winner of misplacing god drawing

My internet was down all weekend, so I apologize that I wasn’t able to get this post up sooner!

The winner of the book Misplacing God, signed by the author Joanne Heim is…

Angie!

I will email you, Angie, to get your mailing information.

Congratulations! :)

elisha’s bones (cfba book tour)

This week, the
Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
is introducing
Elisha’s Bones
(Bethany House March 1, 2009)
by
Don Hoesel

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Don Hoesel was born and raised in Buffalo, NY but calls Spring Hill, TN home. He is a Web site designer for a Medicare carrier in Nashville, TN. He has a BA in Mass Communication from Taylor University and has published short fiction in Relief Journal.

He lives in Spring Hill with his wife and two children.

Elisha’s Bones is his first novel.

ABOUT THE BOOK

Every year, professor of antiquities Jack Hawthorne looks forward to the winter break as a time to hide away from his responsibilities. Even if just for a week or two. But this year, his plans are derailed when he’s offered almost a blank check from a man chasing a rumor.

Billionaire Gordon Reese thinks he knows where the bones of the prophet Elisha are–bones that in the Old Testament brought the dead back to life. The bones of the prophet once raised the dead to life… but they vanished from history in a whisper.

Bankrolled by a dying man of unlimited means, Hawthorne’s hunt spans the globe and leads him into a deadly conspiracy older than the church itself. A born skeptic, Jack doesn’t think much of the assignment but he could use the money, so he takes the first step on a chase for the legendary bones that will take him to the very ends of the earth.

But he’s not alone. Joined with a fiery colleague, Esperanza Habilla, they soon discover clues to a shadowy organization whose long-held secrets have been protected . . . at all costs. And he soon discovers those sworn to keep the secret of the bones will do anything to protect them. As their lives are threatened again and again, the real race is to uncover the truth before those chasing them hunt them down.

If you would like to read the first chapter of Elisha’s Bones, go HERE

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Elisha’s Bones is a good read. I thought that there were a few too many unnecessary deaths ~ too many people died because of their relationship with Jack ~ but other than that the story is interesting.

complaint free week

Okay, I admit it. I complain way too much. Most of my complaining is done in the form of sarcastic statements (i.e. “Oh, wow! You mean you actually managed to put your very own dinner plate into the dishwasher? Wow!”). I can complain in the form of making a joke about something, but it’s still complaining.

I do that with God, too. I remember very distinctly praying, every single day for well over a year, “God, why did You put us here? I HATE where we’re living. Couldn’t You send us to Alaska? You know I like the mountains. Why do I have to live in such a hot, humid, nasty place?”

I know I groan every morning when Attison wakes me up ~ it’s before 10am; that’s how I know I groan. Even if I don’t necessarily remember it, I know I complain in some way. I’m not a morning person.

Sheila Gregoire at To Love, Honor and Vacuum is hosting a Complaint Free Week. You can go here to read her post and find out what it’s all about. I’m going to participate. I’m posting so everyone knows I’m participating. There are things I say that can seem like complaining even when I don’t mean to be complaining. So there’s going to be a whole lot of watching my tongue going on around my house this week!

misplacing god (book giveaway)

Have you met my friend Joanne Heim? She’s a lovely lady, a fun blogger and a terrific author. Joanne’s newest book, Misplacing God (and finding Him again) is the second book of hers I have read. And let me tell you, Joanne’s heart and love for Jesus shine through on every page of her books.

I have a copy of Misplacing God (and finding Him again) to give away. Even better ~ the winner of this book drawing will receive a SIGNED COPY of Misplacing God! Joanne has graciously agreed to sign a brand new copy of her book and send it to the lucky winner!

All you have to do to enter the drawing is send me an email. As with previous giveaways, I do things a little differently. It works best for me to do it this way. :) If you want to have your name placed into the drawing, just send me an email with “Misplacing God” in the subject line.

The drawing will be held April 27. 2009.

keeping it in perspective

Yesterday was Easter ~ the day we Christians set apart as a special day to remember that Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Son of man, not only died a horrible death on a cross, but He rose from the grave 3 days later. It is His rising that our faith centers on ~ His death would have meant nothing if not for His conquering sin and death through His rising from the grave and His ascension into heaven.

It seems to me that most of the time the fact that He is the Risen Lord who lives at the right hand of God the Father in heaven is lost in the general evangelical preaching of the Gospel. The Good News is that He didn’t just pay the price with His death, He is the Conqueror of sin and death! Because He rose from the grave, we can be sure He is Who He says He is, and He did what He said He would do!

