Posts by: Adam Forrest

Jesus: Favorite Uncle or Uptight Boss? by Scot McKnight

Guest post by Scot McKnight, who blogs at www.patheos.com/community/jesuscreed. Scot's latest book is One.Life: Jesus Calls, We Follow.


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I don’t know about you, but I get tossed between absolute wonder and utter frustration when I read the moral challenges of Jesus. Some days I wonder if we ought not call Jesus a "moral zealot" to chase away our beliefs that he is an avuncular Lord. Consider words like this: "Be perfect as your father in heaven is perfect" or "Let the dead bury the dead," or the always yougottabekiddin’ me! line of Jesus that if we don’t give up our possessions we can’t be his disciple.

 

Sometimes, if I were to confess the deepest truth, I can almost unconsciously dismiss these lines with "that’s just the way Jesus talked," but I can’t for one conscious moment think Jesus said some of the following things and didn’t mean business:

  • If you don’t have surpassing righteousness you can’t enter the kingdom (Matt. 5:20)

  • If you don’t do the will of my Father you can’t enter into life (Matt. 7:21-27)

  • If you don’t become like children you can’t enter the kingdom (Matt. 18:1-4)

It's the "you can’t enter" stuff that disturbs me.


My years of studying these lines (and I teach some of them nearly every semester and encounter them more times a year than I care to count) has convinced me that they are designed at their deepest core to confront us with the singular challenge Jesus gives to us as a daily summons. It goes like this:

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NIV eBook Special: “Buy One, Give One” Through Jan. 4

BUY ONE, GIVE ONE: For every digital copy of the updated NIV Bible sold through Jan. 4, 2011, Zondervan will donate a New Testament of a new NIV-like Hindi translation through Biblica, the worldwide publisher and translation sponsor of the NIV Bible. Read on for more about the new NIV eBook and the "NIV+" Mobile App.


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128 million people.

53 countries.

6 continents.

1 Word.

 

Since 1809 Biblica has been providing Bible resources to people all over the world. As a result, hundreds of millions of lives have been transformed—from desperation to hope, from brokenness to peace, from questions to answers. Ever since Biblica began their work, they have stayed true to the ir goal: to give every person in the world the chance to encounter Jesus through God’s Word and be transformed. To date, more than 400 million copies of the NIV have been distributed worldwide through Biblica, Zondervan and other publishing partners.

 

As part of the NIV eBook release, Zondervan launched a holiday BUY ONE, GIVE ONE campaign. For every digital copy of the updated NIV Bible sold through Jan. 4, 2011, Zondervan will donate a New Testament of a new NIV-like Hindi translation through Biblica, the worldwide publisher and translation sponsor of the NIV Bible and a global Bible and publishing ministry. Zondervan and Biblica hope to donate 30,000 copies of the all-new Hindi translation of the New Testament.

 
About the NIV eBook
With quicker page turns and a numbered footnoting system that allows you to easily jump from Bible text to footnote and back again, this NIV eBook is faster and more robust than ever before. And with a new “How to Use This Bible” page included, navigating the Bible has never been easier. Learn More


Learn More about NIV Plus App Now Available

About the NIV+ App
You can choose from any digital Bible materials including devotional materials, study Bible materials, academic reference materials, atlases and maps.  The NIV+ App also allows you to turn on or off different layers of text and customize Bible reading for whoever is using the Bible.  For example, the Women’s Devotional Study Bible and Busy Mom’s Bible materials can be used by mom and then turned off in order for her daughter to view the True Images Bible notes which are age appropriate for young girls. Learn More

Platforms: iPad/iPhone, Droid, and Blackberry.

 

 

 

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Merry Christmas, Uncle Scrooge: 4 Books on Finding Joy

 

If I could work my will… every idiot who goes about with ‘Merry Christmas’ on his lips should be boiled with his own pudding.
-Ebenezer Scrooge, in A Christmas Carol

Do you have an Uncle Scrooge inside of you? I do. My Uncle Scrooge is the part of me that’s boiling in my own bitter pudding.


If times are tough for Uncle Scrooge — and they usually are, since Uncle Scrooge holds on to grudges and disappointments — then Scrooge doesn’t want anyone else to be happy. Rejoicing just reminds the Scrooge inside me how little joy I’m feeling.


So, do you have an Uncle Scrooge too? If so, we can do something for him.


