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What the Table is for – An excerpt from “Bread and Wine”

The light is fading, the sky bleaching from blue to white and then warming to the softest blush pink, like ballet tights, like a rosewater macaroon.

I’m worn-out and the house is ragged, but my mind and heart are full from last night’s little celebration for Brannon’s baby, the fourth Cooking Club shower in a year.

It was a lovely, wild night—babies everywhere, dishes sprawled all over the kitchen, platters of brisket and plates of macaroons fighting for space among wineglasses and forks and ramekins that used to hold bread pudding.

Brannon insisted it wasn’t a shower—she insisted on no invitations, no fuss, nothing formal or showery. But we reminded her that she’s not the boss of us, and if we wanted to celebrate her baby boy, we could celebrate all we wanted. A compromise was reached: Cooking Club as usual, with a few extra friends and a special “mini” theme to celebrate the new mini-man who would join our little family in a few months.

The Cooking Club began when Aaron and I moved back to Chicago from Grand Rapids three years ago.

There are six of us—my cousins Melody and Amanda, who are sisters and both teachers; our friend Casey, whom Melody and I have known since junior high; Brannon, my stylish and sophisticated college roommate and dear friend; and Margaret, an actor and screenwriter and friend from church. Our friend from South Haven, Josilyn, was an original member until she moved away.

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Why We Can Call the Lord of the Universe “Abba,” Daddy [Excerpt by Philip Yancey]

 

A meditation for us as Easter nears, excerpted from Philip Yancey's The Jesus I Never Knew (eBook).

 

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[As Jesus's disciples grew up, they] took for granted, as did most other religions of the time, that worship must include sacrifice: something had to die. Their God had forbidden human sacrifice, and so on a festival day Jerusalem was filled with the bleats and cries of a quarter million animals destined for the temple altar. The noise and smell of sacrifice were sharp sensory reminders of the great gulf between God and themselves.

I worked in the Old Testament for so long [while working on The Student Bible] that, when one day I skipped over to the book of Acts, the contrast jolted me. Now God's followers, good Jews most of them, were meeting in private homes, singing hymns, and addressing God with the informal Abba. Where was the fear, and the solemn protocol required of anyone who dared approach [God]? No one brought animals to sacrifice; death did not enter into worship except for the solemn moment when they broke bread and drank wine together, reflecting on the once-for-all sacrifice Jesus had made.

In these ways, Jesus introduced profound changes in how we view God. Mainly, he brought God near. To Jews who knew a distant, ineffable God, Jesus brought the message that God cares for the grass of the field, feeds the sparrows, numbers the hairs on a person's head. To Jews who dared not pronounce the Name, Jesus brought the shocking intimacy of the Aramaic word Abba. It was a familiar term of family affection, onomatopoeic like "Dada," the first word many children spoke. Before Jesus, no one would have thought of applying such a word to Yahweh, the Sovereign Lord of the universe. After him, it became a standard term of address even in Greek-speaking congregations; imitating Jesus, they borrowed the foreign word to express their own intimacy with the Father.

 

No high priest need tremble to enter the sacred room.

An event happened as Jesus hung on the cross that seemed to seal the new intimacy for the young church. Mark records that just as Jesus breathed his last, "The curtain of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom." This massive curtain had served to wall off the Most Holy Place, where God's presence dwelled. As the author of Hebrews would later note, the tearing of this curtain showed beyond doubt exactly what was accomplished by Jesus' death. No more sacrifices would ever be required. No high priest need tremble to enter the sacred room.

 

Those of us in modern times have lived under the new intimacy for so long that we take it for granted. We sing choruses to God and converse in casual prayers. To us, the notion of sacrifice seems primitive. Too easily we forget what it cost Jesus to win for us all — ordinary people, not just priests — immediate access to God's presence. We know God as Abba, the loving Father, only because of Jesus.

 

He brought God near

 

-Philip Yancey

 

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Learn more about The Jesus I Never Knew eBook
Visit Philip Yancey's Blog

 

(Images & some styling above are web-exclusive features not included in the text of Jesus I Never Knew eBook. Image attribution: By Onderwijsgek (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-2.5-nl (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/nl/deed.en)], via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Spirit-Filled Living vs. Just Trying Harder [Excerpt by Jim Cymbala]

 

Excerpt from Spirit Rising: Tapping into the Power of the Holy Spirit by Jim Cymbala.

