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BBAW: Best Spiritual/Inspirational or Religious Book Review Blog

Voting is now open at the Book Blogger Appreciation Week Awards.

2 Kids and Tired Book Reviews Holly at 2 Kids and Tired is a member of FIRST blog alliance, a group of reviewers who tour Christian books (from Christian publishers). In addition to the books from FIRST, Holly reads and reviews lots of other mostly fiction titles from Christian publishers. Her reviews are short, sweet, and to the point.

A Novel Menagerie has been nominated for Most Prolific Blogger and Best Design in addition to a nomination in this category. Sheri at A Novel Menagerie reviews all sort of books including Christian inspirational reading, Mother-Approved books for youong adults, and Guaranteed Good Books. The design IS lovely.

Callapidder Days Katrina at Callapidder Days sponsors the Fall Into Reading Challenge, a fine way to jump-start or share your fall reading list if that’s what you’re looking to do. (There’s also a Spring Reading Thing.) I would call these challenges low pressure, gentle reading encouragers–just like the blog Callapidder Days itself.

My Friend Amy Amy is, well, everyone’s friend and the brains behind BBAW. For the latter role alone, she should probably get all the votes in whatever category she nominated. After all, she’s worked extra hard to make all this BBAW stuff happen. However, Amy not only organizes BBAW; she also blogs about LOST, hosts her own book challenge, and reads and review lots of books of all kinds. “Faith ‘n Fiction Saturday is a weekly meme for Christians to get together and talk about fiction published from a Christian worldview, hosted at My Friend Amy. Amy’s blog was also nominated for most eclectic taste, most prolific blogger, most altruistic blogger, Best Community Builder, and Best Blog Post.

Semicolon Then, there’s little old me.

For obvious reasons, this is a hard one. You all can vote for Semicolon in this category, and I may vote for Semicolon, too, just to give myself a pat on the back because I do enjoy blogging here. I blog about my faith in Jesus Christ, my love of books, homeschooling, hymns, LOST, church and even politics sometimes and how all of those things and more relate to one another because all of them (plus the kitchen sink) make up ME. I am pleased to have been nominated for a book blogger award in this category, aand I will be pleased whether I win or not.

However, if I don’t vote for Semicolon, I’ll probably choose My Friend Amy as my selection for Best Spiritual/Inspirational or Religious Book Review Blog, mostly because of her Faith ‘n Fiction Saturday feature, something I plan to participate in as soon as all this BBAW hullaballoo is over.

Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller

I thought that Rick Warren’s Purpose-Driven Life book was a decent introduction to the Christian life. I’ve listened to Mark Driscoll on youtube, and what I heard him say was exactly what I read in the Bible. I even thought The Prayer of Jabez by Bruce Wilkinson, if read as written, had some good insights on serving God and asking for Big Things from Him. So, what I’m saying is that I tend to give Christian nonfiction writers the benefit of the doubt and not be overly critical and picky. (Fiction is another matter.) I figure we’re following the same Jesus, and if something sounds a little off or immature, maybe the author just hasn’t gotten there yet or maybe I haven’t.

So, although I know I read something, somewhere, that made me think I wouldn’t like Blue Like Jazz, that it would be some kind of New Age reinterpretation of Christianity that made Jesus unrecognizable, I actually loved it. Mr. Miller was a bit disingenuous at times, acting as if he just didn’t understand what in the world those “fundamentalists” were thinking when they didn’t like his take on this or that, but I still thought the book was a revealing and mostly honest (as honest as any of us get) look at what being a Christian is like, at least what it’s like for Mr. Miller. (The idea, however, that changing the name of what we believe in from “Christianity” to “Christian spirituality” is going to do anything except confuse the issue is also rather simplistic and disingenuous.)

A few quotations to give you a taste if you haven’t read it already:

“I grew up going to church, so I got used to hearing about God. He was like Uncle Harry or Aunt Sally except we didn’t have pictures.”

