Showing posts with label Recommendations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recommendations. Show all posts

Monday, July 28, 2008

The New Francis Schaeffer Bio

Steve West has an interesting review here of Colin Duriez' new biography of Francis Schaeffer, one interesting enough (and by a trusted source) to cause me to already order the book. Here's an excerpt:

...What it is is the best biographical treatment of the man and his mission that has ever been written --- scholarly, without being pedantic or lifeless; sufficiently nuanced, without chasing every thread of the man’s life and work; sympathetic, and yet not avoiding the truth about the man’s weaknesses and struggles. If you want to feel what animated Francis and Edith Schaeffer, to be caught up in the emotion of what they felt, read Edith’s Tapestry and L’Abri. (Set aside sufficient time for their combined 906 pages, however!) But this is the biography for most to read, as it is concise [208 pages] and yet comprehensive enough not to miss any important detail of their story...

Colin Duriez, by the way, is an Englishman who has written extensively on the Inklings (The C. S. Lewis Handbook, Tolkien and C.S. Lewis: The Gift of Friendship, The Inklings Handbook, Tolkien And The Lord Of The Rings: A Guide To Middle-earth et al) as well as other books including AD 33: The Year That Changed the World and The Poetic Bible. Duriez won the Clyde S. Kilby Award in 1994 for his work.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Looking for Help After an Abortion?

"How you can find hope, help and healing after abortion?"

Leslie Graves has an extremely informative article which answers the above question -- an article written with compassion, grace and wide-ranging knowledge.

You'll find it, along with many other helpful resources, at the Silent No More website.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

And The Point Is...

Just a reminder to make The Point a frequent rest stop on your cyberspace travels. I do. Here's just a few samples from recent days to show you why it's a very valuable site.

* Links to Chuck Colson's latest (and one of his most compelling) commentaries on Communist China's cruel disregard of human rights AND a detailed BreakPoint Fact Sheet listing numerous resources dealing with the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.

* Regular Point contributor Diane Singer alerted visitors to this stirring CBS news video about Atlanta's judge Marvin Arrington and his blunt, "tough love"message to the black community.

* Gina Dalfonzo's call to drop the "S" word along with a link to a rigorous NRO editorial decrying the MSM's ongoing campaign of malfeasance, misinformation, mud-slinging against the Swift Boat veterans.

* And just one more of many I could list, Kim Moreland's summary of an article published in the July/August online edition of the Atlantic.

The saddest part of this Atlantic article (profanity alert) is that it was a predictable outcome from a governmental initiative. The story goes that housing officials decided it best to tear down inner-city Section 8 housing and move residents to suburban neighborhoods in hopes of creating better living conditions for the poor. But the law of unintended consequences can now be felt in burbs across the country.

What's happened is the poor have congregated in once low-crime neighborhoods and criminals and gangs have followed them. So many suburban neighborhoods are now experiencing "an epidemic of violence.”...

Can't Come to Cambridge This Summer? Then Let Cambridge Come to You!

If your summer vacation plans take you to England, be sure to put a walking tour of Cambridge on your itinerary. And make sure that your tour is guided by the engaging, knowledgeable and dedicated scholars of Christian Heritage Cambridge. Claire and I can personally testify that it is an illuminating experience not to be missed.

After all, you'll learn why Cambridge has for centuries been such an outstanding and important university. And how it is linked to the Reformation, the founding of the United States of America, the abolition of the Slave Trade, the development of modern science, and to such giants on the world's stage as Isaac Newton, Francis Bacon, Oliver Cromwell, William Wilberforce, C.S. Lewis and so many more.

And if, by chance, you're not going to make it over to the UK real soon, I'd advise you to do the next best thing to that walking tour of Cambridge. And that's to brew up, lay out some scones or biscuits on a tray, and treat your family and friends to a viewing of "Saints and Scholars," the video from Christian Heritage Cambridge that not only serves as a great introduction to the history of Cambridge but vividly describes why and how Cambridge has played such a foundational role in the development of Western Culture.