How is it that we can so easily forget this important piece of the equation? Jesus’ death by crucifixion was one of the most barbaric, painful, horrible deaths a human being has ever suffered as a public display. To be flogged and beaten, publicly ridiculed and humiliated, then forced to carry your own cross through the streets as people jeered, mocked you, and threw stone and refuse at you as you passed is honestly beyond my comprehension. And let’s remember here, folks ~ Jesus did this willingly. He asked the Father to let this weight fall away from Him, yet He finished His prayer with, “Your will be done.” He did what God the Father asked of Him. Willingly.

The soldiers stripped Him of His clothes and nailed Him to that cross He had dragged though the streets and outside the city gates to the top of a hill. They laughed at Him and made fun of Him, placing a crown of thorns on His head, and showed no mercy as they hung Him out in the hot sun along with 2 other men who were considered “the worst of the worst.”

Yes, we know all of that, you say. Yes Trish, we get that. We get that Jesus died a terrible death, and as a result our debt is paid to a God Who is loving AND just ~ “I owed a debt I could not pay, He paid a debt He did not owe” and all that.

But wait. That’s only HALF of the story. It doesn’t end with Jesus’ death!! Remember, He secured our place in heaven in His Father’s mansion, because after 3 days in the grave He got up and walked away! The stone (read: boulder that would completely crush your oversized SUV) that was placed in front of the tomb where Jesus lay was rolled back, out of the way, so when Mary arrived she would be able to see that the tomb was empty. He would then appear to various people over the next few days and weeks; He even went so far as to show dear Thomas His hands and His wounds, just to prove He was Who He said He was!

Jesus is alive! Yes, He is my friends. Alive and well. And sitting with God, at the right hand of His throne. Jesus’ crucifixion was entirely necessary ~ but so was His rising from the grave and ascending into heaven. Don’t get stuck halfway through the story. His crucifixion was necessary because of the sin of mankind. The sin that Adam and Eve introduced into the world. And when Jesus died on the cross He said, “It is finished.” Yes, He did. But He didn’t mean the story was finished. Only that the cost of sinning before a holy God and offending the Holy Spirit has been taken care of. The bill has been paid.

And now the rest of the Good News. You and I can, because of Jesus’ substitutionary death and resurrection, spend eternity basking in the heavenly glow of God’s love ~ walking streets of gold and living in mansions with crowns bestowed upon us by the Creator of the universe!!! And, guess what ~ Jesus will be there right along with us!

Jesus ~ the guy who was a humble carpenter, who loved His mother (as shown by His giving her care over to His dear friend John before He died on the cross), who walked around in sandals and ate unleavened bread and olives,  who had younger (half-) brothers and sisters, who helped His friend Peter walk on water and turned jugs full of water into jugs full of the most excellent wine ever tasted ~ this same guy now awaits our joining Him in the heavenly realms.

That’s pretty awesome (and I do mean literally awesome). And it’s all because not only did He die, but He rose again, just like He said He would.

Now whaddaya think about that?!

blogrolling

Woo hoo! I just checked Blogrolling, and was thrilled to find it’s up and running again! That means I can FINALLY edit all of my blogrolls. Oh wow ~ I’m so glad that service is finally fixed. I’m sure it will take me a while to get on with editing my blogrolls, especially the Fruit of the Spirit Blogroll, but it’s on my list of Top Priority, Very Important Things That Must Get Done As Soon As Possible!

christianity in crisis (book review)

This one snuck up on me ~ I’m sorry that I haven’t read this book yet. I requested it to review it because it looks really good. I apologize ~ once I’ve finished reading Christianity in Crisis I will post my review. Until then….

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:
Hank Hanegraaff

and the book:

Christianity in Crisis: The 21st Century

Thomas Nelson; 1 edition (March 3, 2009)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Hank Hanegraaff serves as president and chairman of the board of the North Carolina-based Christian Research Institute International. He is also host of the Bible Answer Man radio program, which is broadcast daily across the United States and Canada, as well as around the world through the Internet at http://www.equip.org/.

Through his live call-in radio broadcast, Hanegraaff equips Christians to read the Bible for all it’s worth, answers questions on the basis of careful research and sound reasoning, and interviews today’s most significant leaders, apologists, and thinkers. Widely considered to be one of the world’s leading Christian apologists, Hanegraaff is deeply committed to equipping Christians to be so familiar with truth that when counterfeits loom on the horizon they recognize them instantaneously.

Visit the author’s website.

Product Details:

List Price: $22.99
Hardcover: 432 pages
Publisher: Thomas Nelson; 1 edition (March 3, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0849900069
ISBN-13: 978-0849900068

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

1

Cult or Cultic?

“The word cult may be defined from both a sociological and theological perspective. From a sociological perspective it describes a group of people who are controlled by their leader(s) in virtually every dimension of their lives potentially resulting in illegal, immoral, and anti-social consequences. From a theological perspective, a cult may be defined as a modern-day movement that claims to be Christian but compromises, confuses and contradicts essential Christian doctrine, such as Christ’s atonement upon the cross.”

