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This book is free today on Kindle, so I am reposting this review from 2010.

Beer Is Proof God Loves Us: Reaching for the Soul of Beer and Brewing by Charles W. BamforthTakeaway: Short, very informative book about the state of beer in the world from a professor of beer.  Not really about the soul or really any other religious thoughts on beer.

I have a somewhat mixed relationship with beer.  On the one hand, I like beer and I drink it fairly often, although in quite moderate amounts.  On the other hand I come from a family that is historically against drinking and from a church background that still has a hard time dealing with alcohol.

My grandmother was raised by an alcoholic father and she dropped out of high school to support her family because he was so often out of work because of his alcoholism.  She later went back to high school, graduated from college, became a teacher and raised 8 children.  She passed on her strong views of alcohol to most of her children and that passed on to many of the grandchildren.

For church background, I do not remember any strong messages on alcohol other than it was not talked about and not drank publicly.  I went to college where we signed a pledge not to drink alcohol as long as we were enrolled.  So I did not really start drinking until my mid-20s.  (I went to seminary at University of Chicago Divinity School where much of the proceeds of the student coffee shop went to parties with lots of alcohol served.  I did not really participate much.)  It was really after seminary that I started hanging with a different church crowd that had a more tolerant view of the proper use of alcohol.

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Christianaudio.com is giving away the MP3 audiobook for free during the month of May. I highly recommend the book, so I am reposting my review from 2 years ago.

Takeaway: God uses people. They will not be perfect, but those that are used, are usually changed by God.

A. W. Tozer has had a resurgence in my world lately. I have not read anything that he has written and really did not know anything about him, other than I know my grandfather liked him and people quote him all the time. Louie Gigglio only started using twitter after he decided to start doing Tozer Tuesday quotes. And then Out of Ur blog decided to copy the idea. After a friend, Matt Erickson, blogged about this book, I figured I would start reading here.

Lyle Dorset was a professor at Wheaton when I was there and I have met and talked to him several times, but never had him for a class. I really liked his biography on Dwight Moody, A Passion for Souls and the very brief biography of E. M Bounds (it was free last month at christianaudio.com but the offer is no longer good.)

Dorset’s biography was well done. It is brief (just under 200 pages), but very well documented with lots of personal interviews personal correspondence that was not available to the previous two biographers. Dorset does what I want in a biography, especially one of a Christian, showing the whole person. But part of my issue with a new introduction to Tozer (not having read any of his books before) is that he was a very broken man. Like many mystical oriented prayer warriors in Christian history, Tozer likely suffered with depression throughout his life. He was an introvert and almost never greeted people before or after church on Sunday. Instead he went to nursery to play with the children.

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I am on vacation this week. So this is a ‘best of review’.

Assaulted by JoyAssaulted by Joy is a good example of what seems to be a new genre of Christian memoir.  These are the “how to grow up” books.  Maybe this is not a new genre, but rather I am of the age, or just over the age, of the authors and both still am dealing with how to grow up and am surrounded by people that I just want to grow up.

The book starts out with the author, Stephen Simpson, discussing how much of a jerk he is.

“Still, I’m probably more of jerk than you are. It drives me nuts if something interferes with my life. I don’t like being bothered, and I don’t want any help. If you catch me when I’m in the mood to socialize, you’ll love me. Work with my schedule and I’ll deliver the sun and the moon. Otherwise, I hate being told what to do, and I have problems with authority. I’m short-tempered when I’m under stress or in a hurry. I start yelling inside my car when another driver cuts me off. As a bonus, I have Attention Deficit Disorder, which means I get impatient, irritated, and bored faster than normal people do.”

I think many in our world, myself included, are accurately described as “jerks”.

I will not spoil the story but there are two points that I think are really good in the book.  One is when Stephen and his wife are sorting through a very difficult decision.  They actually go to an ethicist to help them work through the issues. (Both he and his wife are graduates of Fuller, and he continues to work there, so it is former professors of theirs.)  The ethicist (Ray) gives them an answer that I wish more pastors and friends would give people, “But Ray also told us something else. ‘You’re looking for answers,’ he said, ‘when what you need are accomplices.’”  Simpson and his wife have a whole community come around them, this is the heart of the gospel in my mind.  Not correct doctrine, not right belief, but accomplices that will walk with people through the struggles.

