Archive for October, 2006

1st Chapters Podcast | Ep. 27 “Real Sex”

Monday, October 30th, 2006

In Real Sex: The Naked Truth about Chastity, Lauren Winner speaks candidly to single Christians about the difficulty–and the importance–of sexual chastity. With nuance and wit, she talks about her own sexual journey. Never dodging tough terms like “confession” and “sin,” she grounds her discussion of chastity first and foremost in scripture. She confronts cultural lies about sex and challenges how we talk about sex in church (newsflash: however wrong it is, premarital sex can feel liberating and enjoyable!). Building on the thought of Wendell Berry, she argues that sex is communal rather than private, personal rather than public.

Real Sex will be an essential read for single Christians grappling with chastity, for married Christians committed to monogamy, and for those who counsel them.

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1st Chapters Podcast | Ep. 26 “In His Steps”

Monday, October 23rd, 2006

One hundred years ago Christians read Charles Sheldon’s In His Steps with runaway enthusiasm. Sheldon’s story traces the account of the fictional Reverend Maxwell who challenges himself and his congregation to constantly ask, “What would Jesus do?” This question puts all of life’s circumstances in a new light. Those characters in Sheldon’s book who take the challenge of this question seriously live dramatically changed lives.

But a changed life responding to Jesus’ example of compassion and grace does not always make things easier. People in Sheldon’s story learn that acting like Jesus can alienate others who prefer status quo comfort and social respectability. The real challenge of the question, “What would Jesus do?” is not the initial fervor it evokes but the sustained devotion it can produce.

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1st Chapters Podcast | Ep. 25 “Absolute Surrender”

Monday, October 16th, 2006

This book-simple and powerful-is the result of Murray’s passionate exploration of the issue of surrender: why it’s seemingly impossible and yet completely necessary.

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1st Chapters Podcast | Ep. 24 “The Pilgrim’s Progress”

Monday, October 9th, 2006

This is an updated version for all ages retold in wonderful storytelling fashion. John Bunyan was a simple maker and mender of pots and pans who received very little education. In spite of that, he penned the most successful allegory ever written. Embark on a perilous journey with Christian, the lead character, from the City of Destruction to the luminous safe haven of the Celestial City. The journey will encourage you to “set your hope fully on the grace to be given you” amidst the obstacles of life.

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Devotional Classics | Ep. 19 “The Release Of The Spirit 02”

Monday, October 2nd, 2006

Originally a series of messages delivered at Customs Lane, Foochow, South China in 1948, these were translated and published by Sure Foundation Publishers in 1965. Brother Nee’s writings are an amazing call to fellow Christians. This work is only small in size, but not stature as “the author strongly recommends to all the servants of Christ that they learn a most fundamental lesson in their Christian experience; namely, the breaking of the outward man for the release of the inward spirit.”

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1st Chapters Podcast | Ep. 23 “The Secret Message Of Jesus”

Monday, October 2nd, 2006

Pastor and bestselling author McLaren (”A New Kind of Christian“) explores Jesus’s teaching in this book, placing it in its Jewish context, analyzing its tenets and expression, and trying to work out how it should be lived today. McLaren starts with the assumption that the church may not have accurately understood Jesus’s “secret message” (hidden “as a treasure one must seek in order to find”). He revisits the gospel material from a fresh -and at times radical -perspective. The church has focused on salvation as a means to “heaven after you die” for too long, according to McLaren; we should take Jesus at his word when he says “the kingdom of God is here now,” and work to assist that kingdom by being peacemakers and loving others. McLaren admits to not exploring every topic here in depth, in an effort to keep the book brief, but he does an excellent job of capturing Jesus’s quiet, revolutionary style -the prophet who spoke in parables, who didn’t want people to talk about his miracles, who challenged established Jewish thought, and paradoxically found ultimate fulfillment and victory through death. Conservative evangelicals will be critical of some points (and there are weaknesses here), but this book will appeal to a broad spectrum of people who want to understand Jesus.

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