Category Archives: Book Reviews

Book Review: One way Love

By Tullian Tchividjian

One Way LoveReal life is long on law and short on grace.  The demands never stop, the failures pile up, and fear sets in. Life requires many things from us- a stable marriage, successful children, a certain quality of life. Anyone living inside the guilt, anxiety, and uncertainty of daily life knows that the weight of life is heavy. We are all in need of some relief.

Bestselling author Tullian Tchividjian is convinced our exhausted world needs a fresh encounter with God’s inexhaustible grace.  His one-way love. Sadly, however, Christianity is perceived as being a vehicle for good behaviour and clean living, and the judgments that result from them rather than the only recourse for those who have failed over and over and over again. Tchividjian convincingly shows that Christianity is not about good people getting better. If anything, it is good news for bad people coping with their failure to be good.

In this book, Tchividjian calls the church back to the heart of the Christian faith – grace. It is time for us to abandon our play-it-safe religion, and to get drunk on grace.   It goes against everything we have ever known and shatters every boundary we have every put in place.  But if you dare to receive it, your life will never ever be the same.  One way Love powerfully explores the depth and beauty of God’s grace in a way that will leave you feeling lighter and more loved.

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The God who Speaks

A Gospel Project small group bible study  by Mike Budler

Ed Stetzer, Lifeway General Editor, and Trevin Wax, Managing Editor, combine to write “The God Who Speaks, The (Workbook)God Who Speaks” for adults as part of their popular series – The Gospel Project.  The small group workbook is a biblical theology going from Genesis to Revelation as well as a systematic theology focusing on the work of Jesus Christ as found in both the Old and New Testaments.

The editors teach us how to respond to the Word of God as we live in a fallen world as unbelievers and also how we can respond to God’s Word once God redeems us.  In the introduction to The Gospel Project for Adults, we read that “the scriptures are a story revealed – it is one story of redemption through Jesus Christ.  The Gospel saves us, and when we encounter Jesus in the pages of Scripture, the Gospel works on us, transforming us into His image.  We become God’s Gospel Project.”

The editors speak of core values for the workbook:

  • It is rich in theology but not dry
  • It is Christ-centered
  • It is story-focused
  • It is mission-driven

The book also gives great small group tips: make sure that all participants have a workbook and that you have extras in case newcomers to the group need a copy; make sure that the group facilitator is trained and has a “missional attitude” in his life; that the group prays regularly for the Great Commission be carried out by each small group member; and that the group finds a Gospel Project to be done in the community or abroad (Acts 1:8).  Each chapter includes devotions for each individual to be read during the week and also group discussion questions for the facilitator.  Contributors include Tim Chandler, Timothy Keller, Tullian Tchividjian, John Piper & Wayne Grudem.

Allow God to be His Gospel Project – Begin with “The God Who Speaks.”  He will be glorified and you will grow in your faith!

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Book Review: Stronger than the Sword

By Faith Cook

Stronger than the SwordThough the characters in this novel are fictitious, they represent the truth and their lives are interwoven with historical figures such as John Bunyan. Set during a time of great persecution, the focus is on a typical family living in Somerset at that time. The lesson is clear: we do not fear those who kill the body, but must have faith that is ‘stronger than the sword’.

A farmer, searching the moors at night for his son, missing after a skirmish in the English Civil War, stumbles across a Royalist soldier lying severely injured in a ditch. His decision to help the man will have surprising repercussions in years to come, both for his own family and for the stranger whose life was saved at great personal cost to his rescuers.

Set in times when to refuse to conform to the forms of worship imposed by the state was to risk fines or imprisonment, the circumstances of the lives of the central characters are set in the context of these stirring historical events.

These people are representative of the countless numbers of Christians worldwide who, down the centuries, have demonstrated a faith in the living God which is stronger than the sword – a faith that prevails even though a civil power may attempt to crush and annihilate it.  As such, their example challenges Christians today to remain faithful to the truths of Scripture, cost what it may and however subtle the forms in which persecution may be presented.