The "Saints and Scholars" DVD can be purchased for £8.00. (That's about $16.) And here's the specific page where you can order the DVD. (And remember, if you live in the USA, make sure you order the NTSC version.)

Monday, July 14, 2008

Here's UK News & Commentary You Can Trust

Dr. Greg Gardner over in Birmingham, England sends along to visitors of Vital Signs (particularly those interested in the latest engagements of the culture war in the UK) a couple of very good news and commentary sources -- reputable, relevant and rightly purposed.

1) The Christian Institute is a nondenominational Christian charity committed to upholding the truths of the Bible with it's resources designed to promote the Christian religion in the United Kingdom. The CI also helps inform Christians of how the issues of the day relate to their biblical obligations and assists Christians in the normal practice of their faith through CI's fine legal team.

A case in point, both in the CI's legal assistance and the subsequent news coverage of the affair, is a Christian from Islington whose job was threatened because she asked to opt out from performing civil partnership registrations involving homosexual couples. With the CI's help, the employment tribunal unanimously decided that the Christian woman had been directly discriminated against by the Islington Council because of her faith-based request.

Here's that story from the Christian Institute website and here is the page linking you to more detailed information about the organization itself, including a faith statement and positions on key issues.

2) Christian Concern for our Nation describes itself as "an organisation that exists to serve the Church by providing information to enable Christians to stand up publicly against a tide of unchristian legal and political changes in the United Kingdom. It brings together focused legal, policy and media expertise and strategic intervention in order to secure favourable legal and political outcomes in areas of concern... CCFON was established to inform and empower Christians to speak with a coherent and cohesive voice against ungodly and unjust laws, and to speak up for righteousness and justice..."

This organization also hosts a website that is an excellent source of information, an example of which is this Andrea Williams’s summary of just where pro-life Britons are in their struggles against the monstrous Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill recently passed by Parliament and now awaiting possible amendments.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Checking in With Eternal Perspectives -- Always a Profitable Thing To Do

Not surprisingly, Randy Alcorn has some terrific articles in the summer edition of Eternal Perspectives -- "What Does a Cross Bearer Look Like?", "The Relationship Between the Holy Spirit and the Word of God", one that lists his favorite books (in various genres, no less), and a particularly able answer to the question, "Doesn’t the concept of tithing rob people of the joy of giving?" Very good stuff.

Also in this summer edition of the magazine (a publication of Eternal Perspectives Ministries) is a brief devotional by Charles Spurgeon; a splendid challenge called "The Indispensable Father" by Rick Johnson, excerpted from his book Better Dads, Stronger Sons: How Fathers Can Guide Boys to Become Men of Character; and even a reprint from a Vital Signs Ministries LifeSharer letter written by a venerable sidewalk counselor some of you may know.

As always, Eternal Perspectives Ministries is providing strong, timely help for godly living. They are good people to be roped to.

Self-Command, the Prudent Use of Freedom...and WALL-E

...Some conservatives have dismissed "WALL-E" as a crude critique of business and capitalism. This is only true if capitalism is identical to boundless consumerism -- a conviction that Adam Smith did not seem to share. Smith argued that human flourishing requires "good temper and moderation." Self-command and the prudent use of freedom are central to his moral theory. And these are precisely the virtues celebrated in "WALL-E." The end credits -- worth staying to see -- are a beautiful tribute to art and work, craft and cultivation.

"WALL-E" is partly an environmental parable, but its primary point is moral. The movie argues that human beings, aided by technology, can become imprisoned by their consumption. The pursuit of the latest style leads to conformity. The pursuit of pleasure displaces the deeper enjoyments of affection and friendship. The pursuit of our rhinestone desires manages to obscure our view of the stars....


Read the rest of Michael Gerson's thoughtful commentary right here.

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

WALL-E Revisited

In responding to a friend's e-mail yesterday, I ended up making several more specific comments about the G-rated Pixar film WALL-E than what I had made in an earlier blog post about the movie. Claire read the note and suggested I print them here too. Okay, babe.

But please be forewarned if you haven't already seen the film. There are "spoilers" below!