 

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Regardless of whether we have had good influences or bad influences, we still get to decide what will influence our future. It is heartbreaking to meet people who instead of seeking God’s strength during the battles of life, have become hardened, embittered, unforgiving, and cynical. You probably know some people like that. You say to them, “Hey, what a beautiful day,” and they answer with, “Well, it’s not gonna last long.” … Those people didn’t start life that way… Somehow they have let the negative influences in their lives control them…

As Christians, our lives have been purchased for a price, and we now belong to God. The price was the blood of Jesus Christ, which he shed on the cross… We’re God’s people now. We belong to him — rescued out of the clutches of sin, guilt, and condemnation, and adopted into his family. In this case, being bought and owned by someone isn’t a negative thing; it’s a beautiful thing.

 

Is Spiritual Growth about “Trying Harder”?

The irony of Spirit-filled living is that we have to give up power in order to gain a greater power. How many times in your Christian walk have you come to a place where you struggled to do something, so you just tried harder? Have you ever tried harder to have the self-discipline to read your Bible more or pray longer? Have you ever tried harder to love an unlovely person? Have you ever tried harder to be bold when you felt afraid? How did that work out for you? Trying harder has never gone well for me.

 

Christianity is not a self-effort religion but rather one of power — the ability and might of the Spirit. “For it is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose” (Phil. 2:13). The Spirit is the only one who can produce self-discipline, love, and boldness. But to do so, he has to control us daily. We can’t rest on a religious experience we had years or even months ago.

 

Keep the Fire Going

‘For the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love and self-discipline.’ (2 Tim. 1:6–7)

Paul’s last letter was written to Timothy, a young minister he had ordained. In the letter, Paul said: “For this reason I remind you to fan into flame the gift of God, which is in you through the laying on of my hands. For the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love and self-discipline” (2 Tim. 1:6–7). We get a picture of a fire that’s almost out, embers that need to be breathed on to keep the fire alive. Paul wanted Timothy to fan the flames of the Spirit. He warned Timothy not to neglect them, but to stir up the fire and keep it going. Whatever Timothy did, he was to prevent the fire from being extinguished; he was to give attention to the Spirit’s work in him…

 

When we refuse to yield to the Spirit, we miss out on the holy excitement of living beyond ourselves.

When God takes control of a life or a church, he takes control through the Holy Spirit, because the Holy Spirit is the Helper Jesus sent to do the job. When we fear giving control to the Spirit, we really fear God’s control over our lives. When we refuse to yield to the Spirit, we miss out on the holy excitement of living beyond ourselves.

 

As Paul told Timothy, God did not give him the spirit of timidity; rather, he gave power, love, and self-discipline. Notice, God is the one who gives those gifts, and it is only through the Holy Spirit working in our hearts that we receive them. We cannot live the life God desires for us without the presence of the Holy Spirit, but with him in control of our lives, our hope is in his power and his gifts are available for us to receive.

 

Would you like to love more deeply and more freely? Do you wish to have more self-discipline? Are your life and ministry producing fruit? For those things to happen, you have to surrender to the Helper. But oh the rewards that come when you hand control of your life to the Holy Spirit…

 

You and I are going to be controlled by something. There is no question about that.

I encourage you to get alone with God today and spend some time praying about who or what is in control of your life. You and I are going to be controlled by something. There is no question about that. So before you go any further, decide now whom you will yield to. Tell God your questions about being controlled by the Spirit. Present him with your hopes and longings for something more.

 

The first step in the process is giving him control.

– Jim Cymbala


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(Some styling above is a web-exclusive feature not included in the text of Spirit Rising. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer’s personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

 

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Use These Outreach Books (5 Zondervan Authors Honored with Outreach 2012 Resources of the Year Awards)

 

The 2012 Outreach Resources of the Year were announced today in a press release from Outreach magazine, honoring twenty evangelism-themed resources from the last year. Five of these resources are by by Zondervan authors.