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Equip Book of the Month: February

The Explicit Gospel by Matt Chandler

Explicit Gospel, The (PB)You know you know it… But then again, maybe you don’t. Even if you go to church, it doesn’t mean that you are being exposed to the gospel explicitly. Sure, most people talk about Jesus, and about being good and avoiding bad, but the gospel message simply isn’t there – at least not in its specificity and its fullness. Inspired by the needs of both the over-churched and the unchurched, and bolstered by the common neglect of the explicit gospel within Christianity, popular pastor Matt Chandler writes to remind us what is of first and utmost importance – the gospel.

“If you only read one book this year, make it this one. It’s that important.”—Rick Warren, Pastor, Saddleback Church

 “This book, like the gospel itself, is clarifying, convicting, comforting, and compelling all at the same time. I wholeheartedly invite you to read it, to be overwhelmed by the mercy and majesty of God in the gospel, and then to spend your life making this gospel explicit in every facet of your life and to every corner of the earth!” —David Platt, President, International Mission Board

“That the gospel is not clearly taught in classic liberalism is disheartening but not surprising. That frequently the gospel is not taught in evangelical congregations is both disquieting and surprising. Evangelicals will not deny the gospel, but they may assume it while talking about everything else – and that is tragic. Matt Chandler issues a robust call to make the gospel an explicit and central part of our preaching, and takes pains to show what that looks like. Amen and Amen.” – D. A. Carson, Research Professor of New Testament, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School

Usual CBD Price: R200.00
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Book Review: God’s not dead

Evidence for God in an Age of Uncertainty – you’ve watch the movie, now read the book.

God's Not DeadThe goal of God’s Not Dead: Evidence for God in an Age of Uncertainty is straightforward: to help readers develop a faith that is real and credible and strong enough to help others find faith in God. To that end, Rice Broocks outlines a roadmap that guides seekers to acknowledge the most basic truths of Christianity:

  • There is overwhelming and exciting evidence for God’s existence
  • The God who exists is indeed the God of the Bible
  • God has revealed his nature through his Son, Jesus Christ

As shown during the movie, this is the original book on which the main character bases much of his debate points with the atheistic professor. Persuasive arguments crafted with tools borrowed from logic, science, and philosophy, as well as scripture, solidify the faith of the Christian reader and provide starting points for discussions with sceptics. With clear, easy-to-follow explanations of key concepts and controversies, God’s Not Dead is apologetics for the twenty-first century, presented in layman’s terms. Readers will be empowered not only to talk about their own faith with confidence but to lead others to a relationship with Jesus.

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Book Review: Decisions, Decisions

How (and how not not) to make them.
By Dave Swavely

Decisions, DecisionsHow can I know what God wants me to do?

Life is made up of more decisions than we can count. We face so many choices every day that often lead us to anxiety or desperation. Many people stumble this way and that because they do not ground their decisions in God’s Word.

In this brief yet relentlessly biblical and yet practically insightful book, Dave Swavely first shows us how not to make decisions and then reveals what biblical decisions making is.  He covers topics such as circumstances, counsel, desires and prayer and the will of God.

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Book Review: The Fitting Room

 By Kelly Minter

An irresistible invitation to a spiritual makeover …

The Fitting RoomColossians 3:12 tells us to “clothe” ourselves in Christian virtues like forgiveness, joy, patience, compassion. But how does that work in real life? Can we really “dress up” in the character of Christ? Kelly Minter says the answer is yes?  If we let the Master Designer do the fitting.

Writing with warmth, humour and down-to-earth honesty, Kelly explores what it means to take off negative traits and emotional entanglements and to put on the character of Christ.  There is no guilt here, just a lot of grace, insight, warm encouragement and an invitation to a spiritual makeover.

Through scripture and story, Kelly gently shows you how to put on virtues that were truly made for you, personally tailored by the One who knows and loves you best.

CBD PRICE: R180.00

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Equip Book of the Month: January

Good News for Anxious Christians : 10 practical things you don’t have to do…

By Phillip Cary

Good News for Anxious ChristiansLike a succession of failed diet regimens, the much-touted techniques that are supposed to bring us closer to God “in our hearts” can instead make us feel anxious, frustrated, and overwhelmed.

