Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Inferno by Dan Brown - 462 Pages


The latest from Dan Brown, Inferno puts the (apparently Tom Hanks in a mullet lookalike) Robert Langdon in Florence, Italy and races him around through familiar landmarks, medieval literature, and short cliffhanging chapters in a desperate quest to stop a biological weapon.  If you are familiar with Dan Brown, you know what to expect...and you won't be disappointed.  Having read three Dan Brown novels, this was my favorite as it was the least crass and had the least amount of cheap shots at the Bible and faith of the Brown books I've read.

A quick, entertaining, guilty pleasure.

Sunday, October 6, 2013

World War Z by Max Brooks - 352 pages



I saw the movie this summer and while not an amazing movie, I was interested enough to check out the book that it was based on.  As always, the book is better (and different) than the movie.  What I liked most about the movie forms the core of the book. Told from many different perspectives, WWZ isn't so much about zombies as it is about exploring how different cultures and world views would react to a global catastrophe, bringing out the best and worst of us. I found it to be an interesting and entertaining discussion of geopolitical, economic, social, and moral case studies...oh ya and it has zombies!  

King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa by Adam Hochschild - 366 Pages



Years ago, I remember while on a morning walk in Queen Elizabeth National Park in Uganda, watching off in the distance as the morning mist rolled in over Mount Stanley, part of the mountain range that makes up the border between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.  During my time in Uganda I had heard many stories for the first time about the spiritual, political, and social darkness as well as the amazing beauty and people of that massive country.  As I stood there taking in the beauty and mystery of the scene, I felt that whatever the future brought, the DRC would be part of it.  Originally I thought that call was a call to pursue missions in the DRC.  This seemed to be confirmed when the church I was working at in Los Angeles began to share our building with a congregation of dear Congolese brethren, many of whom where recent refugees from DRC.

For the time being it does not look like God is is leading us to live and work in DRC.  However, we believe that He has called us to be involved with DRC in a much more intimate way.  We are in the process of adopting two twins from DRC and making them part of our family.  That is another story in itself, one that you can follow here.

As God has kept DRC on our mind and heart, now is making it part of our family, Sarah and I have begun to look for resources to help us understand the history and culture of this vast country.  That's where King Leopold's Ghost comes in.

It's hard to know where to start in praising this book.  Although a work of historical nonfiction, it reads like a thriller.  It would be a fantastically entertaining story...if it weren't true.  You couldn't make up some of these characters - A heroic, homosexual with an English Bulldog, a Baptist missionary, an obese slimy lawyer, Mark Twain, Joseph Conrad, countless (literally) African victims, Parisian courtesans - the list goes on and on.

In reality it is truly haunting.  The extent to which this one man was able to exploit such a vast population and area is horrifying.  Yet it is in understanding this history that one begins to understand how such instability and corruption exists in the region today.  I do need to say that Hochschild, while focusing on the depravity of King Leopold and the type of people his exploitative rule attracted, doesn't gloss over the depravity of the other parties - African, Arab, and American alike.  However the extent to which Leopold oppressed the people of the Congo has few parallels in the history of injustice.

This book hit me in a personal place. These are people I know.  Now through adoption, these are people I am related to.  It is one thing to read about atrocities that happened in an exotic far away place in a time very different from our own.  It is quite another to read about your kids great - great -grandparents being treated like animals, and to see your kids living in the fallout of racist, imperialistic, systematic explotation today.

This is one of the best and most important books I have read in a long time.  I highly recommend it.



Saturday, October 5, 2013

Dispensationalism: Essential Beliefs and Common Myths by Michael J. Vlach - 73 pages





Great, short survey of Dispensationalist core assertions and common misunderstandings.  A great introduction not only to this eschatological view, but also to hermeneutics.  Any productive conversation about eschatology needs to start by truly understanding the views represented in the discussion and this concise book lays a great foundation for understanding what Dispensationalists believe.

Recommended as a good starting point for adherents and challengers of Dispensationalism alike.

Sanctification in the Everyday by John Piper - 50 pages



Three classic Piper sermons on the subject of sanctification in e-book form.  Great, soul-feeding truth.  Get it free here!

"...in every case, the decisive impulse for our holiness and our sin-killing is the death of Christ.  Which means that the decisive power for our conquering sin is Christ's canceling sin.  That is, the only sin that we can defeat is a forgiven sin."

"By the world's standards we may accomplish much without Christ (like build an institution, or produce a blockbuster movie).  But from God's perspective, without Christ our lives are like little, shriveled, fruitless twigs."

"Sin can't enslave a person who is utterly confident and sure and hope-filled in the infinite happiness of life with Christ in the future."

When God Comes Calling by Ted Fletcher - 172 pages


Good Missionary biographies are at once engrossing and instructive.  When God Comes Calling excels at both.  It starts out as an autobiography by Ted Fletcher, the founder of Pioneers, a missions agency that seeks to bring the Gospel the least reached and most inaccessible people groups on earth.  Fletcher tells about hearing the Gospel on the front lines of the Korean War as a Recon Marine.  After the war Fletcher became one of the senior editors of the Wall Street Journal.  Yet in all of that success, he and his wife Peggy, felt a call to be part of something more eternally significant.  After years of being rejected by traditional missionary agencies, they decided to start their own - Pioneers.

In the second half of the book, Fletcher leaves his story behind and instead tells of the amazing things God has done through Pioneers.  I found it instructive that even in his autobiography Fletcher rarely talked about himself, but wrote about the men and women of Pioneers, those who have come to faith through their work, and above all - His Savior.

The last chapter is a beautiful tribute to Ted, and God's work in and through him written by his wife Peggy.

Sarah and I hope to join Pioneers this year in preparation for missions work in Southeast Asia.  This book has confirmed that this agency has a Christ-centered, Gospel-driven ethos and we look forward of becoming a small part of the faithful legacy that God has given the Fletchers.