...We especially liked WALL-E because it was such a surprise. Claire and I rarely go to the movies (we prefer old stuff: Astaire and Rogers, Frank Capra, Bogart, Ronald Colman, Citizen Kane, Marx Brothers, Britain's Ealing Studios, et al) but The Point's links to World and CT about the film were enough for us to check it out.

We found the messages in WALL-E vivid and compelling; especially the critical need for emotion and companionship, the enduring power of hope, and the dangers of monopoly (I think that was much clearer than mere anti-capitalism) as well as the dangers of overindulgence and living life as a consumer/spectator rather than an active adventurer.

Regarding that latter area, what you found depressing was one of the things we found most delightful; that is, the realization of the captain (and at least a few of the other "roly-poly people") that they needed to drastically change. Could they pull it off? You're right; maybe they couldn't. But the effort, requiring as it did a foundation of humility (repentance may be too strong), courage, resolve and hard work? Well, the fact that they were willing to start in was terrific. Thus the film ends with a huge challenge facing the principals, but it ends in hope.


One other connected point -- a major part of that hope is provided by the backwards scan provided by the "camera" at the end of the film, revealing that there's a lot more plants that have made it beside the one they've so honorably saved. It provides a most interesting departure from standard "green" doctrines. Man, even if he does his dead level best to kill a planet, just can't pull it off. Earth is damaged but Earth wins after all. It's an attitude that certainly doesn't lend itself to the global warming mania.


We also liked the grown up subtleties of WALL-E (the old film clips of Hello Dolly, the odd bits WALL-E collected, the jabs at giants like WalMart, the use of the theme from 2001 as background for the captain taking on the computer, and so on) and we loved the touching, powerful romance involved in just holding hands. We've traveled a long road down since the Beatles sang of the same sensation, haven't we?


Plus Claire absolutely loved the sound the little robot made. She's been mimicking it for two days now (Waaallleeee, Eeeevaaaa)...

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

WALL-E -- The Importance of Holding Hands

The lead character in the Pixar film “WALL-E” is both an acronym (Waste Allocation Load Lifter—Earth class) and a lonely robot with a personality. While Pixar has mastered the art of animation, it is the implicit message this film conveys which makes it much more than a mere cartoon.

Some conservatives have written the film off as anti-capitalist propaganda. If the intent of capitalism is to cater to the basest instincts of the human heart, requiring us to indulge our every whim and desire, leading to a dependence on government, then I guess I, too, am an anti-capitalist. However, capitalism can only arrive at that end when all of the restraints of personal responsibility are removed. In this sense, WALL-E is a brilliant exposure of liberalism’s flaws...


After a weekend viewing of “WALL-E,” Claire and I (along with Quint and Carol Coppi) agree with Paul Edwards' positive review of the film. It is a very touching story, well told, inventive and with profound social and spiritual significance. On the surface, it may seem to be a "green" movie but its environmental messages are rationally, responsibly conveyed with a few significant departures from the more radical green propaganda normally touted nowadays.

Your kids may like the film. It will be, on their level, cute and perfect for the inevitable spin off toys and video games.

But thinking adults will like it even more.

Other spiritually-oriented commentaries about “WALL-E” can be found here and here. And, don't forget to read the rest of Paul Edwards' column as well.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Frostys to Help Foster Kids Get Adopted

It's been awhile since I've enjoyed a Frosty from Wendy's but I'm planning on doing so this Father's Day weekend after Kurt Oyer brought to my attention that participating Wendy's restaurants will be donating 50 cents from the sale of every Frosty to the Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption.

The Foundation is the only one of its kind, one dedicated exclusively to foster care adoption and it tirelessly serves to streamline the adoption process and make adoption more affordable for families. Their motto comes from the late Dave Thomas, founder of the restaurant chain and himself an adopted kid, "Do what's best for the child."

So, c'mon; it's a good cause and a delicious treat, so join us at Wendy's this weekend for a Frosty or two.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Families Need Clean Water and Antibiotics, not Population Controllers

Christina Dunigan, who blogs at Real Choice, responds to this Fox News story about Save the Children's latest global report which describes the tragic lack of basic health care for more than 200 million children around the globe.

