Thursday, December 28, 2017

Longing For God A Prayer and Bible Journal: A Review

Longing for God A Prayer and Bible Journal is authored by Frank Hasel, who is an associate director of the Biblical Research Institute and previously served as an ordained pastor in Germany and Bible teacher and dean of the theology department at Bogenhofen Seminary in Austria. Since the death of his wife in 2009, Hasel has practiced and prayed the content of this Bible-prayer journal for himself.

In other words, the thoughts of this book have been tried and tested in his own life. They have opened up new horizons for his own personal quiet time with God.
Taking God at His word is fascinating because the Bible is full of surprises. It describes God in unexpected and unique ways. The encounter with God in the Bible has the power to transform your life. It challenges you in many ways to deepen your thinking and to change your living for the better. It is worthwhile to engage in a study of the Bible. It pays to diligently search the Holy Scriptures. In the living Word of God you find more than interesting information about God. You may encounter God Himself. But in order to discover what the Bible really says, you have to read it for yourself. This book is intended to stimulate such personal Bible Study.
If you follow the exact suggested reading program outlined in the book you would read through the entire Bible in one year.  But be of good courage, Frank Hasel says “It doesn’t matter how much you read every day. To read just a little in the Bible is better than to read nothing at all!”
The book provides space for journaling about what you have read.  It also strongly encourages making prayer an important part of your Bible Study time and includes space each day to journal your prayers
Many people can be truly blessed with the methods and suggestions contained in this book.
For more information and to read the first chapter for free online please click here

500 Years of Protest and Liberty: A Review

500 Years of Protest and Liberty-From Martin Luther to Modern Civil Rights by author Nicholas P. Miller is a lively and intensely readable contribution to the debate over the intersection of America’s two most radioactive issues: religion and politics.

Miller brings balance, thoughtfulness, and a great deal of insight to a discussion often marred by fierce polarization and simplistic generalizations. He provides a consistent historical overview, reaching back to the Protestant Reformation itself and moving forward to the founding of America and on into the twenty-first century.
The question is raised if we hope to make America great again, isn’t it important to know what made it great to begin with? Nicholas Miller asserts that the answer to this question involves an understanding of America’s Protestant backgrounds and the source of its ideals of representative government and civil and religious freedoms.

The 500th anniversary of Martin Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses in 1517 is a perfect time to reflect on these critical issues.
I found this book carefully written with concisely presented historical information showing how America developed its form of government and its civil and religious freedoms. Reading the book also helped me to understand better how complicated and complex these issues can be.

Click here to read the first chapter of the book online for free.

Stewardships Motives of the Heart: A Review

This new book by John Matthews has been specifically written as a companion study guide to be used along with the first quarter 2018 Adult Bible Study Guides. It’s an excellent study on the subject of stewardship whether or not you are following the Adult Bible Study Guides.

As all-encompassing as the topic of stewardship is, there is one common denominator in all its subtopics: stewardship touches everything we do, and everything we are, and everything we have.
Someone has said that material things are God’s only competitor. Jesus described it this way, “No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money” (Matthew 6:24).

Money has always been a problem for God’s people, and modern consumerism isn’t helping. This book is about the management of our possessions, about our relationship with money, and about the ways we relate to God as the Owner of all we have.
The book helps us remember that we do not own anything in this world. We are merely stewards of what God has given us.

You can read the first chapter of this book on line for free by clicking here.


Thursday, December 21, 2017

Here We Stand: A Review

Here We Stand: Luther, the Reformation, and Seventh-day Adventism. This monumental book just off the press is edited by Michael W. Campbell and Nikolaus Satelmajer. Altogether there are 28 separate authors of this new book. Although separated in time by centuries, Seventh-day Adventists see themselves as heirs of the Protestant Reformation started by Martin Luther King 500 years ago. This monumental volume explores the various faces and contours of Luther and compares them with Seventh-day Adventism.

George Knight, professor emeritus of church history, Andrews University says there is nothing like this book in Adventist literature.
For his part, Shawn Boonstra, speaker/director of Voice of Prophecy says, “Half a millennium after Luther, Christians are not as clear as their forefathers on some of the most important developments in sacred history,” adding “much of the twenty-first-century Christian world struggles to remember exactly what Luther’s contribution was” and goes on to conclude this volume “offers a golden-and comprehensive-opportunity to understand where we came from.”

Luther’s rejection of the teachings and practices of the Roman Catholic church found resonance Jean-Henri Merle d’Aubigne, the Swiss Protestant and minister whose thinking Ellen G. White embraced and quoted, thus, “Since your most serene majesty and your high mightinesses require from me a clear, simple, and precise answer, I will give you one, and it is this: I cannot submit my faith either to the pope or to the councils, because it is clear as the day that they have frequently erred and contradicted each other. Unless therefore I am convinced by the testimony of Scripture or by the clearest reasoning, unless I am persuaded by means of the passages I have quoted, and unless they thus render my conscience bound by the word of God, I cannot and I will not retract, for it is unsafe for a Christian to speak against his conscience. Here I stand, I can do no other; May God help me. Amen.”
One may ask the question, why does Luther matter? Or, put differently, is there anything in Luther that matters in the second decade of the twenty-first century?

The short answer is an emphatic Yes! Luther and his message matter today because he was propelled by those teachings that form the very heart of biblical Christianity.
First among those teachings is the issue of religious authority. Heiko Oberman put his finger on the importance of that topic when he wrote, “What is new in Luther is the notion of absolute obedience to the Scriptures against any authorities; be they popes or councils.”

A second teaching at the heart of why Luther still matters is Luther’s understanding of justification, or righteousness by faith. His teaching of salvation by grace alone has stood at the center of Christian history from Paul’s time up to the present.
A third reason for Luther’s relevance for our day is his teaching on the priesthood of all believers. Luther uplifted the fact that every individual can come before the throne of grace without the aid of an earthly priest or other human intercessor.