You may recall it took four ghosts in Dickens’ A Christmas Carol to wake that Scrooge up to reality, to show him he didn’t have to live in bondage to the disappointments and mistakes of his past. While I don’t know four ghosts, I can offer us the next best thing: books.


These four biblically-based books have helped me reclaim the joy that Jesus offers. May these books help you pursue a life full of the Fruit of the Spirit, and not least of those, joy.  -Adam Forrest, Zondervan

 

Birthright

1. The Birthright by John Sheasby with Ken Gire

Is it hard to relax and enjoy life because you always feel that God is demanding more from you? John Sheasby’s book is an excellent guide for escaping this “drudgery of doing to the joy of being.” He uses the Parable of the Prodigal Son to help us see how we, as adopted children of God, don’t need to live in bondage to fear or to anything else. I especially recommend The Birthright to those struggling with anxiety, perfectionism, and people-pleasing.  Learn More

 

  2. Bittersweet by Shauna NiequistBittersweet  

Shauna Niequist’s Bittersweet: Thoughts on Change, Grace, and Learning the Hard Way is an honest look at suffering and how we might rejoice in the midst of it. In this “ode to all things bittersweet,” Niequist shares how God ministered to her through challenges that ranged from the uncomfortable (like moving to a new state), to the downright heartbreaking (like losing a child). One of Niequist’s insights: “Rejoicing is no less rich when it contains a splinter of sadness.” Learn More

 

Land Between

3. The Land Between by Jeff Manion

If you’re going through a big change you didn’t ask for — if you’re between relationships, between jobs, or dealing with an illness that won’t go away — I especially recommend Jeff Manion’s The Land Between: Finding God in Difficult Transitions. Manion shows us biblical examples of complaint and personal meltdown, and helps us see how God provided for His people in need. Learn More

 

Assaulted by Joy

4. Assaulted by Joy by Stephen Simpson

When Stephen Simpson became a Christian as a boy, he thought Jesus was offering him an easier life. So when things got tough, Simpson got angry. Throughout struggles that hit him seemingly because he was a Christian,  Simpson found cynicism more comfortable than joy. Things changed when he and his wife were told to expect quadruplets; Simpson had no fight left in him. But instead of feeling defeated, Simpson felt joy through surrendering to God’s wisdom and care. Simpson’s book is a funny and true-to-life book about learning to live with the tension between joys and trials of being a Christian. Learn More

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A Place of Peace: The Inspiration Behind the Story

Guest post by novelist Amy Clipston. Amy shares about her new book, A Place of Peace, in the normal type below; and in the Bold type, she shares about life events which have laid this story on her heart.

 

A Place of Peace is the third installment of my Kauffman Amish Bakery Series, featuring an Amish family in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.

 

My fascination with the Amish way of life began after my father, a German immigrant, told me that the Amish speak the same dialect as my German relatives. I visited Lancaster as a child, and their culture made an impression on me.


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In A Place of Peace, tragedy brings Miriam Lapp back to her family’s Amish community, the place where she left her family, here identity, and her heart.

 

Amidst Miriam’s grief over her mother’s death, and the consequences of painful lies from her past, Miriam is forced to face the people who rejected her. Losing her one-time fiancé and being shunned by her father becomes an excruciating test of her faith.

 

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Stories of Christmas Songs

Guest post by Ace Collins. For more Christmas info and discussion from authors Ace Collins, Amy Clipston and others, visit Facebook.com/ReclaimingChristmas.

 

Christmas songs never really leave us. Like clockwork, they come back annually to set the holiday mood. They are less like old songs and more like familiar friends—just like the folks who sing them. Without holiday hits, entertainers like Bing Crosby and Perry Como may have faded into the past and their hit songs would have been buried in another era. But because of their holiday hits, these performers now come back to us each year with the regularity of Santa himself. Yes, Bing and Perry, as well as so many others—including a group of mischievous rodents, The Chipmunks, and a rocker named Elvis—make our holidays sing.

 

If you think about it, Christmas songs are like time machines: just hearing a few notes from our favorite holiday tunes can magically transport us to a cherished moment from our past. These carols are powerful musical greeting cards reminding each of us of the joy that is coming this Christmas season, as well as the wonderful love and glad tidings from past holidays as well.