How can we meet and know God with ongoing joy rather than experiencing the Christian life as a series of guilt-inducing disappointments? Phillip Cary explains that knowing God is a gradual, long-term process that comes through the Bible experienced in Christian community, not a to-do list designed to help us live the Christian life “right. ” This clearly written book covers ten things Christians don’t have to do to be close to God, such as:-

  • to hear God’s voice in their hearts,
  • find God’s will for their lives, and
  • believe their intuitions are the Holy Spirit.

Cary skillfully unpacks the riches of traditional Christian spirituality, bringing the real good news to Christians of all ages.

CBD PRICE: R215.00

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Top Books of 2014

Tony Reinke posted his top 14 books of 2014 on his Desiring God blog site.  He says they were chosen based on what books he thought (1) serve the widest crowd, (2) offered the most unique insights, (3) and seemed to promise the most enduring impact in the years ahead. Read more about his choices here.

14 best books of the year

Top 14 Books of 2014

1. Tim Keller, Prayer: Experiencing Awe and Intimacy with God (Dutton). Unique, fresh, and deeply rooted in history — this book is vintage Keller in his most carefully researched and most Reformed self. In part, it’s a celebration of the rich tradition of prayer enjoyed by our forefathers. But its greatest strength is the use of Scripture to frame the prayer life (a bulk of the book is about how Scripture is essential to it). When I finished this book, it instantly topped this year’s book list. Reformed to the core, practical, comprehensive, God-centered, Christ-focused, and joy-saturated — the book is rich on many levels. (And be sure to read the footnotes, where you’ll discover a second book of bonus content!)

2. ESV Reader’s Bible (Crossway). The biggest book buzz this year belonged to the Kickstarter Bibliotheca Bible, an elegant, handcrafted, multivolume edition of the Bible you want to sit and hold and read and enjoy. Crossway had already planned the release of a Bible that pretty much matched it feature-for-feature, with a superior translation, and packaged in a more affordable and convenient one-volume edition. Remove the section headings and chapter and verse numbers, and you’re left with the bare text of Scripture, ready to be read like any book. I expected that. I was unprepared for how this Bible would change my reading habits, and how I would fall in love with reading the sweeping narratives of Scripture, the Prophets, and the Wisdom literature. Reading Proverbs, for example, I was struck by how individual bits of wisdom are meant to fit into a cohesive plan of lifelong God-fearing obedience. Simple and clean — this Bible displays a winning recipe for innovation.

3. Dane Ortlund, Edwards on the Christian Life: Alive to the Beauty of God (Crossway). This book nails the core of what we celebrate at Desiring God. Delighting in God’s beauty is the high-octane fuel for the Christian life. And this God-centered delight frames all the other gifts he has given us to enjoy. As Dane writes, “True joy derives not from God and job, family, sex, friends, food, rest, driving, buying a home, reading a book, drinking coffee — but from God in these things. . . . Every taste of beauty in this world, from the roar of waterfalls to the chatter of birds to the richness of true friendship to the ecstasy of sexual experience, is a drop from the ocean of divine beauty. Every pleasure is an arrow pointing back to him. Joy is from, and only finally in, God” (79). As you can see, Dane is a realist, and in this book he highlights Edwards’s greatest contributions to the church, and critiques his failures, but mostly he just helps average Christians come alive again to God’s beauty.

4. Stephen Westerholm, Justification Reconsidered: Rethinking A Pauline Theme (Eerdmans). This is a magnificently short, clear, and profound book on the precious doctrine of justification. Not only is it deliciously good theology, it’s a nearly perfect model of how serious academic theology can be done (and should be done!) in rich prose for the joy and health of the church . . . and in 100 pages.

 

 

 

5. John Piper, Seeing Beauty and Saying Beautifully: The Power of Poetic Effort in the Work of George Herbert, George Whitefield, and C. S. Lewis (Crossway). If you are a preacher, public speaker, writer, poet, or songwriter, and you find yourself called by God to creatively engage culture with the truth of God, this may be the most important book of the year for you. What we say is critically important; but how we say it needs our desperate attention as well. In this book John Piper not only serves as a model of creative writing but also a historian of three men who mastered the feat in history past.