I personally found this book deep, profound and very readable and highly recommend it. For more information on this book and to read the first chapter for free on line click here.

The Sound of Sleigh Bells: A Review

Cindy Woodsmall is the author of this  book.

Do you enjoy Amish fiction?
Do you enjoy Christmas stories?

Do you enjoy sad stories that turn out fine?
Do you enjoy stories with a romantic twist?

If you answered yes to any or all of these I am sure that you would enjoy this book.
Beth Hertzler works alongside her beloved Aunt Lizzy in their dry goods store and serves as contact between Amish craftsman and Englischer retailers. But remorse and loneliness still echo in her heart every day, and she still wears dark dresses to indicate her mourning of her fiancé. When she discovers a large intricately carved scene of Amish children playing in the snow in an Englischer store, something deep inside Beth’s soul responds and she wants to help the unknown artist find homes for his work.

Lizzy sees the changes in her niece when Beth shows her the woodworking, and after meeting Jonah, the artist, she is determined that Beth come to know this man whose hands create healing art. But it’s not that simple—Beth has cut herself off from any possibility of romance. Will Lizzy’s elaborate plan to reintroduce her niece to love work? Will Jonah be able to offer Beth new hope and a second chance at real love—or just more heartbreak?
I encourage you to find a copy of this book and read it.  My wife and I have read it several times and like to read it each Christmas Season.

Check for this book at your local book store or on line from Amazon.


Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Christian Standard Bible: A Review

I have been reading the book of Romans this month from this new version of the Bible and have concluded the CSB is a highly readable text which stays as literal as possible to the Bible’s original meaning without sacrificing clarity. The optimal blend of accuracy and readability in this version makes Scripture more moving, more memorable, and more motivating to read and share with others.

This new Bible translation was developed by more than 100 Scholars from 17 different denominations and faithfully and accurately captures the Bible’s original meaning without compromising readability helping you experience God’s truth as never before.
The particular copy I have is a Large Print Personal Size with easy to read 11.25 point type which makes reading very comfortable.

Here are a few sample verses:
Romans 1:16,17: For I am not ashamed of the gospel because it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, first to the Jew and also to the Greek. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith, just as it is written: The righteous will live by faith.

Romans 4:3-5: Abraham believed God and it was credited to him for righteousness.  Now to the one who works, pay is not credited as a gift, but as something owed. But to the one who does not work, but believes on him who declares the ungodly to be righteous, his faith is credited for righteousness.
Roman 5:1:  Therefore since we have been declared righteous by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.

Romans 8:1,2: Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those in Christ Jesus, because the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set you free from the law of sin and death.
Romans 10:13: For everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.

I personally like using various versions and this new one from the Holman Bibles is one I highly recommend. The texts quoted in this review are taken from the Christian Standard Bible. Copyright 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by  permission.



They Called Him Rabbi: A Review

I love biographies and this one of Elder Calvin Edwin Moseley Jr. is exceptional.
Students called him “Rabbi.” His eulogists called him “The Father of Preachers” for having taught and prepared in his day at least up to 90 percent or more of African American pastors and evangelists for Seventh-day Adventist pulpits.

If you ever knew the man, you surely became conscious of connecting with a life rich in honor, homiletics, humanitarianism, heroism, and humor. You also knew that he was all about holding aloft the gospel banner of Jesus Christ and being a “voice crying in the wilderness” preparing “the way of the Lord” and making “His paths straight” (Matthew 3:3)
The first African American chair of the Religion Department at Oakwood College, now University, and first pastor of the Oakwood College Church, Elder Mosely shaped an entire generation of preachers and believers. Later serving at the General Conference, this man of God continued to impact the Adventist Church throughout his life, providing leadership at a crucial time in its history.

Some interesting things I learned about Calvin Mosely through reading this biography are:
He was born in Demopolis, Alabama. His father worked at the plastering trade. Calvin learned it too. When he was 15 years old he enrolled at Tuskegee institute.  Calvin came to know, Dr George Washington Carver as much more than a scientist who discovered more than 300 uses for the peanut but also as a man of God. Calvin attended Dr Carver’s Bible study group which proved crucial in a religious way of enhancing and advancing Calvin’s appreciation for Bible and things spiritual.

Later he attended a series of Seventh Day Adventist Church meetings and subsequently became a member. He felt God telling him: “You will preach for me” and eventually he did become a preacher.
While at Emmanuel Missionary College, now Andrew’s University, his experience as a plasterer came in handy and he was able to do a major plastering job that needed to be done. It is an interesting story. He chose to work late one night rather than waste an extra batch of mortar that his helper had mixed up and later that evening the president of the college came by and found him working late. When he learned what had happened he went home and had his wife fix a nice dinner and invited Calvin over for the meal. This was in the days when generally blacks and whites did not eat together—even at the cafeteria at the college which was segregated.

One needs to read the entire book but in the mean-time click here to read the entire first chapter for free.

Monday, December 4, 2017

Never Enough: A Review

Never Enough? Authored by Ron Blue with Karen Guess is one of the finest books I have read on Christian money management.  This book was published in 2017 so is right up to date with useful and current information.

Have you ever worried that doubling down on your debt repayment is robbing your family of memories and fun? Or had a major appliance fail, right after splurging on an expensive purchase or vacation? The tension between giving to church or charity and paying for your kid’s tuition or sports equipment is real.
Money and life are inextricably linked. They don’t run on independent tracks but rather continually exist together, both of them somehow needing to be handled with steady applications of wisdom and biblical integrity, even when they seem in direct competition.

Veteran financial counselor and trusted author Ron Blue helps you navigate the seeming incompatibilities of money management. His liberating, simplifying analysis breaks down all your financial options to a basic four—plus the biblical principal of giving generously, then shows you how to adeptly keep them spinning alongside each other without leaving you consumed by confusion or regret with all your dreams, plans, and principles still intact.
Ron Blue lists these 5 Wise Principles which really is the theme throughout the book:

1.       Spend less than you earn-because every success in your financial life depends of this habit.

2.       Avoid debt-because debt always mortgages the future

3.       Give generously-because giving breaks the power of money

4.       Save for the unexpected/Plan for financial margin because the unexpected will occur

5.       Set long term goals because there is always a trade-off between the short term and the long term.
I encourage you to get a copy of this book whether you are young or older and be inspired and blessed with this wise counsel that Ron Blue draws from the Bible as well as life experiences.

