Book Reviews From 2012

BookshelfHere is a list of the books I read in 2012. Click on any title to read the review I posted.

Amazing Grace In The Life Of William Wilberforce

Artificial Maturity

Billy Graham In Quotes

Christian Disciplines

Conformed To His Image

Disciples Indeed

Discovering Your Spiritual Center

Dreaming in 3D

Fearless

Forgotten God

Freedom Begins Here

From Santa To Sexting

Good News Of Great Joy

Grace

Grace Abounding To The Chief Of Sinners

Grant: Savior Of The Union

Helping People Win At Work

I Am A Follower

Live Dead

Love, Sex & Happily Ever After

Men Of The Bible

Morning & Evening

My Utmost For His Highest

Nurturing The Leader Within Your Child

Pastor Dad

Porn-Again Christian

Praying Circles Around Your Children

Relentless

Secret Power

Spirit Rising

The 21-Day Dad’s Challenge

The Book Of Man

The Circle Maker

The Gospel Of Yes

The Greatest Thing In The World

The Inner Chamber & The Inner Life

The Necessity Of An Enemy

The Questions Christians Hope No One Will Ask

The Return Of Sherlock Holmes

The Treasure Principle

The Truth About Forgiveness

Through My Eyes

Today We Are Rich

True Vine

What Is He Thinking??

What Matters Most

What Would Jesus Read?

When Work & Family Collide

Why Jesus?

I am looking forward to sharing more great reads with you in 2013. If there are any books you would like me to review, please let me know. (If you are interested in seeing my list of book reviews for 2011, please click here.)

When A Christian Goes To Prison

Special Guest Blogger: Dick Brogden

Over two weeks ago some very good friends and colleagues were arrested by security police. Two men representing two families, and there has been minimal contact. Their wives are still unable to see their husbands after two long weeks. Events like these help us remember and pray through our priorities. We must approach these situations with the long term view in mind.

Emotionally this is very hard to do. When we are in the middle of the situation our priority naturally shifts to the welfare (and in our minds this means the release) of our loved one. I am not so sure God’s priority ever shifts. There are several things more important than the health and comfort and release of the incarcerated.  Let me list some of them:

1)  THE GLORY OF GOD

It is informative how central prison is to the plan of God. Joseph, Jeremiah, John the Baptist, James, Peter, Paul, and many others in Scripture and history all testify to God being glorified in confinement. We remind ourselves with Joseph that it is not about us, and that what “man intended

for evil, God intended for good.” We encourage ourselves in the Pauline Epistles and forget that many of them were written from prison repose.

2)  THE CREDIBILITY OF THE GOSPEL

When followers of Jesus go to prison, it puts the gospel on display. Do we live what we preach? Do we believe what we say? Is God enough? Is Jesus our strong tower? Is the Holy Spirit a comfort? Are these platitudes of the insulated or are they truths burned into our souls by trial? When missionaries suffer well, it sends a message to indigenous believers (who suffer much more than we do) that Jesus is indeed worth suffering for and that we are in solidarity with their difficulty. Suffering well also is a witness to our tormentors. Athanasius insisted that one of the proofs of the resurrection was the joy with which women and children faced physical abuse and death.

3)  THE CHARACTER OF THE PRISONER AND HIS FAMILY

God works in us when we are stripped down, confined, abused, and mistreated. There is a joy in the fellowship of His sufferings. The seldom-experienced (for we fear the process) reward of prison and persecution is unimaginable intimacy with Jesus, which delights our soul. Tales from the released surprise us as they pine for the good old days of the cement cell because Jesus’ presence was unmitigated and pristine. God also works in the hearts of spouses and children in these admittedly painful times, if we let Him.

All the above are more important than the health and release of the captive. This is not callous, this is Christ. It is not about us and it is not about our security. Helen Keller—who knew much about being confined—said,

Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature, nor do children of men as a whole experience it. Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run that outright exposure. Life is either a daring adventure, or nothing.