“God is not here to worship me, to mold Himself into something that will help me fulfill my level of comfort.”

“Satan, who I believe exists as much as I believe Jesus exists, wants us to believe meaningless things for meaningless reasons. Can you imagine if Christians actually believed that God was trying to rescue us from the pit of our own self-addiction? Can you imagine?”

“If the supposed new church believes in trendy music and cool Web pages, then it is not relevant to culture either. It is just another tool of Satan to get people to be passionate about nothing.”

“If loving other people is a bit of heaven then certainly isolation is a bit of hell, and to that degree, here on earth, we decide in which state we would like to live.”

“The most difficult lie I have ever contended with is this: Life is a story about me.”

That last one, especially, is profound. Think about it.

Kids, Drugs, and Depression

Whatever happened to Freddie Prinze?

I’m old enough to remember comedian and TV star Freddie Prinze. I watched his sit-com Chico and the Man. I laughed and enjoyed the comedy.

But Mr. Prinze, only 22 years old, wasn’t laughing so much. And on a January night in 1977, Freddie Prinze, full of quaaludes and depression and drama, shot himself. His mom insisted that it was an accident and got the cause of death on his death certificate changed from suicide to “accidental shooting due to the influence of Quaaludes.” I don’t see that it really matters. Mr. Prinze ended his life at the age of 22 because of drugs and depression. The drugs deepened the depression and made him reckless and stupid.

I’m writing about this tragedy because today is Freddie Prinze’s birthday. He would have been 55 years old today.

But I’m also writing about Mr. Prinze, the talented but tragic comedian, because just this past week another talented young man destroyed himself with drugs and depression and bad decisions. I didn’t know D., but I do know his family. D. was taught about the Lord. He grew up in a family that loves Jesus with a mom and dad who loved D. He was homeschooled and went to church and memorized Scripture and had made a commitment to Jesus Christ.

However, D. had “graduated” to using cocaine about three months ago, and he came home a little over a week ago to get help. He was hearing voices and believed that implants in his head were monitoring his thoughts and telling him to do horrible things.

He told his dad he didn’t know what to do to make the voices stop. What he decided to do was to douse himself with gasoline and set himself on fire. His parents woke up to hear D. screaming in pain, and although D. was in agony, he was able to tell his dad that he was sorry before the paramedics came, sedated him, and took him to the hospital burn unit. D. never regained consciousness, and he died a couple of days later.

A friend of mine wrote about D.:

How did this happen? Why did it end this way? No one will ever have all the answers but there are some lessons here for anyone with eyes to see.

. No child of God is immune to sin. Each of us has freedom of choice and is responsible to God for his choices.

. God disciplines the child that He loves.

. If we continually reject the warnings of God at some point He will call His child home.

I choose to believe that D. was more afraid to continue to live than he was to die. I have no doubt that as the old gospel hymn goes, D. is now; “Safe in the arms of Jesus, safe from corroding care; safe from the world’s temptations, sin cannot harm him there.”

Why am I telling you all this story? Because it’s still happening. Kids, and some who should be past childhood, still think that illegal drugs are harmless, that maybe taking a few pills or a shot of something will make them feel better, will medicate the depression and the pain out of existence. I know some of them are thinking this way because they’ve told me: “it won’t happen to me. I just smoke a little weed. Nothing bad will happen to me. That’s a scare story.”

Well, yeah, I’m trying to scare you. But D. really did die just the way I described. I’m going to his memorial service this afternoon. And we’ll remember all the good things about him, how he had compassion for homeless people, how he made beautiful music, how he loved his family. But we’ll also remember what could have been, how D. could have been a blessing to his family instead of giving them a pain that will never go away completely. How he could have served the Lord with his music. How he could have lived.