This book is available at book stores or online from Amazon.com.




After God's Heart: A Review

After God’s Heart-A Study in Brokeness- From the Life of David- by Elizabeth Viera Talbot is a new book that I have enjoyed reading.

What is it about Psalm 23 and its writer that ministers to us? Whether we live in green pastures and waters of rest or find ourselves in the valley of the shadow of death, we all can relate to the song of this sling-hurtling shepherd boy who cried a lot and whose songs could soothe a crazed king.
David, the only person in the Bible called a man after God’s own heart, inspires us with his vulnerability and his yearning for intimacy with God. Each of us in our own broken way yearn for such an intimacy with God.

I love the way the author goes through various episodes in the life of David and draws lessons applicable in our own lives.
When everything around me seems to fall apart, I need to remember that God has a plan.

The good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ is we have eternal salvation, not because we are powerful and able soldiers in the battle between good and evil, but because Jesus fought in our place and won.
It is important to remember that there are storms that come with no wrongdoing on our part.

My brokenness can bring glory to God.
God is an expert in being triumphant in the midst of apparent impossibilities.

During his time in the wilderness, David kept talking to God.
God doesn’t abandon us, even when we make wild decisions and take crazy detours.

Regardless of what was happening, David still had his God!
God’s GPS is able to recalculate and reroute your path no matter how deep you may  have gone into the enemy camp.

When we place ourselves under the heavenly Shepherd King, He will provide for our needs.
Click here for information about this book and to read the first chapter on line--here






Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Unshakable Faith: A Review

Unshakable Faith, is Mark Finley’s most recent published book. Hard to believe but Mark Finley has written over 70 books so far!
Mark Finley shares about a number of people through history who have shown unshakable faith!

The Waldenses, John Wycliffe, John Huss, Martin Luther, Lefevre, William Tyndale, John and Charles Wesley are just but a few examples.
Finley brings snapshot pictures of these leaders who God used through the ages to emphasize the truth of salvation as found in the Bible as a gift from God and the power of unshakable faith in standing firm in the teachings of the Bible.

To read the 1st chapter of this book on line click here.




The Glad Tidings: A Review

Throughout my life since I was old enough to read, I have loved reading books and have read them in the hundreds to this date and plan to read hundreds more!

Even as I have read these many books, there are 3 books I read going back to the first year I worked at a book store back in 1972 that have stood out through the years as being very life changing for me and that I find I blessed every time I reread them.

One of these books is The Glad Tidings--the Inspiring Message of Galatians by E. J. Waggoner in which the author takes us through the book of Galatians from beginning to end.
Here are several quotes from the book which give an overview of what the glad tidings are in Galatians:

“The Gospel is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth.”
“Just as Jesus Christ is the only power of God, and there is no other name than of Jesus, given among men whereby salvation can be obtained, so there can be only one Gospel.”

“I do not frustrate the grace of God; for if righteousness came by the law, then Christ is dead in vain. This is the summing up of the case. It is the substance of what has preceded. If righteousness came by the law, then there would have been no use for the death of Christ. The law itself can do nothing except point out men’s duty.”
“The just shall live by faith. To him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.”

“There is no exception, no half-way working. It’s not said that some of the just shall live by faith  or that they shall live by faith and works, but simply, the just shall live by faith and that proves that it is not by their own works.”
“All of the just are made and kept just by faith alone. This is because the law is so holy. It is greater than can be done by man; only Divine power can accomplish it, so by faith we receive the Lord Jesus, and He lives the perfect law in us.”

For more information on this epic book click here


Wednesday, November 15, 2017

The Book of Amazing Stories: A Review

This is a book of 90 devotions and each devotion is based on a truly amazing story. Author Robert Peterson has been a lifelong student of what God is teaching us through people’s lives. In this book, Peterson compiles ninety amazing stories that teach lessons you won’t easily forget.

Did you know that Beethoven’s mom almost aborted him?
Did you know that an exorcism was once performed on Mother Teresa?

Did you know that the Battle of Gettysburg started as a search for shoes?
You will learn in reading this book many things about famous and some infamous people that likely you never knew before and that teach good lessons.

Some of the people whose stories are told include:
Martin Luther King Jr.,

Marilyn Monroe,
Ronald Reagan,

Winston Churchill,
Susanna Wesley,

And many, many others.
Each story ends with a thought-provoking principle as well as an accompanying Bible verse to carry you through the day.

Here are a few of my favorite thought provoking principles:
The greatest powers cannot overcome the humblest prayers.

One person with courage makes a majority.
Forgiveness is not an occasional act but a permanent attitude.

I encourage you to get a copy of this book at your favorite bookstore or click here.


Make Your Voice Heard in Heaven: A Review

Make Your Voice Heard in Heaven is Barry Black’s latest book, which is scheduled for release early in January 2018. Black is Chaplain of the United States Senate and was the speaker for the 2017 National Prayer Breakfast.

This book came from Chaplain Black’s preparation for the National Prayer Breakfast speech. If you did not see or hear Chaplain Black speak at the Prayer Breakfast, you can click here and watch the event as recorded on You-Tube.
In a time when more and more people are calling on those in power to listen and act, Chaplain Barry Black challenges us individually and collectively, to call on our heavenly Father, the one who holds the ultimate power, the ruler of all creation.

Chaplain Black shows-through Scripture, personal stories, and practical insights how your prayers can
Unleash God’s power;

Reveal your sense of need;
Increase your partnership with God’s will;

Deepen your intimacy with God;
Strengthen your desire to live a holy life;

Grow your awareness of God’s blessings;
Reveal the presence of God’s blessings around you and more.