Kids in developing nations are still dying for lack of basic antibiotics and oral rehydration therapy -- not to mention potable water and basic sanitation.


Which is why I want to throttle people whose solution to poverty is to just throw condoms, [birth control] Pills, and cheap abortions at people. It's adding insult to injury when people are helplessly watching their children die from preventable and treatable diseases, and the rich people "help" them by trying to spay and neuter them like so many stray cats. We don't need Poverty Pimps going in and throwing abortion and contraception at people whose dream is to have a few children who survive to adulthood. They need a chance of survival for their children, not a way to keep them from ever drawing breath in the first place...

Christina suggests looking to Mercy Ships and World Vision as organizations that are doing effective and morally responsible relief and development work. For several reasons, Claire and I have long partnered with Samaritan's Purse and we could not recommend them more highly as well.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Why Did He Choose O'Connor? Reagan's Biggest Mistake

I recently finished Bob Novak's remarkable memoir, The Prince of Darkness: 50 Years of Reporting in Washington, a riveting autobiography of the famed (and immensely successful) journalist which provides a fascinating behind-the-scenes view of America's political happenings of the last half century. It is a great read, giving one plenty to ponder about political philosophy and methodology, culture, ambition, the workings of the media, and even religion (Novak converted to Roman Catholicism late in his life).

And amid the well-crafted pages of The Prince of Darkness (there's nearly 700 of those pages but, not to worry, you'll enjoy every one of them) are such revealing vignettes as this one about Ronald Reagan's selection of Sandra Day O'Connor for the Supreme Court.

...The First Evans & Novak column I wrote after returning from a reporting/family vacation trip to Europe in July 1981 belied Daniel Schorr’s 1980 election night taunting of me as someone who could not criticize President Reagan. By July, I had criticized the new administration for betraying the Reagan Revolution's principles—but never Reagan himself. In my column of Friday, July 10, I crossed that line. Thereafter, many of the president's men viewed me as more of a critic than a supporter.


I received a telephone call on July 8 from William Gribbin, a junior White House aide. I met Bill the previous summer at the Republican convention in Detroit where he was editing the party platform. He was intense and very conservative. I think Bill learned to trust me, and that is why he called now to say he had something important. Unlike many leakers, Gribbin was not interested in currying favor with me or promoting himself was disturbed by the president's announcement the previous day, July 7, that he intended to nominate the nation’s first female Supreme Court justice: fifty-one-year-old Sandra Day O'Connor, a former Republican majority leader of the Arizona State Senate who two years earlier had appointed to the Arizona Court of Appeals by a Democratic governor. Gribbin and the Christian conservatives who had so vigorously supported Reagan for president considered O'Connor unacceptable because of her positions on abortion.

“Why Did He Choose Her?" was the Washington Post's headline on our column about O'Connor. The answer was contained in the document Gribbin gave me: a memo written to the attorney general of the United States by his thirty-five-year-old counselor, Kenneth W. Starr.

Gribbin told me that O'Connor's sponsor was Dave Gergen, who wanted a woman justice to give Reagan a foothold in the movement and distance him from the social conservatives. The formal recommendation, echoing the White House staff, came from Attorney General William French Smith, Reagan's personal attorney and the weakest of the cabinet.

Reagan telephoned Smith on Monday, July 6, when social conservatives erupted after O'Connor's selection leaked—the president's first inkling of how controversial this nomination would be. The president wanted a quick check on complaints that his first Supreme Court selection was pro-abortion. Smith did not have a clue and bucked the question over to a young Ken Starr. On the next day, July 7, Starr handed his boss the two-and-a-half page memo that Gribbin supplied me on July 8. My column, published July 10, called Starr's memo "hurriedly prepared" and "error-filled,” but added that it "convinced" Reagan to go through with the nomination.


Starr's investigation that cleared Judge O'Connor on abortion appeared to consist solely of a telephone interview with her, and she was less than truthful. O'Connor told Starr she could not remember how she voted on a 1979 Arizona legislative bill to legalize abortion. Starr did not look into records showing that Senator O'Connor was a co-sponsor of the measure and voted for it as it lost in committee.