The Outreach Resources of the Year series celebrates of "the best outreach-oriented books and curricula," says the magazine, which selects titles in "areas such as evangelism, compassion and justice ministries, missional living and cross-cultural ministries." Here is the magazine's Editor, Brian Orme, on the goal of the series:

These resources deserve accolades, but Outreach Resources of the Year is about more than that… We strive to help churches share God's love, reach their communities and change the world. Drawing their attention to the best resources available each year is one way we do that.

 

We at Zondervan couldn't agree more with Orme. Of course we're thrilled for our authors when they receive awards — we love our authors, and it's exciting to see their excellent work honored by others. But the chief reason we celebrate today is this: we're blessed to work with authors who help people share God's love and transform the world.

 

Here's the scoop on these five award-winning Zondervan authors and their books:

USE THESE BOOKS:
Five 2012 Outreach Resources of the Year

1. Evangelism

Learn more about One Thousand Gifts

The King Jesus Gospel: The Original Good News Revisited
by Scot McKnight (@scotmcknight)
Evangelicals have reduced the gospel to the message of personal salvation. This book makes a plea for us to recover the old gospel as that which is still new and still fresh. (From the synopsis)
Read Excerpt
Learn More about The King Jesus Gospel

2. Church & Culture

Learn more about Understanding World Religions

Half the Church: Recapturing God's Global Vision for Women
by Carolyn Custis James (@carolynezer)
James unpacks three transformative themes in the Bible that raise the bar for women and calls them to join their brothers in advancing God's gracious kingdom on earth. (From the synopsis)
Read Excerpt
Learn more about Half the Church
Visit James's Blog

3. Children's Outreach

Learn more about Ocean Adventures Book

The Nature of God: Ocean Adventures Book & DVDs
by Peter Schriemer (Follow @peterschriemer)
With rich and age-appropriate content based on & supplementing the presentations of Peter Schriemer in the DVD collection Nature of God, readers learn more about God's creation of eco-systems, flora, and fauna specifically found in the Hawaiian Islands of the United States. (From the synopsis)
Learn More about Ocean Adventures Book
Visit "The Nature of God" Page on Facebook

4. Youth Outreach

Learn more about Sticky Faith

Sticky Faith: Everyday Ideas to Build Lasting Faith in Your Kids
by Kara Powell (@kpowellfyi & @stickyfaith)
Based on Fuller Youth Institute findings, this easy-to-read guide presents both a compelling rationale and a powerful strategy to show parents how to actively encourage their children's spiritual growth so that it will stick to them into adulthood and empower them to develop a living, lasting faith. (From the synopsis)
Learn More about Sticky Faith
Visit the Sticky Faith Website

5. Small Group Curriculum

Learn more about The Christian Faith

Muslims, Christians, and Jesus DVD: Gaining Understanding and Building Relationships
by Carl Medearis (Follow @carlmedearis)
Medearis, an international expert in the field of Arab-American and Muslim-Christian relations, provides American Christians background info on Islam and tools for sharing Christ with their Muslim neighbors. (From the synopsis)
Learn More about Muslims, Christians, & Jesus DVD

If you would like to send one of these authors congratulations on their achievement, leave your comment on Zondervan's EngagingChurch Blog. My coworker, Andrew Rogers, has graciously volunteered to forward everyone's messages to the authors!

The full list of 20 award winners are featured in the March/April 2012 issue of Outreach. Now we've covered five of Outreach's favorite books on evangelism. What's your favorite?

 

- Adam Forrest, Zondervan. Big tip of the hat to Andrew Rogers.

 

(This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives; the writer's opinions are his own, and are only intended for information purposes. To receive new blogposts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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January Blog Highlights: Top 7 Posts, other Posts of Note

 

January saw a flurry of posts on the blog, and I (Adam) will do my best to keep it up. Here are highlights from the month.  

 

Top 7 Posts from January

Ranked by reader traffic and feedback.

1. Does Fiction Lie? Thoughts on Truth & Christian Storytelling This post caused a bit of a stir. A reader submitted a question about whether fiction is valid for Christians, and the story-lover in blogger Adam Forrest was unleashed…

2. King Jesus, His Gospel, and Us – Coverage of N.T. Wright's provocative session at the January Series of Calvin College. Basically, Wright says, we're not listening to the whole song…

3. Small Group Videos Galore – Over 50 of our small group videos are on YouTube for free. Learn where to find them.

 

4. Plan B: My Secret Terra Cotta Army – Mark Hall (@MarkHallCC) tells the bizarre true story of Chinese emperor Qin, and how he's not so different from you and me. Excerpt from The Well.