By reading this book, you’ll learn the secrets of praying with power, and making your voice heard in heaven.
I was delighted to read an advance copy of this book and strongly recommend it for everyone.

Check with your favorite book store around the first week of January and get a copy or for more information and to order on line click here
BREAKING NEWS: THIS BOOK WILL BE IN BOOK STORES BEFORE CHRISTMAS!

Dearest Folks: A Review

This is the story Margaret Watts, a Sydney, Australia nurse and her husband Horrie, a pastor, set out in 1956 on the adventure of a lifetime lasting 10 years: mission service in Vanuatu (then the New Hebrides), followed by years serving on the island of Bougainville in the then-Territory of New Guinea.

During this time, Margaret wrote home to Australia on a regular basis wanting her family to know about what was happening in their lives and especially about their children that the family in Australia missed seeing during these years, except for occasional furloughs back to Australia.
The letters Margaret sent home to Australia also gave a thorough account of daily life working as a missionary nurse in remote areas of the Pacific.

Upon their return from the mission field, Margaret discovered that her sister Elva had saved many of these letters.  The letters were given back to Margaret and stowed away in a trunk and then found again years later.
The book comprising of these letters was published in 2016 in Australia and is now available in the United States.

For more information click here.






Sunday, November 5, 2017

Baptizing the Devil: A Review

Baptizing the Devil – Evolution and the Seduction of Christianity by Clifford Godstein is one of the most amazing books about origins.

The book is written in the backdrop of two views on creation that are diametrically opposed to each other: In the broadest reading possible, says the author, we have on one hand the Genesis creation account which is a supernatural phenomenon that leaves nothing to chance. However, on the other hand we have the Darwinian evolution which, in the broadest reading possible, is a natural phenomenon that leaves most everything to chance, so posits the author.
It’s therefore hard to imagine two views of creation more at odds with each other.

Why, then, this irresistible urge to “baptize the devil” by seeking to harmonize evolution with Genesis? Though we can’t know individual motives, the overarching answer is tied to the contemporary belief that evolution must be true because, after all, It’s science!
This, however, raises more questions: “But if science is so good at finding truth, why does the truth change so often? Why are scientific certitudes of one generation often mocked as myths by the next one? Why do the findings of science the results of the ‘scientific method,’ often contradict each other?”

Moreover, the author ponders, when scientific explanations about present reality, about what can be handled, heard, seen, tested and retested, are filled with debate and controversy – why do so many people unquestionably accept every scientific proclamation about supposed events millions or billions of years ago?
In the author’s own words, Baptizing the Devil seeks to show that this capitulation is not only unnecessary but misguided, another unfortunate example of well-meaning Christians compromising their faith to the prevailing culture. With Baptizing the Devil, Goldstein hopes to free believers from the knee-jerk reaction that the only logical and rational response to the phrase ‘But it’s science!’ is to surrender one’s beliefs, even religious ones, to it. Goldstein shows that Christians shouldn’t compromise so crucial a doctrine as origins to the prevailing culture, even when that culture is wrapped in the authoritative garb of science.

To learn more about this new book and to read the first chapter on line, click here

Hinds' Feet on High Places: A Review

I first learned about this book by Hannah Hurnard, a young missionary to Palestine, more than 45 years ago when a group of young people gathered and we read the book together. I have since read the book many times through the years and just finished reading it again in a beautiful new illustrated edition published by Tyndale House publishers.

I liken this book to Bunyan’s, Pilgrim’s Progress. However I find this book more readable.
In the preface to this allegory, the author recalls how one morning during the daily Bible reading on their mission compound in Palestine, their little Arab nurse read from Daily Light a quotation from the Song of Songs, “The voice of my Beloved! Behold he cometh leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills” (Song of Solomon 2:8).

When asked what the verse meant, the Arab nurse looked up with a happy smile of understanding and said, “It means there are no obstacles which our Savior’s love cannot overcome, and that to him, mountains of difficulty are as easy as an asphalt road.”
Hannah Hurnard wrote this allegory about a young lady, named Much Afraid, who lived in the Valley of Humiliation and worked for the Chief Shepherd. She was part of the Fearing Family and the village she lived in was named Much-Trembling.

Some of her relatives included; her aunt, Mrs. Dismal Forebodings, and her cousins Gloomy, Spiteful and Craven Fear. Other relatives include; Old Lord Fearing, Self-Pity and Pride.
The story is how the Shepherd takes her to the “High Places” where perfect love casts out all fear.

I recommend this book highly.
Check for it at your favorite bookstore or  click here for more information and to order on line.

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Suggested Devotionals for 2018

Daily Devotionals are one way to help a person start or end their day close to God. Here are several that I recommend. Each one will have a Click here opportunity to read about them and most of them you will be able to read the first chapter on line to become acquainted with it.

The Devotional Clear Word-by Jack Blanco click here
ADULT- Words to Live-By by Jack Blanco click here

Evening – Christ Triumphant by Ellen G White click here
Boxed set- This is a nice boxed set of the above two titles which makes for a nice gift set to give to anyone including yourself—click here

Women- Notes of Joy, written by Women for Women edited by Carolyn Rathbun Sutton click here
Young Adult- Calling by Troy Fitzgerald click here 

Teen- God Space by Tompaul Wheeler click here
Junior/Early-teen- What If by Bradley Booth  click here

Primary- Talking With God by Sueli de Oliveira and Marta Irokawa click here
Preschool- My Time With Jesus by Lopes, Figueiredo and Macedo click here

2018 is another year to draw closer to God- Devotionals can be a great help in that.

Christmas in My Heart #26: A Review

Wow- Joe Wheeler has done it again with #26 of his collections of Christmas Stories!