If we take the short view, we move heaven and earth to see our loved one released. In one sense this is admirable. In another sense, it can be self-serving. When I was arrested some years ago, I appreciated the efforts of those working to free me, but I would have been livid if they pursued my freedom in such a way that affected my longevity in the land (and among the people) I have been called to serve—and die for if necessary. The long term view undergirds the prisoner in his lonely cell. He does not want a frantic, panicked effort to release him. He wants to stay in the country after his release. He does not want external voices to shame the local authorities or force his expulsion … that can be a fate more cruel than lonely prison days.

Those who speak to us from prison say, “We are fine. Jesus is real. We are being upheld by the Holy Spirit and are in sweet communion with the Father. Don’t worry about us. Don’t panic. Don’t rush the process. We are improving our language skills, we have plenty of time to pray, we are witnessing to our captors. We appreciate your efforts, but we beg of you: proceed slowly and respectfully, for our greatest desire is for Jesus to be glorified in the process and to continue exalting Him in this beloved land (if at all possible) even after our release. So if we have to sit here a few extra weeks or months, so be it.”

Time is on the side of the righteous. Let’s remember who really is in prison after all, and let’s take the long term view, let’s endure what we must that THEY may be set free.

And what of the children of the imprisoned? If you are interested, read the letter I wrote to the children of our dear imprisoned friend—children we love as much as we love our own. It is what I want someone to tell my boys if I ever go back to prison or if we ever are asked to lay down our lives for Jesus.

The Land Of Gospel Gall

Guest Blogger Dick Brogden

This Saturday Jenn and I took the boys to the dollar theatre to see the claymation film Pirates: Band of Misfits. A half-hour in I was in so much pain (could have been the British humor). I left the theatre and walked around the parking lot, vomiting a few times. I tried to tough it out but the pain got worse so I went back in and asked Jenn to take me to the hospital. Dignity seems to be an optional thing. I was writhing in the car and karate kicking the air until the medics could get some pain medicine into me. My gall bladder had declared war. I was admitted to the hospital, and Sunday morning the surgeons went in and Mr. Gall is gone.

Being wheeled on the stretcher to my room, exposed and vulnerable, I noticed my attendant was from the Middle East. His name was Mohammed and he is from Cairo. I told him I loved his country, loved Muslims, loved Jesus, and wanted him to go to Heaven. We had a nice little conversation about the Gospel and Jesus the only sin bearer. I dug him no well, I gave him no water, I taught him no English—he in fact was serving me kindly and gently, but I was able to tell him about Jesus. Who knows, maybe for the first time.

A YWAM friend of mine in Egypt some years ago, decided to take the Gospel literally by not taking anything. He made an exception for a toothbrush which he stuck in his pocket and then he began to walk through the desert, from village to village. Some villages were distant and he would stumble into them hot, thirsty, dirty, and fatigued. The Muslims would take him in, feed him, host him, give him a white robe, wash his clothes, and care for him. He had nothing to give them, nothing to offer back—except everything. He sat with them in their living rooms and shared with them the Gospel—what God has done in Christ.

I am not the gospel. You are not the gospel. The gospel is what God has done, is doing, and will do in Christ. We (in the West) increasingly believe in the Gospel plus. Embarrassed of the exclusive claims of Christ, some of our action (not all) is because we want to self-adorn the gospel. Truth is, God is true and the gospel stands whether or not I am false or laid out on a stretcher. The gall of the Gospel is that it is not about me, it’s not about what I do—the Gospel is all about what God has done in Christ.

Do not read this as a call to license, to falsehood, or to removal from the world. We attack evil wherever we find it, we minister in word, sign, and deed to body, soul, and spirit—but let’s remember that we and what we do is not the gospel. Let’s proclaim the good news about what God has done in Christ. Let’s do it from weakness—Gospel Gall—it really is not about us or what we can give. God gave His only Son. What can we possibly add to that?