Starr's memo concluded: "Judge O'Connor further indicated in response to my questions that she had never been a leader or outspoken; advocate on behalf of either pro-life or abortion rights organizations. She knows well the Arizona leader of the right-to-life movement, a prominent physician in Phoenix, and has never had any disputes or controversies with her." Starr was referring to Carolyn Gerster. I phoned Gerster, and learned that Starr had not called her. "I had an adversary position with Sandra O'Connor," Gerster told me, calling her "one of the most powerful pro-abortionists in the Senate." Gerster harbored an eleven-year-old grievance against O'Connor for burying an antiabortion proposal in the Senate Republican caucus.

I wrote in the Evans & Novak column of July 10:
"[I]nnocence has departed for right-to-life activists. Dr. Gerster cannot forget a 45-minute meeting with Reagan in Rye, N.Y., on Jan. 17, 1980, in which candidate Reagan promised her that his first appointment to the Court would share their anti-abortion views. She chooses to believe that the President has been misled by advisers.

But the more plausible explanation is that Reagan shares the view of Jim Baker and his other aides that the Moral Majority [the social conservatives] is not vital to his political coalition. He has given that signal by ignoring its sensibilities in selecting Sandra O'Connor."


With this, I burned bridges to the White House, Baker, and maybe the president. Many Republican sources claimed I was overheated and that Sandra O'Connor would turn out fine on abortion. Indeed, Justice O'Connor was a clever politician who in her first years on the court seemed to be voting with conservatives. But before long, she evolved into the swing vote on a five-to-four divided court that nearly always swung left on social issues. In 1993, she voted with the majority upholding the Roe v. Wade decison legalizing abortion. From a conservative standpoint, O'Connor was not the worst choice ever by a Republican president for the Supreme Court, but she was pretty bad. Ronald Reagan, Jim Baker, and Ken Starr were wrong about her, and I was right...

Monday, April 28, 2008

Ben Stein's "Expelled" is a "Tremendous, Compelling Film"

We had an "Expelled" party last Saturday night, a lively conversation shouted over the noise of an equally lively Old Chicago restaurant. And the talk was of Ben Stein's riveting new movie which we had just attended. John and Barb, Matt, Claire and I, Jake, Daniel, Glory and Abraham all believed the film to be an important salvo in not merely the Intelligent Design controversy but in the larger culture war of which it is a part.

And we all recommend "Expelled" to you.

Stein has performed an extraordinary and exemplary service in "Expelled" and I hope many young Americans understand and embrace the message of the film; namely, the incalculable value of intellectual freedom. Sure, the film investigates the arrogance and the closed-mindedness of the Darwinian powers that be and it deftly reveals the wild injustices they've committed against freethinkers.

But the overarching ideal Expelled presents is intellectual freedom. Stein's use of the continuing motif of the Berlin Wall as a metaphor for the tyrant's irrational paranoia set against the yearning of the human spirit for truth was brilliant. As was the whole methodology of the movie. For instance, his use of humorous snippets from old films served not only as entertaining comedic relief but very effective illustrations of his message. His fairness in giving both sides of the ID controversy their time was also superb, particularly so because the best arguments as to why moviegoers' should distrust unadulterated Darwinism frequently came from the Darwinists themselves!

And then the sheer audacity of Ben Stein to connect the dots (not very far separated at that) between the doctrines of Darwin to such movements as human eugenics, Planned Parenthood-style racism, and ultimately the "Final Solution" was daring indeed. But daring only to those who fear political correctness more than they love truth.

Ben Stein, I emphasize again, has made a tremendous, compelling film -- a film that is 1) a highly effective argument for the legitimacy of at least the discussion of Intelligent Design; 2) a powerful, well-crafted defense of intellectual freedom; and 3) a soaring tribute to the sanctity of human life.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

The Book Den Is Open Again

After taking much too long a hiatus from The Book Den (my other blog, one specifically devoted to literary pursuits), I’ve decided to jump back in with a renewed resolve to keep it at least as current as the old days. We'll see. With the increased attention I’ve given to Vital Signs Blog, my other duties for Vital Signs Ministries, and now an ongoing commitment to prepare a sermon each week for an inner city church, that’s going to be a rather tough assignment. But hey – who needs six hours of sleep a night anyway, right?