For 26 years Joe Wheeler has published volume after volume of Christmas stories and in each one of those years, leading to being named “America’s Keeper of the Story” by James Dobson, Founder of Focus on the Family. Wheeler’s latest in this splendid series has just been published and is available.
Every year my wife and I look forward to the new volume coming out and normally we would have read it at least 2 or 3 times before the end of the year (the new volume is usually available in early Fall). We also like to go back and reread many of the stories in the older volumes.

This new volume has as usual one story written by Joe Wheeler and the rest of the book comprises stories which he and his wife have gleaned from thousands of Christmas stories that they have collected through the years.
These old-fashioned Christmas stories are spiritually based, heart-tugging stories which incorporate values worth living by, and remind us of the divine reason for the Christmas season.

Click here to read the first chapter in this latest volume of Christmas in My Heart and for more information about this book.

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Fire Road: A Review

Fire Road, the autobiography of Kim Phuc Phan Thi, is one of the most fascinating stories I have read.

This is the story of the Napalm Girl’s Journey through the Horrors of War to Faith, Forgiveness and Peace.
Kim was 9 years old-and lived in South Vietnam when the Vietnam war was raging, more than 4 decades ago. Her excruciating pain was exposed in a photo that made headlines around the world. Only now (in 2017) is she fully revealing the depth of her scarring-to both body and soul.

In a moment forever captured, an iconic image that has come to define the horror and violence of the Vietnam War:  Nine-year-old Kim running in agony moments after napalm bombs fell from the sky, bringing hellish fire that burned away her clothing and seared deep into her skin.
Left for dead in a hospital morgue, Kim miraculously survived- but her journey toward healing was only beginning. When the napalm bombs dropped, everything Kim knew and relied on exploded along with them: her beloved home and village, her country’s freedom, as well as her childhood innocence and happiness. Kim’s coming years would be marked by agonizing treatments for her burns, incessant physical pain throughout her body, and being handled for political propaganda.

Kim survived the pain of her body ablaze, but how could she possibly survive the pain of her devastated soul?

Fire Road is a story of both unrelenting horror and unexpected hope, a harrowing tale of life changed in an instant. In this stunning first-hand account of struggling to find answers in a world that only seemed to bring anguish, Kim ultimately discovers strength in Someone who had suffered Himself, transforming her tragedy into an unshakable faith.
Look for this book in your favorite book store or order online from Amazon.com  or click here

Loving Luther: A Review

In this extremely fascinating Novel Allison Pittman tells the story of Katharina von Bora who became the wife of Martin Luther and is being celebrated in 2017 in commemoration of 500 years since he nailed his 95 Theses to the Wittenberg Church door in Germany. This sparked the Protestant Reformation.

In the dark of night, Katharina von Bora says the bravest good-bye a six year old can muster and walks away as the heavy convent gate closes behind her.
Though the cold walls offer no comfort, Katharina soon finds herself calling the convent her home.God, her Father. She takes her vows—a choice more practical than pious, but, in time, a seed of discontent is planted by the smuggled writings of a rebellious, excommunicated priest named Martin Luther. The message: That Katharina is subject to God, and no one else. Could the Lord truly desire more for her than this life of servitude?

In her first true step of faith, Katharina leaves the only life she has ever known. But the freedom she has craved comes with a price, and she finds she has traded one life of isolation for another. Without the security of the convent walls, or a family of her own, Katharina must trust in both the God who saved her and the man who paved a way for rescue. Luther’s friends are quick to offer shelter, but Katharina longs for all Luther has promised: a home, a husband, perhaps even a chance to fall in love.
Look for this brand new book at your favorite book store .

Click here for more information.


Martin Luther, A Man for His time: A Review

Few movements have altered the course of history more than the Protestant Reformation, which historians mark its beginning with the life and ministry of Martin Luther. In 1517 he nailed his now famous 95 Theses on the Castle Church door in Wittenberg, Germany, sparking the greatest religious upheaval the world has ever seen.

In response to the prevailing spiritual abuses of the church, he fearlessly championed two grand truths: the Bible is the only rule of faith and practice and Christ is the only way of salvation.
This 32-page, easy to read booklet tells the story of this bold Reformer. A man whose life and legacy was inspired by the words from the apostle Paul: “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes, for the Jew first and also for the Greek” who goes on to add “For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith; as it is written, ‘The just shall live by faith.’” (Romans 1:16-17, NKJV).

For more information on this booklet click here


Sunday, October 1, 2017

A Great Song: A Review

A biography of Herbert Blomstedt, world-renowned conductor of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra. The author is Ursula Weigert. http://www.adventistbookcenter.com/a-great-song.html

This is the story of a boy who fell madly in love with classical music at the age of twelve, practicing enthusiastically- first his violin and later the organ. It’s the chronicle of a young man who, instead of following his father’s wish that he becomes a Seventh-day Adventist pastor, opted to study music.
The passion and love of music from that early stage of his life led this young musician to becoming a conductor in the world’s leading symphony orchestras. The book tells the story of this maestro who has served the field of classical music with humility, integrity, kindness, and an encyclopedic knowledge of the classical music repertoire.

In sum, the book is the celebration of a world-class conductor who is also an exceptional person, loved and respected by concertgoers and musicians worldwide.
What’s even more interesting is the fact this is an ongoing story as Blomstedt is far from done in his music achievement, even as he has just turned 90 years old. If you Google his name, you’ll find he has an extraordinary line up of upcoming concerts.

To read the first chapter of this amazing book click, click here

How to Enjoy Your Life and Your Job: A Review

This book by bestselling author Dale Carnegie has been in print for a number of years.  I just finished rereading it this week and I do highly recommend it.

The book contains selections from “How to Win Friends and Influence People” and “How to Stop Worrying and Start Living.”
Some of the great thoughts elaborated on in this book are:

Find yourself and be yourself: Remember there is no one else on earth like you.
Four working habits that will help prevent fatigue and worry.

What makes you tired and what you can do about it.
How to banish the boredom that produces fatigue, worry and resentment.

Count your blessings-not your troubles.
Do the very best you can; and then put up your old umbrella and keep the rain of criticism from running down the back of your neck.