The second point that I found really helpful was really the final conclusion.  Stephen says, “There’s a part of me that refuses to accept that I don’t need more. I never feel smart enough, fit enough, or wealthy enough. It’s hard for me to believe that there’s not more fun to be had around the next corner. The good news is that it doesn’t take as much as it used to for me to see that this isn’t true. Now, all it takes is one of my children crying because I’m leaving. They know I’ll be back, but they don’t even like it when I’m gone for a little while. How much more do I need to convince me that I’m worth something? Why do I think that there’s some rush or high that’s better than the love of my family?”  I think this is the point that in our youth-oriented, goal-oriented culture we often miss.  There really is something good about staying home and focusing on family.

In the end joy really does save him, not only from cynicism but in a positive way it makes him into the type of father that we all know we need to be.  Not a perfect person, but one that is content and striving to be better.

Assaulted by Joy Purchase Links: Paperback

I am reposting this review because The Jesus Prayer is on Sale for $2.99 on Kindle

Summary: A description of the famous short Orthodox prayer with a lot of insight into the Eastern Orthodox Church.

I read a lot of books on prayer.  I found The Jesus Prayer on a random amazon surfing trip.  I have had it on my kindle for a couple months reading a little bit at a time before finishing it up this week while on vacation.

The Jesus Prayer is one of the early prayers of the church.  There are variations of it, but it is essentially, “Lord Jesus Christ, son of God, have mercy on me.”  The history of this prayer goes back to at least the fourth century.

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I am at the beach this week. So I decided to post some of my favorite beach reads instead of writing new reviews.

Finding Juliet

Summary: Classic guy meets girl romance with a slight literary twist.

Today is my last day at the beach while on vacation.  I just have not been reading much this vacation.  Instead I have been playing Scrabble and Words with Friends and hanging out in the room.  (I break out in hives if I put on too much sunscreen, so I have to limit my sun exposure to a couple hours a day.)  I have mostly been reading church focused stuff but not finishing anything.

Yesterday, I gave up and decided to just go fiction.  So I looked through my long list of fiction books that I have picked up free from Amazon and pretty much at random chose one.  (The cover image on the left was different when I originally picked it up.  I think when I got it, it was a statue of Juliet.  This cover looks like it should be on a vampire book.)

Finding Juliet is a classic beach read.  A light romance without a ton of mental content.  The set up is a recently dumped Literature Grad student writes a letter to Juliet (from Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet) as a class assignment.  The letter is chosen best in class and sent to the Juliet Society in Verona.  A letter is written back and soon the guy decides to travel to Italy to meet his Juliet.

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The idea of Sola Scriptura as many modern Evangelicals understand it is not what the original proponents of the idea were presenting.  The bible is understandable, but that does not mean that every Christian can intuitively under the whole of scripture.  Scripture requires study to understand.  Walton has done the church a service by researching not only the original languages but the documents and culture of Ancient Near East (including Israel) and giving context to the scripture.

The Lost World of Genesis One: Ancient Cosmology and the Origins DebateTakeaway: Professional biblical scholars bring important understanding to texts. We need to spend more time being taught, not just by pastors, but by the academic theologians and biblical scholars throughout the church.

Over the past year I have been increasingly convinced (and convicted) that the church needs to take scripture seriously.  Not just reading it or finding biblical principles to live by, but seriously studying scripture and allowing scripture to change us.

I have been hearing about the Lost World of Genesis One for a while, but only started reading it as part of a book discussion.  John Walton, a formerly at Moody Bible Institute and currently an Old Testament professor at Wheaton College, makes a clearly presented case that the first chapter of Genesis is not about the material creation of the earth, but a functional creation of the earth as his temple.

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Satan Loves YouTakeaway: No matter how serious the topic, sometimes it is good to just laugh.

Purchase Links: Kindle Edition

One of the chapters that I really enjoyed with David Dark’s Sacredness of Questioning Everything was about Questioning our Offendedness.  It is easy to be offended when people do not believe as you do or seem to make fun of what you consider essential.  David Dark has a useful understanding of being able to laugh at yourself and your beliefs.  Whenever you are offended instead of seeking after the understanding, hurt or incredulity that is often root of humor I think  it can help to build a bridge toward relationship instead of pushing people away.