The first “official” entry of the new era is an overdue installment of a feature that has become popular with the nation’s English teachers, librarians and retired disc jockeys; namely, Denny and Claire’s Annual NHN Book Recommendations, primarily developed for the consideration of the members of our “fine vintage” literary club.

So, if you're interested in books and authors, reviews, reading recommendations, poetry, publishing, etc., pay a quick visit every once in awhile to the Book Den.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Expelled Takes On "Fundamental Egoism" of Secular Scientists

Dave Berg, one of Jay Leno's producers, takes a look at Ben Stein's controversial new flick, Expelled as does highly-acclaimed science philosopher, William Dembski. First, an excerpt from Berg...

...The film’s endeavor is to respond to one simple question: “Were we designed, or are we simply the end result of an ancient mud puddle struck by lightning?”


Big science doesn’t like that question because they can’t answer it. Underneath their antagonism toward explanations that suggest an intelligent cause, lies a fundamental egoism. Science wants to deny any evidence of a supreme being precisely because it wants to be a supreme being. Moreover, representatives of big science in the film are unsettlingly snippy, suggesting that they feel threatened by rival opinions, rather than assured of their own.


To make this point, the film introduces teachers and scientists who are shunned, denied tenure, and fired for questioning dogmatic Darwinism. The film’s producers spent two years traveling the world, talking with more than 150 educators and scientists who say they have been persecuted for questioning Darwin’s theory of natural selection....


The rest of Berg's review is here at National Review Online.

And Dembski, research professor of philosophy at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, weighs in on Expelled in this engaging Baptist Press article. It's a very interesting piece and it ends with this provocative paragraph:

...Expelled's impact will be felt immediately. But its long-term impact will be even greater. The film opens with documentary footage of the Berlin Wall going up and closes with it coming down. The day Darwinism and Intelligent Design can be fairly discussed without fear of reprisal represents the removal of a barrier even greater than the Berlin Wall. When future intellectual historians describe the key events that led to the fall of "Darwin's Wall," Ben Stein's Expelled will top the list.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Remembering Dr. Liviu Librescu, A Hero from the Virginia Tech Massacre

Earlier this week (April 16) was the anniversary of the murders of 32 students and faculty at Virginia Tech. Debbie Schlussel marked the tragic day by paying tribute to one of the victims, Dr. Liviu Librescu, an American/Israeli Jew who was an esteemed Visiting Professor at the university. Librescu's bravery and self-sacrifice in saving 22 lives -- though he forfeited his own -- should be much more heralded and appreciated than it has hereto been but, thankfully, principled people like Schlussel are doing their part to honor this fallen hero.

Read Schlussel's tribute to this "scientific superstar" and view the compelling 10-minute video clip she provides right here.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

A Word of Thanks

A couple of thank-yous are in order this morning to fellow bloggers who have recently cited Vital Signs Blog posts on their sites: Randy Alcorn, Gina Dalfonzo at the Point, Jill Stanek, and Steven Ertelt at LifeNews.com.

Of course, all of these Christian pro-life activists have important and excellent things to say all the time -- that's why they are charter members of the Links Section we have on the lower left side here and why we have urged you before to visit their sites often. They are diligent, prayerful, capable watchmen on the wall.

Again, thanks.

Emitte lucem et veritatem (Send out light and truth)

Monday, February 25, 2008

Looking Forward to Heaven

Dear Randy Alcorn,

Before I read your book, Heaven, I wondered a lot about Heaven. I wondered what it was going to be like and if it was really a place to look forward to. I wondered if I would be happy when I died and went to Heaven. I wondered if things were better here or if they would be better there. I was afraid of death because I really did not know what happens when you die and did not have much to look forward to.