Become genuinely interested in people.
Make the other person feel important- and do it sincerely.

Show respect for the other person’s opinions. Never say, “You’re wrong.”
Begin in a friendly way.

Let the other person feel that the idea is his or hers.
Appeal to the nobler motives.

Tell about your own mistakes before criticizing the other person.
Let the other person save face.

I really enjoyed this book. The isbn is 978-0-671-70826-9. This is a pocket book published by Simon and Schuster and you can purchase this book in fine book stores or on line from Amazon.com




Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Message: A Review

The Message is the Bible in contemporary language paraphrased by Eugene Peterson.

I personally really like the Message version because it is in very plain easy to understand language. (I recommend using various translations, and paraphrases of the Bible because—at least for me it helps me understand the meaning of scripture).
Eugene Peterson began his vocational life as a teacher and for several years taught Hebrew and Greek in a theological Seminary. His life then took a sudden vocational turn and he began pastoring a congregation!

Peterson soon realized he was in quite a different world and many of the members of his church knew very little about the Bible.
Pastor Peterson personally read the Bible in Hebrew and Greek and while much of the original manuscripts were written in everyday language of the time in Hebrew and Greek, the King James English Version of the Bible is not. (The King James Version is an excellent version but often, for those who did not grow up on it, it can be a real challenge reading it).

Pastor Peterson began translating for his members the Bible into contemporary English when in reality he began teaching his members the Bible.
After doing this for some 30 years, the pastor was encouraged to put this together into a complete Bible and thus the MESSAGE came into existence.

Here is a short sample of the Message; Matthew 7:24-29 which is the conclusion of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount:
These words that I speak to you are not incidental additions to your life, homeowner improvements to your standard of living. They are foundational words, words to build a life on. If you work these words into your life, you are like a smart carpenter who built his house on solid rock. Rain poured down, the river flooded, a tornado hit-but nothing moved that house. It was fixed to the rock.

But if you just use my words in Bible studies and don’t work them into your life, you are like a stupid carpenter who built his house on the sandy beach. When a storm rolled in and the waves came up, it collapsed like a house of cards.
When Jesus concluded his address, the crowd burst into applause. They had never heard teaching like this. It was apparent that he was living everything that he was saying-quite a contrast to their religion teachers! This was the best teaching they had ever heard.

The Message Bible is available on line at Amazon.com and can also be purchased at many book stores.
Please feel free to make comments on your preferences of translations of the Bible.


Long Road to Armageddon: A Review

Armageddon; a word universally understood in the context of judgment and destruction that often strikes fear into the hearts of God’s people but, should it?

In The Long Road to Armageddon, author Marvin Moore places the battle firmly in the context of the great controversy. “It is the conclusion of the struggle between the kingdom of Light and the kingdom of darkness,” he states, and as such, it is not something to be afraid of when recognized as the fulfillment of the hopes and dreams of God’s people.

I found  Marvin Moore’s writing very clear and biblical.  I also highly recommend this book.
You can read the complete first chapter on line for free at the link below:

Friday, September 1, 2017

Mud: A Review

Rich Aguilera author of Mud has compiled some extremely fascinating fun, fabulous, and sometimes bizarre facts on edible bugs, barnacles, bears and a bunch of other fascinating stuff. 

Did you know, for example, that the catfish has more than 27,000 taste buds-the most of any animal?
That it’s possible to lead a cow upstairs but not downstairs?

That snails can sleep for three years without eating?
That bats always turn left when exiting a cave?

That slugs have four noses?
These are amazing facts that prove all of nature has been wonderfully designed by our loving Creator to help sustain life for us on planet Earth.

It’s no wonder that God looked at everything He had made and said, “It is good.”
http://www.adventistbookcenter.com/mud-off-road-discoveries.html

Man-Eaters of Malekula: A Review

This is the story of Cannibals in the South Sea Islands and the missionaries that brought salvation and civilization to these islands

The South Seas Islands known as the New Hebrides consist of 80 Islands stretching some 450 miles long and in 1839, when the first Christian missionaries came to these islands, the islands were inhabited by Cannibals. These two missionaries arrived and within minutes of their disembarking from their boat, they were killed and subsequently eaten!

About 20 years later John Paton, another Presbyterian missionary, came to the island but, before leaving his home for the journey, he was told by one of the church leaders in Scotland, “If you go to that hate-filled land, you will be eaten.”
John Paton’s reply was, “If I live and die knowing the Lord Jesus it will make no difference whether I am eaten by cannibals or eaten by worms.”

So, John came to the island. His wife died in childbirth the following year and their baby son a week later but he labored on, distraught and lonely.
More Presbyterian missionaries came some of whom were eaten by the cannibals.

In the early 1900’s several different Adventist missionaries came. They built upon the work that the earlier Presbyterian missionaries had begun but there was still much cannibalism and darkest heathenism. 
This book is a thrilling story of how God could turn heathen cannibals into beautiful Christians.

You can read the first chapter for free at the following link:
http://www.adventistbookcenter.com/man-eaters-of-malekula.html

Danger's Hour: A Review

This is one of the more sobering books I have read this year.

The author, Maxwell Taylor Kennedy, tells the story of the USS Bunker Hill. Toward the end of World War II, just days after the Nazi Surrender, this magnificent vessel that held thousands of crewmen and the most sophisticated naval technology available was holding at the Pacific Theater, 70 miles off the coast of Okinawa, Japan.

The Japanese, in their desperation, turned to Kamikaze warfare a new and terrifying weapon using airplanes as suicide bombers.
On the morning of May 11, 1945, Kiyoshi Ogawa flew his  “Zero” plane and  nose-dived into the Bunker Hill at 10:02 am.

The attack killed 393 Americans and was the worst suicide attack against Americans until the September 11, 2001 attack on the World Trade Center.
The author details the heroism of the men aboard the Bunker Hill describing how American Sailors and airmen worked together, risking their own lives to save their fellows and ultimately triumphing in their efforts to save their ship.