I’m writing about what happened to Freddie Prinze and to D. because I don’t want it to ever happen to another family or to another talented young man. And they’re all talented and remarkable and loved, by God the Father even if they don’t feel loved by anyone else. Please pray for my friends the R family who have lost a son and a brother. And please examine yourself, and if you need it, get help. Make good decisions. Flush the drugs, whatever they are, down the toilet. Cling to the precious saving love of the Lord Jesus Christ and don’t let go.

Please.

Gospel Challenge

Becky’s hosting a mini-challenge for the summer:

Operation Actually: Summer Studies Mini-Challenge

Host: Operation Actually Read Bible

Duration of the Challenge: June 1, 2009 – September 7, 2009

Description of the Challenge: Participants will choose one gospel (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John) to study for the summer. Study could mean reading it multiple times (once a month for June, July, August). Or it could mean reading the gospel and reading books about that gospel (commentaries, study helps, etc.). Or it could mean reading the gospel, listening to the gospel, watching a video drama of the gospel, listening to sermon series preached from that gospel, or participating in a Bible Study or Sunday School class discussion of that gospel. It might mean memorization of passages.

You do not have to have a blog to participate. You can keep track of your progress on the mini-challenge by commenting on this site. (If you want. No one is going to make you share what you learn or anything! But sharing does build community among participants, so it is encouraged!

If you have a blog and would like to ‘journal’ your studies, feel free to do so. But it’s not required.

Go to Becky’s place to sign up. I’m tempted, but what with the hymns and the urchins and the summer field trips and the projects over in the sidebar, I’m already on Project Overload.

Pseudogamy

Anthony Esolen at Mere Comments is writing a series of essays that he calls “Pseudogamy,” reflecting the sham and pretense that we as a society have made of the sacred institution of marriage. It’s worth reading in its entirety, but here are some selected quotes to whet your appetite.

Marriage — marriage such as Jesus defined it — is the foundation of society not simply because it is the best environment for raising children, though it is. It is the foundation because in it man and woman commit themselves one to another, as if they were, so to speak, gods freely bestowing freedom upon what they create.

I return to the notion of cosmos: order. Man and woman unite in marriage to bring into being a new generation; and even when they cannot do so, because of age or some physical defect, they may well wish to do so, or they stand for others as exemplars of the act that naturally brings forth children. All of which is to say that marriage that is open to children is part of the order created by God. Then marriage that is not open to children violates that order, and introduces into our understanding of marriage a destructive chaos.

In these two posts, Mr. Esolen says eloquently and intelligently some of the things I tried to start talking about in this post on marriage: that we have already lost the meaning of marriage before the activists and anti-Christians came along to try to put into statute and law what was already broken. I’m not saying that it’s a losing battle but rather that we will have to re-examine the fundamental Biblical meaning of marriage itself before we will be able to speak truth to our culture and, perhaps, change the course we are travelling toward the destruction of both marriage and family.

Pseudogamy 101 by Anthony Esolen.

Pseudogamy 102 by Anthony Esolen.

The End of the Alphabet, Wit, and John Donne

On a Friday night in February (during my blog break) while my ten year old daughter, Betsy-Bee was celebrating her birthday with a bevy of giggling friends in the living room watching Princess Diaries II, I watched the movie Wit in my bedroom, mostly alone. Wit tells the story of a forty-something college English professor, a specialist in the poetry of John Donne, who is told that she has stage-4 ovarian cancer. As Professor VIvian Bearing tells us later, in an aside, there is no stage-5.

Much of the movie, based on a play by Margaret Edson, is made up of the monologue narration of Ms. Bearing, as she tells the viewer of the indignities, pain and suffering that make up her journey through chemotherapy and cancer and eventually into death. As you can imagine, there are many poignant asides and scenes that are quite difficult to watch. Actress Emma Thompson plays the part of Vivian Bearing, and she is amazing. Engineer Husband saw pieces of the movie as he came in and out of our room, and he said she deserved an Academy Award. I agree.