Book Reviews From 2011

Here is the complete list of books I read in 2011. Click on each title to be taken to my review…

7 Habits Of Highly Effective Teens

A Collection Of Wednesdays

A Treasury Of A.W. Tozer

Abandon The Ordinary

Average Joe

Be A People Person

Be The People

Biblical Ethics

Biblical Psychology

Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy

Bringing Sons Unto Glory

Chazown

City On Our Knees

Costly Grace

Doing Virtuous Business

Elite Prayer Warriors

Enemies Of The Heart

Experiencing The Spirit

Fasting

For Men Only

From The Library Of A.W. Tozer

Galileo

Generation iY

George Washington Carver

Get Off Your Knees And Pray

Go For Gold

God Is The Gospel

Has God Spoken?

Home And Away

How The Mighty Fall

How To Read The Bible

How To Win Friends And Influence People

I Knew Jesus Before He Was A Christian

In Visible Fellowship

Leadership Gold

Leadership Is Dead

Leadership Prayers

Lee: A Life Of Virtue

Letters From Leaders

MacArthur: America’s General

Max On Life

Me, Myself & Bob

Never Surrender

Night

On The Verge

Peach

Plugged-In Parenting

Radical Together

Remember Why You Play

Say It With Love

Secure Daughters, Confident Sons

Sherman: The Ruthless Victor

Smith Wigglesworth On Faith

Soul Work

Soulprint

Stuff Christians Life

Sun Stand Still

The Blessing Of Adversity

The Church In Exile

The Heart Of A Great Pastor

The Hour That Matters Most

The Next Christians

The Seed

Toxic Committees & Venomous Boards

untamed

Upside

Wandering In The Wilderness

We Shall See God

Whale Done

What The Bible Says About The Holy Spirit

Why God Won’t Go Away

Why Great Men Fall

You Were Born For This

Looking forward to sharing more great reads with you in 2012! Let me know if there are any books you would like me to review.

The Land Of Tumors

My cousin Dick Brogden is one of my heroes. He has faithfully followed God to some of the toughest places on the planet to share the love of Jesus. He continues to grow in his relationship with Jesus Christ, and challenges me to grow as well.

Check out these challenging words an amazing prayer journal that Dick edited called Live Dead:

Greetings From The Land Of Tumors

Three weeks ago I started getting dizzy when I stood up. Over the next few days my vision began to blur and a headache set in behind my eyes that has not left. My eyes felt like they were being pushed out from the inside, and after 2 pm it was hard to keep them open. I went to the neo-omniscient internet and diagnosed myself with a brain tumor. Yesterday I went to the doctor. He ordered a CAT scan and the result was encouraging: There is nothing in my head. The doctor had some ridiculous advice for me like getting more sleep and working less.

Flying home to Chicago from Pennsylvania this week I asked myself what I would do if I did have a tumor. My thoughts initially turned to eating a dozen Twinkies, and coughing up the $500 it would cost to take my sons to a Chicago Bears game before settling on this:

If I had a tumor, I’d hammer in the morning.
I’d hammer in the evening, all over this town.
I’d hammer out gospel, I’d hammer out warning
I’d hammer out love and truth to brothers and sisters
—all over this land.

Now that I don’t have a tumor, I have decided to live like I do. This is after all what it means to Live Dead. Dying to what people think. Dying to what doesn’t matter. Living every moment to make Jesus famous, to make much of Him, to see God glorified. Let’s all live with imaginary tumors. Let’s live as if we are dying—which incidentally we are.

Land Of Smoke

Guest Blogger: Dick Brogden

Greetings From the Land of Smoke,

A Christian handed a Bible to a Northern Sudanese Muslim Arab who declined to receive it saying, “I have a smoking problem. If I take the Bible, I will just rip out the pages, make cigarettes, and smoke them.”

Thanks be to God, the distributor did not stand on niceties and responded, “No problem, go ahead and rip the pages out to make your cigarettes. But before you roll them, make sure to read the page you ripped out.”

The Muslim man agreed, took the Bible and began to contemplatively smoke his way through the Gospels. Daily he would rip out a page, peruse it, then roll it into a cigarette and puff away. Matthew, Mark, and Luke all were read and then immolated. By the time the smoker had inhaled his way into John, the Holy Spirit had begun to draw as well. John 3:16 was the clincher—it was after smoking that chapter and verse that this Muslim man gave his heart to Jesus.