5.  History-Making Prayer & the Legend of the Circle-Maker – Mark Batterson (@MarkBatterson) tells the legend of Honi, the circle-drawing, history-changing pray-er. Excerpt from The Circle Maker.

6. The Hitchhiker and the Blue Jeans (A Surprise Blessing) Author Andrea Palpant Dilley shares a hitch-hiking story she'll never forget. (I bet you won't, either.) Excerpt from Faith and Other Flat Tires.

7. Do Not Judge? Jesus on "Using a Good Measure"  Lois Tverberg (@LoisTverberg) on what Jesus really meant when he talked about judging others. Excerpt from her new book Walking in the Dust of Rabbi Jesus.

10 More Posts of Note

1. Martin Luther King & Jeremiah the Prophet – The similarites between the prophet and MLK are considerable, as shown by Jeremiah experts Tremper Longman III and David E.

2. Sloth, aka "The Noonday Demon" An experiment in personifying sloth, so we may more easily detect it in ourselves and resist it.

3. Eight Surprising Ideas about Humility + Joe Louis's Punching Power A post inspired by the boxing champion and the writing of John Dickson (@johnpauldickson), whom I personally believe is on his way to becoming a heavyweight champion of biblical scholarship.

 

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Small Group Videos Galore: Watch Over 50 Full Bible Study Sessions for Free

 

Have you ever watched a trailer for a movie, then watched the movie, only to realize the trailer collected all the best parts, or it told you nothing about the movie's real plot? While curriculum trailers aren't exactly like that, sometimes watching a two-minute trailer just won't tell you if you want to spend 4-12 weeks with the topic, or study, or author.

Watching the complete first session of the curriculum is a great indicator of what the rest of the sessions will be like. That's why we're making the first sessions of our video-based curriculum available for free on YouTube.

View the curriculum videos playlist

 

Today we have 50-plus full video sessions loaded on the playlist (zndr.vn/curriculumvideos). We will continue to add more until there's video available from every group study that Zondervan publishes.

Now you can watch full curriculum sessions from bestselling authors like…

 

 

If you like what you see, you can visit Amazon, CBD.com, BN.com or your local retailer and get the DVD and Participant's Guides for yourself and your small group.

 

Tips for Small Group Members

  1. Share the videos with your small group via Facebook to discuss what you might want to study.
  2. Subscribe to the YouTube playlist (http://zndr.vn/curriculumvideos) because more videos are coming soon.
  3. Most of all, enjoy!

 

- Chris Fann, Zondervan Curriculum Marketing

 

(This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's opinions are their own, and are shared for information purposes only. To receive new blogposts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Re:Word Weekly – 1/20/12

 

Re:Word is our weekly collection of articles regarding words or the Word. We re-tell these stories because they're exciting, surprising, useful, or nourishing. As you explore, we hope you discover a few new and fascinating author friends.

From The Grass is Greener

Deborah Kerr, Stanley Donen & Robert Mitchum discuss interests between scenes of "The Grass is Greener (1960)."

 

1. How Martin Luther King spoke to me as a failed man by Trent Gilliss of On Being. Includes stirring audio from MLK's speech "Is Your Heart Right?"


2. What's the answer to anxiety?
by Ann Voskamp (author of One Thousand Gifts)


3. Quotes from famous writers on writing (via Scot McKnight, author of  The King Jesus Gospel).

4. 5 myths about Arab Spring, according to author Rezla Aslan, in this summary and commentary by Mike Wittmer (author of Don't Stop Believing).

5. Teachers & students: Apple announces interactive iBooks textbooks. Then someone asked Zondervan on Twitter, "Textbooks come alive on iPad … Now, how can we help the Bible come alive on iPad?" We answered, "Have you seen the new NIV Study Bible App?

"

6. Is Christianity just a crutch? A thoughtful and well-researched article by David Wenham (via Ravi Zacharias, author of Has Christianity Failed You?).