This is an amazing story which helps one realize the cost of war and also the sacrifice of those who have given their lives to protect us.
I believe one of the values of books of this type is to help us appreciate Americans who on a daily basis give their all to protect us and also to help us realize how important it is to  as much as possible keep relationships such that wars do not have to be fought.

This book is available through Amazon.com
Feel free to comment on this story.




Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Never Lose Hope: A Review

This is definitely one of the most gripping stories I have ever read. The author Pastor Jose Cortes tells his story of being imprisoned in Cuba for his faith and how he led many other prisoners to faith and acceptance of Jesus as their Savior while he was in prison. It was the birth of an underground church.
God gave him the words to speak.

I recommend this book highly and suggest you go to the following website and read the first chapter for free.
http://products.adventistbookcenter.com/search?w=never%20lose%20hope


I'll Push You: A Review

This is an amazing story by and about Patrick Gray and Justin Skeesuck; a journey of 500 miles, two best friends, and one wheelchair.
“I’ll push you.” The words came easily to Patrick but he had no idea of the struggle that lay ahead.

Meet Justin and Patrick. Born in the same hospital two days apart, they grew up together, faced life shoulder to shoulder, and were best man in each other’s weddings. It was the way things always were. It was the way things were always going to be: living their separate lives as though they were joined at the hip.
But then the unexpected struck; Justin was diagnosed with a progressive neuromuscular disease that robbed him of the use of his arms and legs. As Justin transitioned to life in a wheelchair, Patrick stayed by his side, and together they refused to give in to despair or physical limitations.

So, when Justin shared his dream of traveling the famous Camino de Santiago—a spiritual pilgrimage through the mountains and rough terrain of northern Spain, Patrick immediately volunteered to push Justin in his wheelchair. Their six-week, 500-mile trek, with its physical challenges, host of colorful characters, and deep inner battles, would prove to be the most difficult and important journey either man would ever take.
Full of love, humor and faith, I’ll Push You exemplifies what every friendship is meant to be. This epic travel adventure shows the incredible risk and reward that come with trusting someone else to have your back, no matter what.

Discover how friendship can push us past all limits…and help us become the best versions of ourselves.
Go to the following website for more information: www.ILLPUSHYOUBOOK.COM

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

The Watchers: A Review


The Watchers is the 2nd book in the series entitled The Lost Treasures by Bradley Booth. The book is about the Jewish people at the end of their 70 years captivity.
All the Jews were talking about Jeremiah’s 70-year prophecy. Some thought it would be fulfilled; others thought that God had abandoned His people once and for all.

The Watchers follows Caleb, Tamzi, and their families, Allamu the blind beggar, and the old prophet Daniel, as before their very eyes the mighty kingdom of Babylon is overthrown by Cyrus and his Medo-Persian army. And now, Caleb and his Babylonian friend, Tamzi, discovered something important-something very important. Caleb was certain of that, but who could confirm his suspicions? Was this the beginning of the end for the Babylonian Jews or the sign of a new beginning? God would keep His promise-Caleb was sure of it!
Bradley Booth tells this story in a way that will appeal to Kids from 10-14 years of age and kids of all ages that love a well told story.



Romans Salvation for "ALL": A Review


This is a new title by George R Knight.  I have just finished reading it and I highly recommend it for everyone to read.
Here are a few highlights:

P 11 “Romans is the most influential document in Christian History. It stimulated not only the Protestant Reformation but many other revivals throughout history”
P 27 “While some people might question the relevance of such biblical books as Obadiah for living in today’s world, no one doubts the importance of Romans for their life. All of us are daily confronted by the problems of sin and guilt. And every Christian rejoices in the amazing grace of God who welcomes us in spite of ourselves.”

P 44 Speaking of God’s Grace, “The wonder of wonders is that the greatest blessing in the universe is absolutely free.”
P 65 “The good news is that Christ died for every human being who has ever lived. The bad news is that not all receive or accept God’s gracious gift.”

P 85 “Romans 8 is one of the most-loved chapters of the Bible…One student has pointed out that the chapter opens with ‘no condemnation’ and ends with no ‘no separation’ while in between it is characterized by ‘no defeat.’”
P 114 “As He hung on the cross Jesus prayed for those in the act of killing Him.

Here, I must say, is a challenge to the genuineness of our Christian love: Have we prayed for our enemies lately? If not, why not? Today-right now- is a perfect time to do something that’s not normal. It could change your life and theirs.
P 126 “…the apostle is out to win souls-not arguments. Thus, he concludes the most influential presentation of salvation in the history of Christianity with a prayer. Paul prays that ‘the God of hope’ will fill his Roman readers (and us) with joy and peace as they trust in Him.”

This just touches on a tiny bit of what the complete book presents so well. I encourage you to go to the following link and read the first chapter on line for free: http://www.adventistbookcenter.com/romans-salvation-for-all-bible-book-shelf-4q 2017.html

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

For Such a time: A Review

Authored by Ed Dickerson, For Such a Time, looks at 15 remarkable women and examines how the biblical authors intentionally shaped their narratives to show how their actions and outcomes parallel those of 15 well-known biblical heroes. Clearly these were not ordinary women. They did not fit the image of the “perfect woman.” They had little in common with the “ideal woman” pictured in Proverbs 31 but they did share one crucial characteristic with that woman and that is, initiative. These were women who did not hesitate to roll up their sleeves and plan an active role in shaping their destiny, even when it meant defying convention.

All of these 15 stories tell about women with different callings and they underline the lesson that God has a unique calling for each of us, and we should not concern ourselves too much with what God calls another to do or the expectations others have for us. When it comes to that, we would do well to remember what Jesus pointed out to Peter “If I want him to remain alive until I return, what is that to you? You must follow me.” (John 21:22).
What was true for Peter is true for us. Man or woman, our calling is the same: to follow Him wherever He leads.

Click on the following link to bring up more information on this new book and for a link that you can click on to read the first chapter on line.