6. Kevin Vanhoozer, Faith Speaking Understanding: Performing the Drama of Doctrine (WJK). Many skilled writers today help us do church right. But no serious theologian gives a more cohesive and compelling vision for the local church than Vanhoozer. A reader has “gotten” Vanhoozer’s theology when he or she feels an insatiable urge to gather again with the people of God. While most of what he’s written has been aimed at academic audiences, this is his first attempt to bring the cookies down, to serve up his vision of theology in an appetizing way for all the people of God. Looong overdue, but fresh and delicious.

7. Drew Dyck, Yawning at Tigers: You Can’t Tame God, So Stop Trying (Thomas Nelson). This is a welcome and much-needed reminder of how the hard things of God in the Bible are meant to stir our love for him and mission with him. It’s time to stop apologizing for God, and time to humbly worship him as he has revealed himself in the Bible. God is not a kitten, he’s a tiger. He’s good, but he’s not tame. If we choose to live in denial of God as he revealed himself, our worship will weaken, our standards of purity will diminish, our mission will skid to a halt, our message will be hollowed out, and our part in God’s global work will become more and more trivial. All that’s at stake.

8. C. S. Lewis and David C. Downing, editor, The Pilgrim’s Regress: The Wade Annotated Edition (Eerdmans). Most annotated books leave me feeling pretty confused and stupid, but this book edited by Downing makes me wonder if most annotated classics are just lazily done and fail to address the many questions that will inevitably arise in the reader’s mind. Downing is different. He is a master at reading my mind and predicting when and where I’ll stumble on terms and phrases in Lewis’s notoriously difficult allegoric autobiography. Not only do I applaud Downing’s wonderful offering, I also make a public plea: Please tackle Till We Have Faces next!

9. Karen Swallow Prior, Fierce Convictions: The Extraordinary Life of Hannah More — Poet, Reformer, Abolitionist (Thomas Nelson). Not much here to add beyond my endorsement: “When Christ shed his blood for women he forever exalted them to their true and undeniable dignity, Hannah More has said. Blood-bought dignity was the bedrock for all her fierce convictions. She cultivated her intellect and imagination, and helped other women do the same, knowing sharp female minds would magnify Christ-honoring femininity and strengthen marriages, homes, and churches. Abandoned at the altar by her fiancé and never married, More poured out her life to educate women, care for the poor, pen bestselling literature, and help abolish slavery in Britain. She embraced God’s script for her life with tireless zeal. In the pages of this vibrant biography, Karen Swallow Prior paints a living picture of Hannah More: a modest and imaginative woman with the courage to cultivate biblical femininity and the wisdom to avoid the snares of early feminism. Her story must be retold in every generation. Ours is now covered.”

10. Christopher Ash, Job: The Wisdom of the Cross (Crossway). For my money this was easily the best commentary of the year. Typical of the Preaching the Word series, Ash is given a lot of freedom to bypass technicalities and to concentrate his attention on the theological interpretation of each passage, keeping his focus honed on the storyline momentum as the book of Job unfolds. All of this makes for a rare commentary you can sit down and read from cover to cover, and all of it written in light of the perfect work of Jesus Christ. This commentary is a spectacular achievement!

 

11. Michael Reeves, Christ Our Life (Paternoster, UK), or, Rejoicing in Christ (IVP, US). I read everything by Reeves and this book proves again why. This book is loaded with Tweetable statements, pithy, wise, and mature thoughts that will offer you a lifetime of meditation, like this one: “Nothing is more holy than a heartfelt delight in Christ.” Just think on that for a while. The book was first released in the UK this year, and IVP plans to release it in the States in March under the new title Rejoicing in Christ. If Charles Spurgeon was right — “There is no joy in this world like union with Christ. The more we can feel it, the happier we are.” — then prepare yourself to delight. Pre-order it, read it, and feast on the glories of Christ.