 

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Preview the New Updated NIV Church Bible

Sign up for a free Gospel of Mark Sampler & free updated NIV Bible for review
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Are you a pastor or church leader interested in updating your Worship or Pew Bibles? Then you are eligible to receive a free updated NIV Bible for review.

Sign up for your Bible now and you'll also receive a free softcover Gospel of Mark Sampler, which will ship to your mailing address immediately. (Your updated NIV Church Bible will ship in March 2011.)

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Awakening to God with Common Prayer

Guest post by Tim Otto, member of the Church of the Soujourners in San Francisco, CA.

 

I’ve dragged my body, for the last ten years, to morning prayers with my housemates. In spite of that effort, my heart hasn’t always made it there along with the rest of me (I’m fond of the saying, “If God had intended us to see the sunrise God would have scheduled it later in the day.”).

 

We’ve tried traditional prayer liturgies, but by the time we trudge into the third Psalm, I find that I’ve usually lost the trail, and my mind is wandering elsewhere. We’ve tried “evangelical prayers,” but in those early, tired hours, there are so many awkward silences, and so many petty petitions. We’ve tried centering prayer, but the silence so often slips into sleep.

 

Perhaps I’m just a hopeless case—a modern, attention deficit disordered person, incapable of real prayer.

 

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But I find myself re-inspired by the book Common Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals. Just like my beloved morning cup of coffee, Common Prayers feels stout and rousing. It awakens my sleepy brain and heart with its combination of songs, responsive readings, scripture, historical reflections—all pointing to a common theme. Somehow the diversity—all pointing to a unity—wakes me up and helps me remember what my life is about, and my desire for God. The content feels modern and timely, and yet it draws from the ancient. It provokes, and ponders, and prods, and preaches, and … it prays.

 

I still wish morning prayers were later in the day, but in the meantime, I’m glad that Common Prayer helps me pay attention and awakens me to God.

 

- Tim Otto, The Church of the Sojourners, San Francisco

 

Read excerpt of Common Prayer on Scribd
Visit commonprayer.net

More about Tim Otto
Wes YoderTim Otto co-authored Inhabiting the Church: Biblical Wisdom for the New Monasticism with Tim Stock and Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove. Tim has lived at Church of the Sojourners, a church commune in San Francisco, for sixteen years. He works part time as an RN, providing home nursing for the uninsured of San Francisco, and is also a primary teacher/preacher at Sojourners. Learn more about the Church of the Sojourners at churchofthesojourners.wordpress.com.

 

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“Your Secret Name” Online Read-Along

Your Secret Name Read-Along

When: Tuesdays,
12/28 – 2/22

No cost

Register Now

An online book discussion of Kary Oberbrunner's latest book Your Secret Name kicks off on December 28.

 

I haven't participated in an online book group before, but I'm intrigued. It looks like the Read-Along works like this: the groups reads a couple chapters of Your Secret Name throughout the week, and then each Tuesday people discuss the book online. Here are more details on the Read-Along. You can join the Read-Along for free.

 

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In a nutshell, Your Secret Name is about how people can shed the labels the world throws at them, and how we can find our true identity in Christ. You can read an excerpt on Scribd.

 

If you don't already own a copy of Your Secret Name, there's a pretty good deal going on: for a limited time $10 will get you the book, an audio download, and free shipping. Learn more

 

I think Oberbrunner's book is  sure to lead to some interesting discussion. I recommend you check out the Read-Along

  - Adam Forrest, Zondervan

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Common Prayer: A Guidebook for Plotting Goodness Together

Guest post by Shane Claiborne and Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove.

 

A few years ago, a bunch of activist-types and a bunch of prayer-warriors got together to create a prayer book that would help us live with the Bible in one hand and the newspaper in the other. We were all convinced that prayer and action cannot be divorced from each other, and that Jesus and justice have to kiss. So we formed a team of liturgy experts, church leaders, grassroots organizers, and justice activists, and we began plotting goodness together. After a long and expectant labor, we just gave birth… to a little book and web resource called Common Prayer.

 

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Common Prayer is a book for folks who love God and want to make the world a better place. Whether you are over-churched or under-churched, a proud evangelical, a recovering evangelical, or not evangelical at all; whether you are high-church, low-church, or no-church, a skeptic or a Pentecostal; whether you are a political activist, political agnostic, or a political misfit; whether you have found a community or have burnt out on community… we had you in mind as we created Common Prayer.

 

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