I guess it goes to prove that where there’s smoke, there is fire!

Dick Brogden and his family have served as missionaries in Sudan for 15 years.

Comparative Religion Class In Sudan

Guest Author: Dick Brogden

There is a wonderful Egyptian Mission agency active in Sudan that exists to give Christ’s living water to the last, least, and lost.  One annual ministry they provide is a Book and Bible exhibition in the middle of downtown Khartoum.  They sell Christian books and Bibles, show Christian films, and host lectures on aspects of the Christian faith.  The exhibition is set up in an empty lot that opens on the major downtown avenue and is open to all.

Last month during the exhibition, five buses pulled up and 150 veiled-to-the-eyes Muslim women plodded out.  They were the first year students from a local Islamic University.  Their professor of comparative religion, Dr. Yathrub, decided they needed to interact with some Christians.  The 150 women were respectful, participated in the events, and took home some free literature as a gift.  Dr. Yathrub asked if she could return with the 4th year students.

A couple days later, five more buses, and 150 more Muslim women, most veiled-to-the-eyes showed up.  One hundred of them marched right to the lecture tent and asked if the lecturer could address the issue of the unity of God and the Trinity.  The staff obliged and a wonderful question and answer time followed.  Again, all the students were kind, earnest, and respectful in their interaction.  They too were given a free Christian book titled, “Did Jesus ever claim to be God?” and went home happy.  Dr. Yathrub asked if she could bring the entire year 2 and 3 students, and of course the staff of the event agreed.

The next day Dr. Yathrub called to apologize.  She could not make it nor bring the other students.  Evidently, 300 veiled Muslim women marching around the campus happily reading, discussing, and sharing Christian material was too much for the administration and they opened an investigation of censure against Dr. Yathrub.  To her credit she did not back down, insisting that in comparative religious studies you must be free to compare religions.  A novel and dangerous idea.

Would you join us in praise and prayer.  Praise God that 300 Muslim women were gracious and brave enough to visit the exhibition.  Pray that the words they heard, and the literature they now posses, would be used of the Holy Spirit to delight their hearts in Jesus and unveil their spirits.  Praise God for the courage for Dr. Yathrub.  Would you pray with us that God would reward her with Himself and unveil Jesus to her.  Praise God for the Living Water Team.  Please pray that they continue to be bold and loving in witness and that as a result they too experience a mighty refreshing.

Land Of Combustion

Guest Author: Dick Brogden

Wilson is a Southern Sudanese Christian who heads the bio water filter project in Eastern Sudan. Made from local materials (cement, gravel, sand) these three-foot-high filters can provide clean water to whole families. In the last two years, Wilson has made and placed over 600 filters, primarily in Muslim homes. This service has opened the door for him to share his faith in Jesus.

A few weeks ago, a Muslim family approached Wilson with a problem. Their home was full of demonic activity. Furniture would be moved around in the night, items in the house would spontaneously combust, the bursting flames destroying many family possessions.

The Muslim family consulted a Muslim Sheikh who demanded $10,000 to exorcise the house. He came, did his Islamic chants, and left a Koran for the family to use to ward off the evil. That night, the Koran burst into flames and was destroyed. In desperation, the family turned to Wilson.

Wilson turned them to Jesus. He explained that protection follows Lordship and that the family had to repent of sin and turn to Jesus as Savior in order to be under His covering. Not rushing things, he took adequate time to walk the family through what it meant to be a sinner and for Jesus to be the only Savior. The family openly confessed their sin, repented, and invited Jesus to be Lord and Savior. Only then did Wilson walk through the house praying over every room.

When Wilson left, he gave the family a Bible. “Oh no,” they said, “We do not want this to burst into flames as well.” Wilson gently told them that this was the real Word of God, and that as the house now was under the protection of Jesus all would be well.

The next morning the new believers called Wilson. “This is great!” they said. “No demons, and nothing has happened to the Bible.”

Water and Fire. What a great combination.

Dick Brogden and his family have served as missionaries in Sudan for 14 years.