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Justice in the Burbs: Being the Hands of Jesus ...
Will SamsonI recently just finished reading this book as part of a book club and as a follow up to Rob Bell's "Jesus Wants to Save Christians". I did not really enjoy the Rob Bell book - it was challenging, which was fine, but I found that I did not agree with much of it's theology. "Justice in the Burbs" does a much better job about backing up it's theology, though there were still things that I did not agree with. But that is ok - I don't always have to agree with everything that I... (show more)
I recently just finished reading this book as part of a book club and as a follow up to Rob Bell's "Jesus Wants to Save Christians". I did not really enjoy the Rob Bell book - it was challenging, which was fine, but I found that I did not agree with much of it's theology. "Justice in the Burbs" does a much better job about backing up it's theology, though there were still things that I did not agree with. But that is ok - I don't always have to agree with everything that I read.
It is a challenging book and definitely makes one think about what living justly looks like. I also liked the clear and concrete ways that the authors gave for living justly, which was something that I thought was lacking in the Rob Bell book.
I think where the danger lies with social justice is when it becomes our faith, instead of Jesus Christ. Without Jesus, honestly I don't think I would realize why caring for the poor is important, or why the products I by matter, or why the way I care for the environment or live in my home, with my eyes and ears open to my neighbors. But because of this faith I say that I have, there are teachings of Jesus that I need to respond to. And practicing social justice is a way to live out and practice this faith.
The way that the book was written was interesting - each section was divided into a fictional story, a teaching, and a meditation piece. Each part was really interesting, short, and easy to get through. It's not going to knock your socks off with its prose but it's content will definitely make you think. And any book that does that has done it's job in my opinion. (show less)
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Looking for God: An Unexpected Journey through ...
Nancy OrtbergThis was a very good, quick read. Rather than having one single coherent thought that carried the book, the book is divided up into short little essays about different topics on the Christian faith. I enjoyed Nancy Ortberg's perspective on things like giving, beginnings and endings, being authentic. Several chapters, particularly the later ones, are more poignant than others and had me in tears at points. I believe that the authenticity that Nancy seeks to live her life with is echoed in her ... (show more)
This was a very good, quick read. Rather than having one single coherent thought that carried the book, the book is divided up into short little essays about different topics on the Christian faith. I enjoyed Nancy Ortberg's perspective on things like giving, beginnings and endings, being authentic. Several chapters, particularly the later ones, are more poignant than others and had me in tears at points. I believe that the authenticity that Nancy seeks to live her life with is echoed in her words on the page. I found myself disagreeing with some points, but in general it just made me think about some things - made me pause and go "huh" - and any book that can do that for me, is a winner in my book. (show less)
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A Walk Across America
Peter JenkinsWhen I first started reading this book, I thought it was going to another tale like "Into the Wild" or something. I was a little put off by the way that it was written, judging it by my "high" standards of a well-written book. But as I continued reading and became captivated by the tale, I quickly learned that this was a book unlike any other that I have read. It made me cry on no less than 4 occasions - and they sprang from a gamut of emotions: sadness, happiness, joy, ... (show more)
When I first started reading this book, I thought it was going to another tale like "Into the Wild" or something. I was a little put off by the way that it was written, judging it by my "high" standards of a well-written book. But as I continued reading and became captivated by the tale, I quickly learned that this was a book unlike any other that I have read. It made me cry on no less than 4 occasions - and they sprang from a gamut of emotions: sadness, happiness, joy, beauty, mourning, and love. Peter Jenkins's walk from Alfred, NY to New Orleans, LA (as this book contains that portion of his walk) enlightened me to the beauties and dangers of our society and to ALL of the people that make up the fabric of this country that we call America.
Jenkins' starts out like any of the myriad of disillusioned, college-educated young people that graduate and gripe about the failures and evils of our country (I know that I fall into that category). But what Peter does that separates him from me is that he takes the advice of a guy that he works with and decides to discover what America is really all about and who really makes up the people of our country. And that decision to go forth and find that answer, with his forever-friend Cooper Half Malamute, begins a journey that takes him from the North to the South, down the Appalachian Trail and along the Gulf Coast until he reaches New Orleans.
In the journey along the way, Peter encounters many, many people - some who's hospitality is beyond belief, and others who's hostility is hard to swallow. One particular encounter in a North Carolina town was so harrowing, I marveled at the fact that he didn't quit his walk right then and there. He learns life lessons from a genuine mountain man in West Virginia, a black family and the rest of the community in Smokey Hollow North Carolina, a commune of people called "The Farm" who lived and worked the land and followed a religion called "Steve", and Governor George Wallace of Alabama - the same one who ordered the police to stop Martin Luther King, Jr.'s walk from Selma to Montgomery, to a revival in New Orleans when God finally found His way into his life. As Peter walks, his prejudices fall by the wayside, and I found that mine fell as well.
It is a testament to the power of his prose that a journey taken in the mid-1970s could still ring so beautifully and so truthfully. Yes, there are dark corners and evils in our country. But what Peter showed me is that there are many, many, MANY more wonderful, hard-working people who seek to etch out a living and in doing so enjoy life to an extent that I hope to know sometime in my lifetime. (show less)
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Facebook-användare is now reading Where Is God When It Hurts? by Philip Yancey. 4 months ago
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Facebook-användare would like to read The Cranford Chronicles (Vintage Clas... by Elizabeth Gaskell later. 4 months ago
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Facebook-användare would like to read The Reason for God: Belief in an Age ... by Timothy Keller later. 4 months ago
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Facebook-användare wrote a super review of Justice in the Burbs: Being the Hands of Jesus ... and now has 30 total book reviews. 4 months ago
Facebook-användare said: " I recently just finished reading this book as part of a book club and as a follow up to Rob Bell's "Jesus Wants to Save Christians". I did not really enjoy the Rob Bell book - it was challenging, ..." - Their Reviews | More Reviews
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Facebook-användare rated Justice in the Burbs: Being the Hands... by Will Samson 3.5/5.0. 4 months ago
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Facebook-användare already read Justice in the Burbs: Being the Hands... by Will Samson. Facebook-användare's collection now has 90 books. 4 months ago
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Facebook-användare wrote a review of Looking for God: An Unexpected Journey through ... and now has 29 total book reviews. 4 months ago
Facebook-användare said: "This was a very good, quick read. Rather than having one single coherent thought that carried the book, the book is divided up into short little essays about different topics on the Christian faith..." - Their Reviews | More Reviews
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Facebook-användare already read Looking for God: An Unexpected Journe... by Nancy Ortberg. Facebook-användare's collection now has 90 books. 4 months ago
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Facebook-användare rated Looking for God: An Unexpected Journe... by Nancy Ortberg 2.5/5.0. 4 months ago
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Facebook-användare would like to read The Walk West: A Walk Across America ... by Peter Jenkins later. 4 months ago
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