The book took me a whole year to read, but I understood it as I got more and more into the book. I grew to have a new picture of Heaven. In that year, I realized that I have something great to look forward to. I see Heaven as more than just a place people go to when they die; I see it as God’s city of gold. It is a real place with real streets, gates, rivers, and dwelling places. It is not some unknown place where we will float around like spirits. We are told in the Bible that we will have new bodies, made perfect, without disease or blemishes. I am looking forward to never being sick or hurt again! These are things I had not considered before reading Heaven.

From day to day, I think about Heaven more than I did before I read the book, and I think of it differently. I look forward to Heaven every day. I know it is my real home and that the New Earth (Heaven) will be the way God made it in the beginning. It will be like the Garden of Eden, with no pain and with plenty of food without the killing of animals, which makes me happy since I love God’s creatures. God’s glory will light the world and we will not even need the light of the sun. All of this is very exciting for me and I know now that Heaven is going to be far better than my present life.

I appreciate your book because I no longer fear death, I look to the eternal future when things are hard here, and I live every day knowing that I will be in the presence of God when I die. It makes it a better life to know that no matter what happens here, I have a home waiting for me where I am already accepted. I will be reunited with my brothers, parents, and many friends in Heaven. That encourages me to treat people better now on this earth because they are the people I will get to spend forever with. I want to get the best start I can on living for eternity.

Sincerely,

Bryan Lewis

A pretty intriguing letter, huh? Especially from a 10-year kid!

To order your copy of Randy Alcorn's Heaven, one of the books securely ensconced in my Indispensable Reading list go here to the order form located in the Eternal Perspective Ministries' website and do so. You, like Bryan, will be heartily glad you did.

And while you're there at the EPM website, look around a bit. It's a terrific site, one full of challenge, inspiration and practical assistance to the Christian who desires to serve faithfully his Lord. And regularly updated too, so put it on your bookmark list and check it out frequently. I do.

Note too the link there to Randy's "personal" blog, another great source for the Christian activist and, for that matter, for the honest non-believer who is looking for accurate information about God, the Bible, heaven, family, suffering, the virtues of a Christian lifestyle, and much more.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Castro's Broken Promises...And the Refusal of the Left to Notice Them

There's a number of noteworthy stories available on the web today examining the import of Fidel Castro's resignation. Yet above them all, I recommend this one in FrontPageMagazine by Humberto Fontova. Riveting reading and very, very important.

Last September, Fidel Castro vowed to stay in power until President George W. Bush leaves the White House. Even with his failing health, one would have been hard-pressed to bet against the dictator who outlasted nine U.S. presidents and his great sponsor in the Soviet Union. Castro’s retirement yesterday, in favor of his brother Raul, confirms that he will not be able to keep his word. But to understand his legacy, and its implications for Cuba’s future, one must go back to a promise that Castro made at the dawn of his one-man rule nearly half a century ago.

Upon entering Havana on January 7, 1959, Cuba's new leader Fidel Castro broadcast that promise into a phalanx of microphones. "Cuban mothers let me assure you that I will solve all Cuba's problems without spilling a drop of blood." As the jubilant crowd erupted with joy, Castro continued. "Cuban mothers let me assure you that because of me you will never have to cry."


The following day, just below San Juan Hill in eastern Cuba, a bulldozer rumbled to a start, clanked into position, and started pushing dirt into a huge pit with blood pooling at the bottom from the still -twitching bodies of more than a hundred men and boys who'd been machine-gunned without trial on the Castro brothers' orders. Their wives and mothers wept hysterically from a nearby road.


On that very day, the U.K. Observer ran the following headline: "Mr Castro's bearded, youthful figure has become a symbol of Latin America's rejection of brutality and lying. Every sign is that he will reject personal rule and violence."


These two events perfectly symbolize the Fidel Castro phenomenon, even half a century later: Fidel Castro oppresses and kills while issuing a smokescreen of lies not merely devious but downright psycopathic. The worldwide media abandons all pretense as "investigators" or "watchdogs" and adopts a role, not merely as sycophants, but as advertising agency.


By the time of his delirious, deafening, foot-stomping receptions at Harvard Law School and the National Press Club (most of whose members oppose capital punishment) three months later in April 1959, "Mr. Castro's" firing squads had slaughtered 1,168 men - and boys, some as young as 15.