A Nation in God's Hands: A Review

Author Jud Lake has just released this amazing new book- over 450 pages long- The full title is A Nation in God’s Hands Ellen White and the Civil War.

In the foreword written by George Knight he asks “How can such a small topic demand such a large book? The small topic is not the American Civil War, which has been the focus of more than sixty thousand books, pamphlets, and Internet resources. Rather, the smallness relates to Ellen White’s writings on the subject. Her works reflect only four visions and/or testimonies on the war; all were contained in thirty pages of her writings and all occurred during the first half of the war.
“…Jud Lake, in his comprehensive and fast-flowing treatment, indicates that her views, when seen against the backdrop of contemporary events, were both insightful and pertinent. Unfortunately, as historian Eric Anderson pointed out, both Ellen White’s critics and her followers have distorted her statements about the war. Her comments too often ‘have been wrested from any appropriate historical context and conscripted into the service of such polemical purposes as proving either that she was a ‘false prophet’ or a truly inspired one.’”

Jud Lake sets White’s war visions in their historical context and provides a theological interpretation of the war through her prophetic lens.  Extrapolating on this, the author notes the volume “is first and foremost a religious interpretation of the American Civil War.”
Lake is not unique in focusing on a religious interpretation. There are many volumes by leading historians on the topic and, as Lake demonstrates in his last chapter, “even Lincoln’s understanding of the significance of the war in his second inaugural address is a religious interpretation.”

Lake puts Ellen White’s statements regarding the Civil War and views them in their historical context. He writes to help us to understand Ellen White and her world.
George Knight finishes his foreword with these words, “Needless to say, I highly recommend this book not only to students of Adventism and Ellen White but also to Civil War buffs of all flavors.”

From the Introduction
Ellen White’s Civil War Visions:

Parkville vision January 12, 1861
Roosevelt vision August 3, 1861

Battle Creek vision of January 1862
Battle Creek vision of November 1862

For anyone who may not be acquainted with Ellen White. She was one of the prominent leaders in the formation of the Seventh-day Adventist church which was officially orgainized as a denomination in 1863. Seventh-day Adventists accept her as having exercised the prophetic gift during her lifetime and leadership in the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
In 1859 Ellen White declared, “When the laws of men conflict with the word and law of God, we are to obey the latter, whatever the consequences may be. The  law of our land requiring  us to deliver a slave to his master, we are not to obey; and we must abide the consequences of violating this law. The slave is not the propery of any man. God is the rightful master, and man has no right to take God’s workmanship into his hands and claim him as his own.” She respected the laws of government in general but condemned the Fugitive Slave Law in particular as a fundamental violation of moral principle.

Ellen White  addressed  slavery several times before the Civil War and condemned it in no uncertain terms. Her most significant discussion was a strong indictment of professed Christians who either supported or actually engaged in slavery,  Ellen White remained an abolitionist at heart for the rest of her life and believed that all human beings, regardless of color, are created equal before God and one in Christ.
Ellen White predicted that the war would be terrible and would  not be a short war. She did indicate that the North would win but not until God had allowed both the North and the South to be punished for the sin of Slavery.

When the United States first  entered the war the  “purpose” of the war was to save the Union. However until doing away with slavery became part of the purpose of the war there was  not good progress in winning the war.  There was a very much up and down progress of the war. This up-down pattern of the union battles would be directly related to God’s punishment on the North for compromising with the South in the sin of Slavery. Once God’s punishment ran its course and emancipation became a reality the pattern of battle outcomes would be decidedly in favor of the Union.
On January 1, 1863, Abraham Lincoln sat down to sign the most important document of his presidency- the final draft of the Emancipation Proclamation. As his bony fingers grasped the pen and dipped it into the inkwell, his hand and forearm trembled. “I could not for a moment control my arm,” he later recalled, “and a superstitious feeling came over me which made me hesitate.”

Dropping the pen, he pondered the occasion for a moment. “Was this all a mistake? Was the trembling a sign, yet another divine warning, this time that he had gone too far, had overreached himself, had taken a step which would only end in disaster?” Then it occurred to the president that for hours he had been shaking hands with hundreds  of visitors to the White house for the New Year’s Day reception. The tremor was not because of any doubt or hesitation on his part about the proclamation.
Turning to the secretary of state by his side, William Seward, Lincoln said, “I have been shaking hands since nine o’clock this morning and my right arm is almost paralyzed. IF my name ever goes into history it will be for this act, and my whole soul is in it.
 Seward’s son, who was also present, heard the president say, “I never in my life felt more certain that I was doing the right than I do in signing this paper.” But Lincoln worried, “If my hand trembles when I sign the Proclamation, all who examine the document hereafter will say, ‘He hesitated.’” Nevertheless,” It is going to be done.” He declared and picked up the pen and “slowly and carefully” signed the Proclamation into history. Looking at those around him with a smile, the president laughed at his earlier apprehension and then quietly remarked, “That will do.”
January 31, 1865 the Thirteenth  Ammendment  was voted by Congress which abolished slavery officially when it was ratified Dec 6, 1865

Robert E Lee surrendered April 9, 1865 in quick succession the rest of the Confederate Generalsl surrendered.
Sometime before Abraham Lincoln’s 2nd Inauguration he wrote a short “Meditation on the Divine Will.”

“The will of God prevails. In great contests each party claims to act in accordance with the will of God. Both may be, and one must be wrong. God cannot be for, and against the same thing at the same time.In the present civil war it is quite possible that God’s purpose is something different from the purpose of either party-and yet the human instrumentalities, working just as they do, are of the best adaptation to effect His purpose. I am almost ready to say this is probably true-that God wills this contest, and wills that it shall not end yet. By His mere quiet power, on the minds of the now contestants, He could have either saved or destroyed the Union without a  human contest. Yet the contest began. And having begun He could give the final victory to either side any day. Yet the contest proceeds.”
On your browser click on or type in the following link to bring up more information on this book and a link so you can read the entire first chapter on line.