Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Spiritual Leadership Classic

Spiritual Leadership

Now in audio!

This is a wonderful resource that can be downloaded free for the month of September 2010. After all these years, this book is still a leading resource for spiritual leadership. Highly recommended. You can download the audio resource for J Oswald Sanders' "Spiritual Leadership" here. Use the coupon SEP2010 to download it free of charge for the month of September 2010.

conrade

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Free Audio Book - "Forgotten God"

One of the key distinctiveness of Regent-College is its particular emphasis on Trinitarian theology. In nearly every lecture, there is a reminder from professors that God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit. I remember hearing it drummed up so often that I find myself becoming more Trinitarian than before.

Francis Chan, a rising evangelical star in the United States has written a second book, that is focused on the Holy Spirit. Even among Churches that proclaim to worship the Triune God, sometimes, the focus tends to be more on God the Father, and Jesus. Hence the title of this book, "Forgotten God" is to help us remember this third member of the Triune Godhead. For those of us who have graduated, and yearns for some spiritual nourishment from time to time, ChristianAudio.com generously makes available a premier audio book each month. For the month of June 2010, you can download the entire audio book by Francis Chan absolutely free of charge. All you need is a computer, an Internet connection and a brief account set up Enjoy. The website is here. Use JUN2010 when you checkout your shopping cart, and your download will be free.

conrade

Thursday, May 20, 2010

NT Wright on Blogging

Thanks to our blogger Regent Alum, Matt Jones, I learn about this little quote from NT Wright about physical anger and habits being transferred to the blogsphere. I find his writeup insightful. Thanks Matt for spotting this. Do check out his website for other great blog articles.

I checked out the book and found more of Wright's perceptive words.
"Everything is interconnected, and when people feel the floor shaking and the furniture wobbling, they get scared. Test this out. Go to the blogsites, if you dare. It really is high time we developed a Christian ethic of blogging. Bad temper is bad temper even in the apparent privacy of your own hard drive, and harsh and unjust words, when released into the wild, rampage around and do real damage. And as for the practice of saying mean and untrue things while hiding behind a pseudonym - well, if I get a letter like that it goes straight in the bin. But the cyberspace equivalents of road rage doesn’t happen by accident. People who type vicious, angry, slanderous and inaccurate accusations do so because they feel their worldview to be under attack. Yes, I have pastoral concern for such people. (And, for that matter, a pastoral concern for anyone who spends more than a few minutes a day taking part in blogsite discussion, especially when they all use code names: was it for this that the creator God made human beings?) But sometimes worldviews have to be shaken. They may become idolatrous and self-serving. And I fear that the has happened, and continues to happen, even in well-regulated, shiny Christian contexts - including, of course, my own." (NT Wright, Justification: God's Plan and Paul's Vision, Downers Grove,IL: IVP, 2009, p26-7)

Of course, the context of Wright's argument here is that what is considered a 'new perspective of Paul' is not exactly a new rocket-science idea. What the blogging platform has provided is to transfer (not transform) an old perspective from the offline terrain to the online domain. In other words, some things have not changed. Describing his 35 years of writing on the subject of Paul, his experience with detractors has NOT been 'disagreement' but failing to meet his opponents' expectations and 'wants' (20). Moreover, Wright claims that those who disagree with him often did not listen in the first place.

Wright is precisely right. As I reflect, blogging does not change the person. It is simply a change of platforms. What was previously paper is now electronic. Self-publishing is overtaking conventional publishing. Distribution by hand is replaced by distribution by wire (and wireless!) In other words, the content may be the same but the medium is different. Whether the medium has changed or not, people has not changed. Didn't they say that a leopard does not change its spots?

At the end of the day, we need to remember that for all views whether online or offline, God is watching.

conrade

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

"Love is a Feeling to be Learned"

This is a small little booklet. It is only a short 37 pages long, but is not short on its message. I read it when I was still single. In a world which often puts happiness as synonymous with good feelings, the late Trobisch drives home the point that love is much greater. It covers a wide variety of emotions. We need to be constantly educated on what love actually is. We are called to learn what love is, and in this instance, feelings too have to be learned. I love this quote. It is applicable for both married and unmarried.



"Love is a feeling to be learned.
It is anxiety and contentment.
It is deep yearning and hostility.
It is pleasure and it is pain.
There is not one without the other.
Happiness is only a part of love.
Suffering belongs to love also.
This is the mystery of love,
its beauty and its burden.

Love is a feeling to be learned.
"

[Walter Trobisch, Love is a Feeling to be Learned, Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1971, p9]

conrade