12. Hannah Anderson, Made for More: An Invitation to Live in God’s Image (Moody). We complementarians can sometimes over-emphasize what makes men and women different at the expense of celebrating our commonalities as fellow heirs of the grace of God and fellow image bearers of him in this world. This book is a good correction. Hannah has proven herself to be a sharp thinker and a genuinely skilled prose stylist, and I hope to improve as a writer by watching how she does it. While this book may not quite go far enough at points, and it may go a little too far at others, for now let me simply say, Hannah has delivered a provocative book to help complementarians steer clear of a gulch on the right.

13. Thomas Kidd, George Whitefield: America’s Spiritual Founding Father (Yale). What George Marsden did for Jonathan Edwards, Thomas Kidd has done for George Whitefield. The difference is that all the excitement of Whitefield’s ministry is packed into 263 pages! As Kidd sets out to prove: “George Whitefield was the key figure in the first generation of Anglo-American evangelical Christianity. Whitefield and legions of other evangelical pastors and laypeople helped establish a new interdenominational religious movement in the eighteenth century, one committed to the gospel of conversion, the new birth, the work of the Holy Spirit, and the preaching of revival across Europe and America. Until now, we have not had a scholarly biography of Whitefield that places him fully in the dynamic, fractious milieu of the early evangelical movement.” Kidd has set a new benchmark in Whitefield studies.

14. Daniel Montgomery and Timothy Paul Jones, PROOF: Finding Freedom through the Intoxicating Joy of Irresistible Grace (Zondervan). Sharp and witty, this overview of the heart of Calvinist soteriology is not only solid orthodoxy, it’s also a model for how to communicate ancient theology in a fresh style. If you’re looking for a new book to help you magnify God for his sovereign grace, or to help explain it to your friends, this is a gem worth considering.

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Book Review: Love & Respect

The love she most desires …. The respect he desperately needs.

Author: Dr Emerson Eggerichs : Reviewed by Joseph & Lisa Beattie

Love & Respect (HC)

A wife has one driving need,to feel loved.  When that need is met, she is happy.  A husband has one driving need, to feel respected.  When that need is met, he is happy.  When either of these needs isn’t met, things get crazy. Love and Respect reveals why spouses react negatively to each other, and how they can deal with such conflict quickly, easily, and biblically.

Scripture is delightfully expounded in his book. Using Ephesians 5:33, Eggerichs highlights and unravels a deep underlying practice, that if taken to heart by both husband and wife truly gives  meaning to the Apostle Paul’s claim that marriage is indeed a mystery.

Using this Biblical basis, Eggerich’s vulnerability and realness of his own relationship with his wife is laid out and reasoned with his expounding of the Biblical text. This is shown in a pragmatic and simplistic way in the cycle’s of Energising and Reward. Highly recommended for any couple, Love and Respect can bring out both the most desired love and needed respect in any marriage.

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Book Review: Sunday’s Best

Messages from Today’s most outstanding Christian Leaders.

Sundays's BestA powerful message can reinvigorate the soul like little else.  Part bible study, pastoral encouragement, spiritual challenge and at time old-fashioned storytelling- a wonderful sermon can change lives.

Published in conjunction with Preaching Today, this book is a collection of twenty extraordinary sermons by today’s most influential pastors. Their diverse voices and styles will make you feel like you’ve just visited some of the most vibrant communities of worship. Contributors include:-

  • Timothy Keller;
  • John Ortberg;
  • Craig Groeschel;
  • Francis Chan;
  • Mark Dever … and more

Whether you dip into this book for occasional inspiration or read it in one sitting, you are sure to come away with extraordinary food for thought and nourishment for the soul.

CBD PRICE: R185.00

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Equip Book of the Month: December

A Life Already Started: Dr Megan Best

Finding a positive path in an unplanned pregnancy…

Life Already Started, AWhen you are faced with an unwanted pregnancy, it may feel like the walls are closing in, and you are overwhelmed with choices:

  • Should you terminate?
  • Should you keep the baby or adopt it out?
  • Should you tell the father?
  • Your parents?
  • Where will you live and how will you deal with finances?

Don’t panic, God has not left you to manage on your own. This immensely practical book looks at all the options from a Christian perspective, starting with the realization that the child in the womb is ‘already a life’ and that this should be the place to move forward from. A life already started also looks at how we, as God’s people, can genuinely love and support women who did not intend to become pregnant.

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