The movie itself, especially Ms. Thompson’s performance, which really was the movie, was morbidly fascinating and difficult to watch. The way that Ms. Bearing interacted with the poetry of John Donne in her struggle with death and dying made the movie a rich and thoughtful experience. It’s rated PG-13 for “thematic elements”, and I would agree that it’s not for the young and/or faint of heart.

DEATH be not proud, though some have called thee
Mighty and dreadfull, for, thou art not so,
For, those, whom thou think’st, thou dost overthrow,
Die not, poore death, nor yet canst thou kill me.
From rest and sleepe, which but thy pictures bee,
Much pleasure, then from thee, much more must flow,
And soonest our best men with thee doe goe,
Rest of their bones, and soules deliverie.
Thou art slave to Fate, Chance, kings, and desperate men,
And dost with poyson, warre, and sicknesse dwell,
And poppie, or charmes can make us sleepe as well,
And better then thy stroake; why swell’st thou then;
One short sleepe past, wee wake eternally,
And death shall be no more; death, thou shalt die.
~John Donne, 1572-1631

After I watched the movie and put the birthday partiers to sleep with threats and charms and poppies, I picked up a small book from my library basket, a novella really, The End of the Alphabet by C.S. Richardson. Coincidentally, serendipitously, it was a book about death and dying. Ambrose Zephyr, the protagonist of the novella, is told that he has a rare and incurable illness and only one month to live, “give or take a day.”As she was dying, Professor Bearing travelled through examination rooms, and hospital waiting areas, and X-rays and chemotherapy; Ambrose Zephyr decides to go on a literal journey, along with his wife, Zappora Ashkinazi, to an alphabetical list of meaningful places.

A is for Amsterdam.
B is for Berlin.
C is for Chartres, etc.

As the couple visit each place, Ambrose becomes more ill, more distant and withdrawn, and more desperate. Zappora, nicknamed Zipper, tries to travel with her husband on his dying journey, but it’s not something easily shared.

Ambrose: “So what? So there it is. Here I am. There’s nothing to deal with. If there were I would do it. But there isn’t and I am terrified and this isn’t happening to you.”
Zipper: “You selfish, silent, sh—, bastard. This is happening to me.”
Ambrose: “Really? In less than a month, you’ll still be alive.”
Zipper: “Really. I can hardly wait. Lying in on Sundays? At last. A decent cup of tea? Brilliant. No more squinting, no more imagination, no more silence? I can hardly f— wait.”

Zipper Ashkenazi and Ambrose Zephyr believe in each other, in communication and shared experience and in love. Zipper is left in the end with silence and her own words echoing off the pages of her journal, “This story is unlikely.” In fact, death is the most likely story of all. It is appointed unto man once to die, and after that the judgement.

Dr. Vivian Bearing believes in her own strength and stoicism, and when that is stripped away from her by her illness, she is left with the poetry of John Donne. She clings, not to God himself, but to Donne’s faith in God, and finally Donne’s conceits and paradoxes are empty for her, too. Her elderly mentor reads to her, not Donne, but rather the elegantly simple picture book, The Runaway Bunny by Margaret Wise Brown. I wonder if one can commit one’s soul to God mediated through the words of a picture book and a seventeenth century poet?

That question brings me back full circle to Donne, and ultimately to God.

“We have a winding-sheet in our mother’s womb which grows with us from our mother’s conception and we come into the world wound up in that winding-sheet, for we come to seek a grave.”
~John Donne’s sermon, Death’s Duel

Dr. Bearing died trusting, perhaps, in the God of Donne and of the Runaway Bunny. Ambrose Zephyr died at home in bed with his wife nearby, their final separation leading only to an “unlikely story.” How will I die? How will you?

“Our critical day is not the very day of our death, but the whole course of our life . . . God doth not say, Live well, and thou shalt die well, that is, an easy, a quiet death; but live well here, and thou shalt live well forever.”
~ Death’s Duel by John Donne.

I may die laughing or crying or screaming, with a bang or a whimper, but into His hands I commit my spirit. And I believe it to be highly likely that “He is able to keep that which I’ve committed unto Him against that day.”

