this - but the cover image is a woman, from the waste down, standing barefoot on a beach...in a polka-dotted dress; it looks more like a "chick lit" book than one with some deep spiritual truths.

I'm glad I ignored all of my preconceived ideas. I found some great nuggets of truth hidden behind the cover. While written from a woman's perspective, there is much that anyone reader - male or female, teen or adult, single or married - can glean from these pages.

I like that Hubbard shares personal stores, some her own and some of people close to her, to illustrate her point. By sharing these stories (some rather recent) disarms the reader by not feeling this is written by someone "who's arrived" but rather a fellow beggar sharing where to find bread.

Some topics covered are a critical spirit, pride, selfishness, control (as in controlling others), hoarding/miserly behavior, being self-focused, and religiosity. In light of what some of us view as "big sins," we may breeze past these topics, but Mrs. Hubbard highlights why these are particularly troubling sins, as most have idolatry at the core.

The pattern of the book is to reveal the sin - both in terms of a theological definition and practical examples.  Hubbard effectively reveals what these traits look like in the paces of life - aggressive driving, manipulative behaviors toward our children or spouses, our treatment of the server at the restaurant, etc.

I like that, while diagnosing the problem as sin, Hubbard's solution is the cross.  To "work harder" or "try more" would merely devolve into moralism.

One quote that sums up the book:

"All that we need to overcome sin has been provided to you.  The cure for sin is the cross.  Only through the power of Christ can sin's call be resisted.  When we set our attention on the power of the sacrificial atoning work of Christ, our hearts become filled with his love for us and our love for him.  Sin is crucified.  It weakens, becomes unattractive, and eventually loses its pull. It's not that we focus on not sinning so much as it is that we focus on the glory and grace of God.  As our hearts become more filled with God, there is less and less room for sin."

One point of caution to the guys reading this: if you're like me, since the book is written from a woman's perspective, you may be tempted to say, "Aha! I get it! THAT'S what my wife is doing!"  Don't fall into the temptation of finding your wife's failings in the pages of this book. 

May we all view our lives through the finished work of the cross - living from that place of victory and residing in the grace found at foot of our Savior.  


Note: I received a review copy of the book from the publisher.  I was required to provide an honest, not necessarily favorable, review, and the opinions expressed are mine.