finally ready to start reading again...:)
Friday, June 13, 2008
Friday, May 2, 2008
A Woman After God's Own Heart by Elizabeth George

"God's perspective on time is different from ours, and we may question His use of time. We may be tempted to think that quiet, hidden time with Him doesn't count--that it doesn't show, it doesn't matter, and no one cares. After all, nobody sees it! There's not glory, no splash, no attention given on those weeks, months, years of waiting on God. No one sees us read and study God's empowering Word; no one is present to watch us memorize and meditate on God's life-changing truths. God alone sees us on bended knee in the heart-wrenching work of prayer, work which He uses to prepare us for ministry.
But then, just like the heroes of the Bible and just like our Savior Himself, one day we are prepared. When the timing is right, when the opportunity for ministry presents itself, we, too, mount up with wings like an eagle-- ready to do God's work! We are then privileged to live out the saying that success comes when preparation meets opportunity. God is responsible for presenting the opportunities-- in His time, place, and manner-- but we are responsible for cooperating with His efforts to prepare us." (189)
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
No Longer at Ease by Chinua Achebe

"Obi admitted that his people had a sizable point. What they did not know was that, having labored in sweat and tears to enroll a kinsman among the shining elite, they had to keep him there. Having made him a member of an exclusive club whose members greet one another with 'How's the car behaving?' did they expect him to turn around and answer: 'I'm sorry, but my car is off the road. You see I couldn't pay the insurance premium'? That would be letting the side down in a way that was quite unthinkable. Almost as unthinkable as a masked spirit in the old Ibo society answering another's esoteric salutation: 'I'm sorry, my friend, but I don't understand your strange language. I'm but a human being wearing a mask.' No, these things could not be. Ibo people, in their fair-mindedness, have devised a proverb which says that it is not right to ask a man with elephantiasis of the scrotum to take on smallpox as well, when thousands of other people have not had even their share of small diseases. No doubt it is not right. But it happens. 'Na so dis world be,' they say." (113)
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Disciplines of a Beautiful Woman by Anne Ortlund

This book I found Grandma Ellie's shelf, and it turned out to be just what I needed for my Spring Break '08. I knew what it was about right from the name, and knew that I needed to cultivate the disciplines that lead to a beautiful woman. There was a lot about the priorities that are necessary to being shrewd and making good choices. There were a few of her teachings that she passed on as "the best way" that were really things that had just worked for her, but there were also a lot of things that had worked for her that will work for me. And I believe I saw through to the heart of it, that it is through cultivating a heart that is obedient and disciplined and correspondent behavior that God is in some way most free to work in us.
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Too Busy Not To Pray

"If an ordinary car engine turns four thousand revolutions per minute, some racing motors can turn up to ten thousand.... Getting caught up in that intense pace can be rewarding! It's exciting when the adrenaline starts to flow and you get on a roll, when your motor starts racing faster and faster. But it leaves precious little time for quiet moments with God." (124)
"Never a dull moment; never a reflective moment either. Frightened, I ask myself, Where does the still, small voice of God fit into our hectic lives? When do we allow him to lead and guide and correct and affirm? And if this seldom or never happens, how can we lead truly authentic Christian lives?" (125)
"Maintaining good prayer habits is nonnegotiable. I know that no discipline will, in and of itself, create a relationship between God and me. At the same time, I know that I will not develop a rich, rewarding prayer life if I try to do it without discipline." (45)
Monday, January 7, 2008
The Four Loves by CS Lewis
SUCH a worthwhile book. CS Lewis articulates what I'd only thought about thinking. At times a bit abstract for my limited mind, but I still appreciated it so very much. It makes good points about the nature of love, which with the limited tool of English, would make my attitude toward ice cream seem comparable to God's very nature... I'll read this one again one day and love it even more.

Saturday, January 5, 2008
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