While the Faith movement is undeniably cultic—and particular groups within the movement are clearly cults—it should be pointed out that there are many sincere, born-again believers within the movement. I cannot overemphasize this crucial point. These believers, for the most part, seem to be wholly unaware of the movement’s cultic theology.

I have personally met several dear people who fall into this category. I question neither their faith nor their devotion to Christ. They represent that segment of the movement which, for whatever reason, has not comprehended or internalized the heretical teachings set forth by the leadership of their respective groups. In many instances, they are new converts to Christianity who have not yet been grounded in their faith. But this is not always the case.

I remember with great fondness, for example, the kindred spirit I shared with two ladies who participated in my Personal Witness Training class in Atlanta, Georgia. Year in and year out, these ladies would diligently and faithfully work to equip church members to effectively communicate the good news of the gospel. They were as committed to Christ as any two people I have ever met; yet they were both staunch supporters of Kenneth Copeland and Kenneth Hagin. I can still recall the conversations we had in 1985 concerning this topic. What stands out most vividly in my mind was their honest conviction that these men did not teach what I claimed they did.

Over the years I have received hundreds of letters from people immersed in the Faith movement who were completely oblivious to the rank heresy they were being fed—individuals who have said, “Until I saw the evidence with my very own eyes, I was not willing to accept it.” For this reason, we must take care to judge the theology of the Faith movement rather than those being seduced by it.

What Makes a Cult?

Christ Himself, in His magnificent Sermon on the Mount, taught us not to judge self-righteously or hypocritically. As frail mortals, we can only look on the outside; it is God who discerns the intent of the heart (1Chronicles 28:9; Jeremiah 17:10).

Having said that, let me reiterate that those who knowingly accept Faith theology are clearly embracing a different gospel, which is in reality no gospel at all. Let us never forget that Scripture admonishes us in the strongest of terms to test all things by the Word of God and to hold fast to that which is good (1 Thessalonians 5:21; cf. Acts 17:11). As Jude exhorts us, we must contend earnestly for the faith (Jude 3).

By the time you finish reading this book, you will have come face-to-face with detailed documentation which conclusively demonstrates that many of the groups within the Faith movement are cults. Therefore we need to understand exactly what is meant by the term “cult.” For the purposes of this writing, I will focus on two primary ways in which a cult may be defined.

First, a cult may be defined from a sociological perspective. According to sociologist J. Milton Yinger, “The term cult is used in many different ways, usually with the connotations of small size, search for a mystical experience, lack of an organizational structure, and presence of a charismatic leader.”1 For the most part, sociologists have tried to avoid negative overtones in their descriptions of cults. The same cannot be said, however, for the media-driven public at large.

According to religion observer J. Gordon Melton, the 1970’s saw the emergence of “secular anti-cultists” who “began to speak of ‘destructive cults,’ groups which hypnotized or brainwashed recruits, destroyed their ability to make rational judgments and turned them into slaves of the group’s leader.”2 Cults of this variety are viewed as both deceptive and manipulative, with the groups’ leadership exercising control over virtually every aspect of the members’ lives. Furthermore, converts are typically cut off from all former associations—including relatives and friends—and are expected to give their complete devotion, loyalty, and commitment to the cult.3 Examples of cults labeled as sociologically destructive range from the Hare Krishnas to Reverend Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church to the Family of Love led by “Moses” David Berg.

A second way to define a cult is from a theological perspective. A cult, in this sense, is deemed a pseudo-Christian group. As such, it claims to be Christian but denies one or more of the essential doctrines of historic Christianity; these doctrines focus on such matters as the meaning of faith, the nature of God, and the person and work of Jesus Christ. Years ago, Denver Seminary professor Gordon Lewis succinctly summarized it this way:

A cult, then, is any religious movement which claims the backing of Christ or the Bible, but distorts the central message of Christianity by 1) an additional revelation, and 2) by displacing a fundamental tenet of the faith with a secondary matter.4

Christian Research Institute founder Walter Martin adds that “a cult might also be defined as a group of people gathered about a specific person or person’s misinterpretation of the Bible.”5 From a theological perspective, cults include organizations such as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, and the Church of Religious Science.

A primary characteristic of cults in general is the practice of taking biblical texts out of context in order to develop pretexts for their theological perversions.6 In addition, cults have virtually made an art form out of using Christian terminology, all the while pouring their own meanings into the words.7 For example, while practically all cults laud the name “Jesus,” they preach a Jesus vastly different from the Jesus of the historic Christian faith. As Jesus Christ Himself put it, the real litmus test is “Who do you say I am?” (Matthew 16:15).