7. A letter to husbands about how small acts can make a big difference, by Lysa TerKeurst (author of Made to Crave Action Plan).

 

- Adam Forrest, Zondervan

 

(This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer shares these personal opinions for information purposes only. To receive new blogposts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Re:Word Weekly – 1/13/2012

 

Re:Word is Zondervan Blog's new weekly collection of articles regarding words or the Word. We re-tell these stories because they're exciting, surprising, useful, or nourishing.

Stumbling upon the stories below felt like finding little luminous treasures. We couldn't resist sharing them with you! Enjoy…

View original photo by Rich Tatum

Photo by Rich Tatum, used with permission.

 

 1. The two most disarming words you can use in a tense conversation about Christians, as told by a friend of Philip Yancey (NIV Student Bible).

2. Is Pornography the Same as Cheating asks author Sheila Wray Gregoire? Further Reading: The Good Girl's Guide to Great Sex

3. 10 thoughts on Tim Tebow from Pastor Nathan Busenitz, including "5 Reasons I like Tim Tebow" and "5 Concerns I have about Tebow Mania." (via Tim Challies, Challies.com) Further Reading: Tim Tebow's memoir, Through My Eyes

4. For writers & aspiring writers: Want a birds-eye view of whether your story has forward momentum? Create an "Emote Pacing Chart." (via DiAnn Mills, author of The Fire in Ember)

5. Punchy thoughts on Jesus's masculinity. (via Scot McKnight, author of The King Jesus Gospel)

6. Via Qideas.org – Many non-Christians are more willing to have a spiritual conversation than a Jesus conversation. Wait, is there a difference? Ron Martoia offers a long but worthy piece on natural, conversational evangelism called Spiritual Conversations: Understanding the Cultural Language. Further Reading: The Next Christians Group Study, Being Countercultural Group Study

7. A timely collection of posts about gender, hierarchy, equality, and marriage collected by Rachel Held Evans (Evolving in Monkey Town).

 

- Adam Forrest, special thanks to Rich Tatum.

 

 (This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer shares these personal opinions for information purposes only. To receive new blogposts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Does Fiction Lie? Thoughts on Truth and Christian Storytelling

 

“Is it wrong for Christians to … write, read or even watch fictitious material?” asked a commenter named Mukwemba on Zondervan’s Facebook page today.

Mukwemba (who permitted the use of her name here) adds some important context: some of her Christian friends do not approve of fiction, arguing this:

Fiction is wrong because it’s not true… As Christians we should hold fast to the truth and not saturate our minds with falsehoods regardless of what “good” they seem to bring about.

I’m sure Mukwemba’s friends are well-meaning, but I believe they are mistaken. I will show you why writing fiction can be an excellent calling.

 

An Editor Speaks

I sent Mukwemba’s question to my coworker Sue Brower, who is an Executive Editor here at Zondervan. Sue says:

When Jesus wanted to teach something to his disciples, he used story—Parables.  Fiction is truth in story form.  It makes concepts more accessible to the reader because the reader relates to the characters and sees themselves in the story.

I agree wholeheartedly with Sue. Let’s look more closely at the biblical basis behind these points.

 

3 Biblical Observations about Fiction

1. Fiction can help us understand, love, and serve others.

A writer (whom I can’t recall) said stories help us “extend our sympathies” toward others who are different from us. In other words, stories can open our eyes to suffering we didn’t see before. With this new awareness, we can choose to better love and serve others.

I can think of two examples where fiction is even linked to changes in public policy. Arthur Miller’s play, Death of a Salesman, portrayed the struggle of older workers so well that Miller’s story was invoked during a 1968 Senate hearing (The Adequacy of Services for Older Workers) as a sketch of the obstacles that face older Americans. Also, a novel by Upton Sinclair, The Jungle, actually influenced the passing of new health legislation for the meatpacking industry in the city of Chicago!

2. Fiction can show you truth about yourself.

Sometimes a story is a mirror. Let’s look at an example from the Bible: after King David hides his sin with Bathsheba, remember how Nathan gets through to David? Nathan goes to David and says,

‘There were two men in a certain town, one rich and the other poor. The rich man had a very large number of sheep and cattle, but the poor man had nothing except one little ewe lamb he had bought. He raised it, and it grew up with him and his children. It shared his food, drank from his cup and even slept in his arms. It was like a daughter to him.