About Heaven on Ash Wednesday

I went on retreat with the women of my church this past weekend, and our topic of study for the three day weekend was Heaven. It’s been a sort of continuation of January’s book club topic.

Anyway, I thought I’d share with you a selection of quotations, songs, Bible verses, pictures, and miscellany relating to Heaven. Enjoy. Even as we repent and remember that we are ashes, we also have the hope that we will someday be like Him for we will see Him face to face.

Revelation 21:2-3 (NKJV): Then I, John, saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from GOd, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from heaven saying, “Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and He will dwell with them, and they will be His people. God himself will be with them and be their God.”

“Wherever we go and whatever we do, we’ll never leave the presence of the King. For although he dwells especially in the New Jerusalem, he will yet be present in the far reaches of the new universe—in which every subatomic particle will shout his glory.” ~Heaven by Randy Alcorn, p. 260.

“I do live expecting great things in the life that is ripening for me and all mine—when we shall have all the universe for our own, and be good merry helpful children in the great house of our Father. Then, darling, you and I and all will have grand liberty wherewith Christ makes free—opening his hand to send us out like white doves to range the universe.” ~George Macdonald

The nearer my approach to the end, the plainer is the sound of immortal symphonies of worlds which invite me. For half a century I have been translating my thoughts into prose and verse: history, philosophy, drama, romance, tradition, satire, ode, and song; all of these I have tried. But I feel I haven’t given utterance to the thousandth part of what lies within me. When I go to the grave I can say, as others have said, “My day’s work is done.” But I cannot say, “My life is done.” My work will recommence the next morning. The tomb is not a blind alley; it is a thoroughfare. It closes upon the twilight, but opens upon the dawn. ~Victor Hugo

Stairway to Heaven


“If the earth is fit for laughter then surely heaven is filled with it. Heaven is the birthplace of laughter.” ~Martin Luther

“If the Lord should bring a wicked man to heaven, heaven would be hell to him; for he who loves not grace upon earth will never love it in heaven” ~Christopher Love.

“To go to heaven, fully to enjoy God, is infinitely better than the most pleasant accommodations here.” ~Jonathan Edwards.

“No man ever saw God and lived.
And yet, I shall not live till I see God,
And when I have seen him,
I shall never die. ~John Donne

Revelation 5:12-13 (NKJV): “Worthy is the Lamb who was slain to receive power and riches and wisdom, and strength and honor and glory and blessing!”
And every creature which is in heaven and on the earth and under the earth and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them, I heard saying, “Blessing and honor and glory and power be to Him who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb, forever and ever!”

Peter Kreeft: What Will Heaven Be Like?

Heaven at Semicolon Book Club, January, 2009.

A Heavenly Hymn: Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence.

Wherever God is, there is heaven. ~Teresa of Avila

Lenten Blog Break 2009

Today is Fat Tuesday, and tomorrow is Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent. For the past two years I’ve taken a break from Semicolon and from blogging for the forty days of Lent. I’ve been blogging since October 2003, and I plan to continue blogging. I just feel that this break is a good time of rest and reevaluation for me and for my family.

I will continue to post the Saturday Review of Books each week, but I may not be able to read your reviews until after I get back in April. I also have a few posts and re-posts and links set up to come online on certain dates while I’m gone. The subject, for the most part, will be heaven, a wonderful place to think about during Lent and during this time of economic hardship for many people.

However, things will be a little slow here at Semicolon for the next few weeks. I hope your Lent is a time of worship, contemplation, and joy as we follow the year into the celebration of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ, this year on Sunday April 12th.

Books for Lent to Lead You into Resurrection

Lenten Links: Resources for a Post-Evangelical Lent by iMonk.

At a Hen’s Pace: An Anglican Family Lent

Semicolon Lenten Thoughts 2005

Poetry Friday: Prodigals and Preachers

I’m quite entranced by the poetry of James Weldon Johnson who took the cadence of a preacher and wrote it into poetry that sings and preaches at the same time. What wise words for a foolish young man: “Your arm’s too short to box with God!”