Mormons answer the question by saying that Jesus is merely the spirit-brother of Lucifer. Jehovah’s Witnesses assert that Jesus is Michael the Archangel. New Thought practitioners refer to Jesus as an avatar or mystical messenger. As blasphemous as all of this is, however, many Faith adherents actually reduce Jesus to an even lower level. For them, He is no more an incarnation of God than is any believer.

The Difference Between “Cultic” and a “Cult”

Given these definitions of a cult, it is completely justified to characterize particular groups within the Faith movement as cults—either theologically or sociologically or, in some cases, both. However, in classifying the Faith movement in general, it is more precise to use the term “cultic,” which essentially means “cult-like. “This distinction clarifies that “cults” (from a theological perspective) refer to groups with uniform sets of doctrines and rigidly defined organizational structures; they are monolithic. Movements, on the other hand, are multifaceted and diverse in their beliefs, teachings, and practices. Thus, while certain groups within the Faith movement can be properly classified as cults, the word “cultic” more aptly describes the movement as a whole. To put it another way, the “Faith phenomena” collectively reflects the sort of diversity found in movements (like the New Age movement), as opposed to mirroring the homo-geneous and relatively static character of cults like the Mormon Church and the Watchtower organization. The Faith movement, as all other movements, is composed of various groups, each with its own distinctives, but which share a common theme, vision, and goal.8 For this reason, the numerous Faith churches, teachers, and adherents should be judged on an individual basis. Each should rise or fall on his or her own merits. Kenneth Copeland Ministries, headed by Kenneth and Gloria Copeland, for example, bears all the marks of a cult. First, it has a formalized hierarchical structure; it boasts a centralized organizational facility; and it is equipped with a publishing arm complete with a distribution mechanism. Additionally, as will be fully documented, the Copeland’s bludgeon many of the essentials of historic Christianity, preaching their own deviant brand of antibiblical theology that the vast majority of their devotees accept without question. Furthermore, fervent followers consider the Copeland’s to be the final authority in matters of faith and practice. Thus we can legitimately characterize the Copeland’s as being cult leaders who, in the vernacular of the apostle Paul, represent “a different gospel—which is really no gospel at all” (Galatians 1:6,7).

The Error Continuum

In combating the errors which confront Christianity, it is important to understand that all errors are not created equal; some are clearly more damaging than others. It may be helpful to picture these errors as resting on a continuum that stretches from the outright silly to the gravely serious. Benny Hinn’s comment about women originally giving birth out of their sides, for example, can be considered a silly statement—which, while nonbiblical, poses no direct threat to essential Christian doctrine.9

On the other hand, such teachings as God possessing a physical body, humans created as exact duplicates of God, and Christ’s transformation into a satanic being fall squarely on the other end of the “error spectrum.” They are heretical, which is another way of saying that they directly oppose the clear teaching of Scripture on matters of essential importance as highlighted in the creeds and councils of the church.

Classifying errors can oftentimes be a tricky business, as a sizable gray area exists between the serious and the not-so-serious type of error. Nevertheless, such difficulties should not discourage us from judging whether certain teachings and practices are faithful to the Word of God and the doctrines of historic Christianity. If anything, they ought to move us to spend more time in carefully thinking about the things we hear daily and hold dearly.10

You, the reader, will inevitably need to decide whether you think the Faith movement is cultic or Christian. You must decide whether these doctrines are true or false or some muddy mixture of both.

If you decide that this movement is a valid expression of Christianity, then in all fairness you should also embrace as fellow believers the Mormons, the Jehovah’s Witnesses, the Christian Scientists, and a host of other groups normally thought of as cults.

That is the choice before you.

prayer request

As I have been listening to the speakers at A Woman Inspired, I have been feeling God tugging on my heart regarding my “ministry.” For so many years, my ministry has been focused mostly on my family. And I know that my family will always be a focus of my heart and ministry for the rest of my life. But I’m also feeling a leading in a different direction.

I don’t have the answers to what I’m sensing right now. I will continue to pray about it. If you are so inclined, I would appreciate your prayers as well.

day two of conference

I am enjoying the A Woman Inspired online conference very much. All of the speakers have been wonderful ~ and it’s really fun to have the ability to “chat” with other women during the presentations via IM/chat box! There’s also a private social networking site which makes it easy to see other people’s bios.

I’m thankful that all of the presentations will be available for download as I’ve had to miss some of them. At times it can be difficult to be online while taking care of an infant!

and the winner is…

Wow! In 3 days I received 417 emails from women who wanted to win a ticket to A Woman Inspired online conference. I used the True Random Number Generator at Random.org to choose which number entry would win the ticket. The winner is #118, Melissa from Fiery By Design.

Congratulations, Melissa!

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