‘Now a traveler came to the rich man, but the rich man refrained from taking one of his own sheep or cattle to prepare a meal for the traveler who had come to him. Instead, he took the ewe lamb that belonged to the poor man and prepared it for the one who had come to him.’

David burned with anger against the man and said to Nathan, ‘As surely as the LORD lives, the man who did this must die! He must pay for that lamb four times over, because he did such a thing and had no pity.’

Then Nathan said to David, ‘You are the man! This is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says: “I anointed you king over Israel, and I delivered you from the hand of Saul… Why did you despise the word of the LORD by doing what is evil in his eyes? You struck down Uriah the Hittite with the sword and took his wife to be your own. You killed him with the sword of the Ammonites…”‘

Then David said to Nathan, “I have sinned against the LORD.” [-From 2 Samuel 12:1-18, NIV]

So if you’re reading a story and think, “I can relate to this character,” keep your eyes peeled. You may find some some fresh insight into your own motivations, maybe even sins. I’ve been given a few such “eureka” moments through fiction, most memorably from reading Douglas Coupland’s story collection, Life After God, and a short story by Flannery O’Connor called “Everything That Rises Must Converge.” These stories revealed some of my attitudes that needed to change.

 

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Amish Country Tour Round-Up: Photos, Giveaways, and Embarrassing Moments

 

The Amish Country Tour concluded early this week, and below we've collected some tour memories from Amy Clipston, Vannetta Chapman, and Shelley Shepard Gray. Read on for a roundup of photos, giveaways, embarrassing moments, and one lethally good pie recipe.

 

Amy, Shelley and Vannetta at the Light Parade

Amy, Shelley & Vannetta after the Shipshewana Light Parade.
View more tour photos in Zondervan's album on Facebook.

On returning home, Shelley (author of Christmas in Sugarcreek) writes this:

It feels great to be home. It really does. But I have to admit that there is a part of me that wishes we were still back on the Amish Country Tour…  There had been a sense that all of us were a part of something pretty special… [We met] so many readers! [And we] visited with a lot of Amish, spending hours talking with them about books and their culture…

Shelley also mentions some behind-the-scenes tour tidbits. During their last meal together, Shelley, Amy and Vannetta took turns sharing their picks for Funniest Moment, Best Moment, and Most Embarrassing Moment from the tour. You can read their picks in Shelley's blog post: read more of Shelley's post.

I'd be remiss not to share these two items from Vannetta Chapman (Falling to Pieces): first, an heirloom pie recipe that I'm afraid to try. It begins, "Fill unbaked pie shell a little more than half full with a mixture of brown and white sugar." Read the full "Brown sugar pie" recipe on Vannetta's blog.

Secondly, Vannetta is hosting a giveaway on her blog through this Sunday (Nov. 27, 2011). Learn more about Vannetta's giveaway.

Speaking of giveaways, Amy Clipston (Naomi's Gift) will host one on her Facebook page this weekend. But as of this writing, Amy is taking reader suggestions for what the giveaway will be. Options include an Amish doll, Amish peanut butter, a set of Amy's books, and more. Add your two cents when you find Amy on Facebook.

- Adam Forrest, Zondervan Internet Team

 

View photos from the Amish Country Tour

See Zondervan's photo album on Facebook

Connect with the authors on Facebook  

Find Vannetta on Facebook
Vannetta Chapman

Find Amy on Facebook
Amy Clipston

Find Shelley on Facebook
Shelley Shepard Gray

Vannetta Chapman www.facebook.com/VannettaChapmanBooks
Amy Clipston www.facebook.com/AmyClipstonBooks
Shelley Shepard Gray www.facebook.com/ShelleyShepardGray

The latest books from Vannetta, Amy and Shelley

Learn more about Falling to PiecesFalling to Pieces
Vannetta Chapman
Learn More about Naomi's Gift

Naomi's Gift
Amy Clipston

Learn More about Christmas in SugarcreekChristmas in Sugarcreek
Shelley Shepard Gray

 

 

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