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book winners and new life: unmasked giveaway

Frame The Clouds coverI’ve had the chance to offer three different book giveaways in the last couple of weeks, which I have to say is so fun! I love giving gifts! I am delighted to announce the winners today.

Thank you to everyone who participated in the launch of life: unmasked last week. Your posts were exactly what I had hoped for — honest, bare, God-filled, hopeful. I sensed a real coming-alongside-one-another in your contributions. I hope that you did too. Please take a few minutes to visit one or two of those who posted and share a word of encouragement with them.

Have you done your post for this week’s life: unmasked yet? You can do anything — write for a few minutes or for an hour, simply post a photo, or record a video. I’m giving away a copy of Christa Wells’s CD “Frame the Clouds” to one of this week’s life: unmasked participants, so make sure you link up before midnight this Saturday.

 

Smack Dab in the Middle of God's LoveSmack Dab in the Middle of God’s Love

Congratulations to Stacey, a teacher who won a copy of Brennan Manning’s beautiful new book for children.

 

 

Will There Be Faith? A New Vision for Educating and Growing Disciples

The winner of my very gently-used copy of Thomas Groome’s excellent book on educating for faith is EmJ, a pastor who I know will get much good out of this book for her church. Congratulations!

 

 

grace for the good girl by emily p. freemanGrace for the Good Girl

Emily Freeman of Chatting at the Sky graciously agreed to give one copy of her new book to a writer in our very first life: unmasked link-up last week. Chrystal won this book after linking her honest confession of her concerns at reentering church ministry (which I can completely relate to). If you’ve always been the good girl who fears that God will love her less if/when she fails, this book is for you.

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Sponsor a child in Bolivia with World Vision

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Smack Dab in the Middle

I’m often frustrated by the Christian books marketed to children, and to their parents. The children’s Bibles are filled with fragmented stories selected apparently at random out of the Bible and illustrated with chubby-cheeked white-skinned cherubic children. The stories in fiction are stilted and artificial. The rhyming books… oh the rhyming books. Everyone thinks they can write like Dr. Seuss. News flash — you can’t. Instead, they produce books of agony — torturous to read because of heavy reliance on the stale and worn or on the so-creative-I-don’t-know-how-that-rhymes.

It is rare and refreshing to find a book beautifully illustrated, well-written, and portraying children from all over the world. So today, I have good news! I have found such a book. It’s called “Smack Dab in the Middle of God’s Love” and it’s a children’s book written by Brennan Manning of “Ragamuffin Gospel” fame.

Smack Dab in the Middle of God's Love

The main characters were Willie Juan and Ana, who live in a little village in Mexico. They aren’t your stereotypical family, which is refreshing — they are unable to have children of their own. But they open their doors to the children of their neighborhood, make and share sopapillas, and tell them stories about God, who they refer to as “Abba.” The children in the book are from all over the world (as you can see from the cover), and the illustrations are rich and beautiful.

The story is well-written and flows naturally, while still addressing things important to children. Willie Juan asks the kids what they think Abba will ask them when they see him in heaven. The things they mention are caring for their family members and caring for their animals. When little Irene mentions being afraid of Abba because he is so big, Willie Juan answers, “Irene, you don’t have to be afraid. Abba loves you very much.” (This is my favorite part of the book.)

Children are often fearful about the world and unsettled by life. (Adults are too.) This story reinforces what I want my children to understand about God (and what I need to remember about God). God loves them, God gives them good gifts, and God wants them to take care of and enjoy those gifts. As Ana says, “Every good thing comes from smack-dab in the middle of Abba’s heart.”

I loved this book. If you have kids, or if you are still a kid at heart, or if you appreciate a well-crafted story and beautiful illustrations, you will love this book too.

Guess what!?!? I get to give one lucky reader a copy of Smack Dab in the Middle of God’s Love away (not my own copy [cuz I'm keeping that!] but a new one, shipped directly to you from the publisher)! Leave a comment to enter (be sure you leave a valid email address so I can reach you if you win). You may enter multiple times if you share this on Facebook or Twitter, and if you like my Facebook page. Be sure to leave separate comments for each thing you do. I will select a winner via random number generator on Monday.

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“Will There Be Faith? A New Vision for Educating and Growing Disciples”

With so many young (and not so young) people walking away from faith these days, parents and church leaders are asking themselves why people don’t embrace the faith of their childhood and make it their own. In “Will There Be Faith? A New Vision for Educating and Growing Disciples,” Thomas Groome presents an approach to Christian faith and identity that informs, forms, and transforms people. He presents thorough examination of who and what is involved in religious education of all kinds and recommendations based on the example of Jesus and a thorough understanding of our current society. Groome states the goal of such education in a theme repeated throughout the book: that people bring their life to faith and their faith to life.

Groome draws from the example of Jesus, the master teacher. He points out, for example, that after the resurrection when he appears to the two disciples on the road to Emmaus, Jesus never tells them what to see. He waits for them to see it themselves. Groome writes, “I’ve found such patience to be the greatest challenge in my own teaching style.” [And everyone said “amen.”]

In the mid section of the book, Groome takes time to examine who we are and what that means for how we teach. Here he spends a good deal of time wading through both the Catholic and the Protestant views of humanity:  are we inherently good or inevitably bad, for example. He shows where both branches of Christianity can find common ground, particularly in how much we are in need of grace. That said, the book reflects his identity as a Catholic Christian and most of the examples come from their specific practice of faith.

Thomas-GroomeI really appreciated his chapter “What Faith and Why Educate?” in which he considers the nature and purpose of educating in Christian faith. He advocates good sound religious education or “’a right understanding of faith,’ so that ‘the truths to be believed are in conformity with the demands of reason.’ …Such critical understanding is needed ‘to overcome certain forms of fundamentalism as well as subjective and arbitrary interpretations.’ Note well: [this] is saying that critical thinking is needed to prevent both fundamentalism and relativism.”

Groome also delves into the challenge of sharing faith with today’s thinkers, who are more postmodern than anything else. His description of modern vs postmodern thinking was both eye-opening and helpful. Despite the postmodern resistance to metanarrative (systems of thought and belief that presume to explain everything to everyone all the time) and assigning universals as products of their contexts, they are open to spirituality and are seeking fullness of life. Jesus can speak to their pursuit of happiness, their desire for meaning, their love of holistic knowing, and their respect for those who are different. Knowing this will help us know how to express faith in a way they can hear.

The book doesn’t remain mired in theory. Groome includes many lists of questions to ask of our programs and activities, strategies to consider, and pitfalls to avoid. He advocates community-based cooperative models of teaching, rather than the more traditional didactic style of a teacher lecturing. If you are not a Catholic, large sections in which he describes church practice and religious schools will seem less relevant. I challenge you to dive in anyway – there is much practical advice for those who plan and lead worship services and who teach children in formal school settings.

Thomas Groome writes as a thoughtful and serious Catholic Christian. While much of what he writes is framed in the context of Catholicism, as a Protestant, I found much to learn from in this book. He challenged me in my personal faith and taught me better how to pass that faith along to my children and friends.

Would you like a free copy of this book? Even if it’s my copy? It’s in excellent condition. Leave a comment and let me know if you are interested in barely-used book giveaways. I’m going through my bookshelves and have many books to share if you like the idea! I’ll select one winner from the comments via a random number generator on Saturday.

Book provided for review by TLC Book Tours. Click here to find links to other bloggers’ reviews of “Will There Be Faith?”

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