I heard of Satan Loves You when a friend on Goodreads.com (a social network for readers) wrote a quick review of it.  It sounded like a fun bit of satire.  And I like satire and humor.  Christopher Moore’s Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff and Piers Anthony’s Incarnations of Immortality series are two very different takes on how different authors have attempted to make fun of religion through fiction.  (Norman Mailer’s The Gospel According to the Son is a negative example.)

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WHY WE READ FICTION: THEORY OF MIND AND THE NOVEL (THEORY INTERPRETATION NARRATIV)Takeaway: Fiction is one example of ways that our minds fill in details and help us understand how we may act in different situations.  This is a fairly advanced literary theory book and I gave up and did not finish.

Purchase Links: Hardcover, Paperback, Kindle Edition

I picked this up because it was on sale for $0.99 (still only $1.99) and the title intriged me. I did not finish this for a couple reasons, but the basic idea is interesting. The Theory of The Mind is a psychology theory about the ability of people to fill in missing pieces in social interactions.  People on the Autism spectrum and those with Schizophrenia have difficulty with this skill for different reasons.  So there is a section on Autism (which I found very interesting) and another on Schizophrenia before moving on to the final two sections that are more focused on how others process fiction according to the Theory of the Mind.

While I found some of the concepts interesting, I was frustrated by the structure of the book.  Not that it was a bad book, but it used a number of classic books as reference points and repeatedly discussed fairly well known sections of those books.  In general, I was able to follow along, but I have not read a single one of the books that were referenced.  It is not that the books were unknown, they are fairly well known books like Mrs Dalloway, Lolita, Beowulf, Don Quixote, Emma, Pride and Prejudice and Clarrissa.  I think of myself as being fairly well read, but I guess I am not well enough read.

After a while, I got the basic point and just lost interest.  If you are interested in Literary Theory, Autism, or psychological looks at fiction, you probably will find this book interesting.

The Next Story: Life and Faith after the Digital ExplosionTakeaway: Technology is too important to not think about deeply.  If anything can become an idol, then the things we spend most of our time and effort interacting with should be examined.

Normally, I write a review immediately after I read a book.  And often will takes some notes about what I want to write as I read the book.  Some books just have so much material that it is hard to deal with in one 400-500 word review.  By the time I finished the book I already had about 1600 words written and no one really wants to read a 1600 word book review.

So I am going to write a summary review now.  Then I am going to write two more posts to round out my thoughts about the book.

First, I think that while there are some issues I disagree with, I think this is a book that needs to be read by almost everyone that wants to think seriously about how we as Christians interact with culture, technology, transition and faith.  Even when I disagree with him on some issues, I think he is respectful of the subject, is consistant theologically and he is pastorally and practically focused.

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Life Together and Prayerbook of the Bible (Dietrich Bonhoeffer Works, Vol. 5)Takeaway: This is one of the classics that everyone should read.

Over the past few years there has been renewed interest in Dietrich Bonhoeffer.  There is a very good documentary (available for streaming on Netflix).  Then two biographies of Bonhoeffer have been published in the last two years (I reviewed Eric Metaxas’s  and have now read but have not read the Ferdinand Schlingensiepen biography, which has been much better received in the academic world and I think is a better biography.)

Much of the interest and resources for Bonhoeffer study is a result of a new 16 volume series of Bonhoeffer’s works.  Previous, to this series that is published in English by Fortress Press, there were only limited editions of Bonhoeffer’s books that had significant translation issues.

I have purchased three of these volumes (they are not cheap, so many people are still purchasing older editions.)  The volume that includes Life Together (Bonhoeffer’s most read book) also includes his book on the Psalms (Prayerbook of the Bible).  I am not reviewing Prayerbook of the Bible here, but will later.  There is a significant amount of extra material in these books to give context and understanding to these two short books.  Life Together is only a bit over 100 pages, but page for page I think is one of the most useful books I have ever read about spiritual growth and the role of community within the church.

The book has only six chapters (Preface, Community, Day Together, Day Alone, Service, and Confession/Communion.)

One of the most useful things that I heard on this reading (I have read this at least twice previously, but not in the last 10 years) was Bonhoeffer’s understanding of the limits and strengths of community. These are two long quotes, but I think shows that Bonhoeffer is not being idealistic about his view of Christian community:

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