The Prodigal Son
BY JAMES WELDON JOHNSON
Departure of the Prodigal Son

Young man—
Young man—
Your arm’s too short to box with God.

But Jesus spake in a parable, and he said:
A certain man had two sons.
Jesus didn’t give this man a name,
But his name is God Almighty.
And Jesus didn’t call these sons by name,
But ev’ry young man,
Ev’rywhere,
Is one of these two sons.

And the younger son said to his father,
He said: Father, divide up the property,
And give me my portion now.
The Banquet of the Prodigal Son

And the father with tears in his eyes said: Son,
Don’t leave your father’s house.
But the boy was stubborn in his head,
And haughty in his heart,
And he took his share of his father’s goods,
And went into a far-off country.

There comes a time,
There comes a time
When ev’ry young man looks out from his father’s house,
Longing for that far-off country.

And the young man journeyed on his way,
And he said to himself as he travelled along:
This sure is an easy road,
Nothing like the rough furrows behind my father’s plow.

Young man—
Young man—
Smooth and easy is the road
That leads to hell and destruction.
Down grade all the way,
The further you travel, the faster you go.
No need to trudge and sweat and toil,
Just slip and slide and slip and slide
Till you bang up against hell’s iron gate.

Read the rest of Mr. Johnson’s poem at Poetry Foundation.

The paintings are by Murillo; the first one is titled Departure of the Prodigal Son, and the second, Banquet of the Prodigal Son.

Lisa Chellman has the Poetry Friday round-up at Under the Covers.

Pre-Election Prayer, Post-Election Promises

Tonight we gathered at my church, and for two hours we prayed for our nation, sang the songs that remind us Who is in control, and spoke encouragement and admonition to one another. We prayed for George W. Bush and for Barack Obama and for John McCain. We confessed our individual sins to God, and we confessed the sins of our nation and asked for God’s mercy. We came boldly before the throne of our Sovereign and Messiah, and we asked him to preserve the lives of the unborn and the elderly and the disabled, no matter who is elected tomorrow. We asked Him who is able to heal marriages and families across our land. We asked Him to place the widows and the orphans into godly families. We asked Him to turn the hearts of the children to their fathers and the hearts of all to Jesus. We reminded ourselves that God still reigns, yesterday, today and tomorrow.

And tomorrow I will vote, and then I will leave this election and our nation in God’s hands. I hope that I will not sin by neglecting to pray for our country and for whomever God places in power. I plan to remember that whether we as a nation of voters elect Obama or McCain, and whether we elect a Republican Congress or a Democrat Congress, neither of those results will bring about the redemption and salvation of the people of the United States. We trust not in princes or presidents; we trust in the Lord. Tomorrow and for all the days after, we Christians will still be strangers in a land that is not our home. And I will serve Him in my place of service here in Houston, and on my blog, and in my home.

This is no time for fear
This is a time for faith and determination
Don’t lose the vision here
Carried away by emotion
Hold on to all that you hide in your heart
There is one thing that has always been true
It holds the world together

God is in control
We believe that His children will not be forsaken
God is in control
We will choose to remember and never be shaken
There is no power above or beside Him, we know
God is in control, oh God is in control

History marches on
There is a bottom line drawn across the ages
Culture can make its plan
Oh, but the line never changes
No matter how the deception may fly
There is one thing that has always been true
It will be true forever

He has never let you down
Why start to worry now?
He is still the Lord of all we see
And He is still the loving Father
Watching over you and me.

~God Is In Control by Twila Paris.

Amen to this prayer from The Book of Common Prayer via Wittingshire.

At The Point: A Prayer for our Nation from the Book of Daniel.

For more reasons and encouragement to vote, check out “Blog the Vote” at Chasing Ray, a round-up of thoughts on the importance of voting from across the blogosphere.