By the time Norman Mailer (another opponent of capital punishment) was hailing Fidel Castro as "the greatest hero to appear in the Americas!" his hero's firing squads had piled up 4,000 corpses and one of 18 Cubans was a political prisoner, an incarceration rate that surpassed Stalin's.


By 1975, when George McGovern (another opponent of capital punishment) was calling him a "very shy and sensitive, a man I regard as a friend," the bullet-riddled bodies of over 10,000 Cubans lay in unmarked graves, and Cuba still held the most political prisoner as a percentage of population on earth, surpassing Nazi Germany's prewar rate by several multiples.


He brought the world closest of anyone to nuclear Armageddon by pleading, begging, and finally trying to trick Nikita Khrushchev into launching a surprise nuclear strike on the U.S. Yet he was nominated for a Nobel Peace Price by Norwegian parliamentarians.


He jailed and tortured at a rate higher than Stalin. Yet Cuba sits on the UN's Human Rights Committee.


His legal code mandates 18 months in prison for anyone overheard cracking a joke about him. Yet Jack Nicholson and Chevy Chase sing his praises.


He abolished habeas corpus while his chief hangman, Che Guevara, declared that “judicial evidence is an archaic bourgeois detail. We execute from Revolutionary Conviction.” A month later Harvard Law School invited him to address them and erupted in cheers and tumultuous ovations after his every third sentence.


He drove out a higher percentage of Jews from Cuba than Czar Nicholas drove from Russia and Hafez Assad drove from Syria. Yet Shoah Foundation founder Stephen Spielberg considered his dinner with Fidel Castro "the eight most important hours of my life."


He overthrew a black Cuban head of state and replaced his government with one where only nine percent of the ruling Stalinist party is black and where the prison population is 80- 90 percent black. He jailed the longest suffering black political prisoner of modern history. (Eusebio Penalver who suffered longer in Castro's dungeon's than Nelson Mandela suffered in South Africa's.) He sentenced other blacks (Dr Elias Biscet, Jorge Antunez) to 20 year sentences essentially for quoting Martin Luther King Jr. in a public square. Yet he's a hero to the Congressional Black Caucus and receives passionate bear hugs from Charlie Rangel...


There's more...much more from Humberto Fontova. Read it here.

Monday, February 11, 2008

Good Preaching Is Never Out of Style

What should be the role of preaching in churches today? Changes in preaching style—from being stationed behind a pulpit to moving freely around a stage (formerly, “chancel”); from tightly argued exposition and application to more anecdotal and practical homilies; from preaching that withers sinners to exhortations that elicit cheers of approval or howls of laughter—coupled with adjustments in the liturgy of the church—changes in music styles, increased space for more contemporary choruses and songs, use of drama and video, elimination or minimizing of congregational responses–have reduced the role of preaching in most churches.

The declining importance of preaching is reflected, as one might expect, in the quality of preaching offered in most congregations. I have heard my share of preachers over the past 30 years of ministry, and talked with many more lay leaders about the quality of preaching in their churches. The decline in preaching has become so marked, and so widespread, that it is now typical for churches to “lower the bar” of expectation for their preachers. I recently talked with a member of a pastoral search committee about the candidate his church had just called as their new preacher. He remarked that, while his preaching was “adequate,” his pastoral skills were excellent and his commitment to missions was outstanding. Clearly, this 1,000-member church puts more value on these latter abilities and interests than on the week-in, week-out exposition and proclamation of the Word of God. When it comes to preaching, “adequate” is good enough...


Preaching may seem foolish to a generation steeped in high-tech entertainment, clever comedic monologues, and spectacular imagery and sound. But preaching has always seemed foolish to those outside the pale of faith. The problem is not that preaching is foolish to unbelievers. The problem is that preaching has become foolish—through mere adequacy—to those who claim to be followers of Christ. Until this changes, and we recover preaching from mere adequacy—we will not know the motive power that Scripture proclamation can generate within the household of faith.


"The Power of Proclamation" is T.M. Moore's excellent essay published over at Breakpoint. It's terrific reading for preachers and hearers alike.