Prayer Tweets

On this National Day of Prayer I’m going for a run. I pray better when my legs are moving. @MaryDeMuth

“Prayer rings the alarm bell, and the Master of the house arises to the rescue, shaking all things beneath his tread.” Spurgeon @brandywinebooks

“Prayer has shaken houses, opened prison doors, and made stout hearts to quail.” Spurgeon on Psalm 18 @brandywinebooks

Today is The National Day of Prayer. “Continue in prayer, and watch in the same with thanksgiving.” (Colossians 4:2) @wyclif

Pray for someone you love today, someone you disagree with and someone who needs healing #nationaldayofprayer @baueriegirl

Happy #nationaldayofprayer! Talking to Him is the first step to having a relationship with Him. So what are you waiting for? @jillianhennan

I urge, then, first of all, that petitions, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for all people. 1 Tim 2:1 #nationaldayofprayer @warrenwoodsjr

Reminded that today, like all days, is a great day for prayer. #nationaldayofprayer @sethhanson

Praying the Psalms

In the Bible study video I watched last night, R.C. Sproul suggested that the book of the Bible most conducive to energizing and improving your prayer life was Psalms. The Psalms are 150 prayers and songs, inspired by God himself, and dealing with all aspects of the human condition.

Here a few psalms that might give you words to speak to God wherever you find yourself today:

Psalm 95: A song of thanksgiving

Psalm 96: A song of praise to a mighty God

Psalm 86: A plea for mercy

Psalm 77: A psalm of confidence in the strength and compassion of the Lord

Psalm 73: A request for God to render justice to the arrogant

Psalm 63: A psalm for someone who is thirsty to know God

Psalm 62: A request for hope, rest, and refuge

Psalm 51: A prayer of repentance

Psalm 133: A psalm celebrating God’s establishment of communities

Psalm 140: A prayer for deliverance from the wicked and protection from evil

Psalm 148: Let everything and everyone praise the Lord!

Psalm 150: Let everything that has breath praise the Lord!

A list of topics for all the psalms.

“In the Psalter you learn about yourself. You find depicted in it all the movements of your soul, all its changes, its ups and downs, its failures and recoveries.” ~Athanasius

“The most valuable thing the Psalms do for me is to express the same delight in God which made David dance.” ~C.S. Lewis

National Day of Prayer, 2011

So today is the National Day of Prayer in the United States.

The 60th Annual National Day of Prayer will take place Thursday, May 5, 2011. Millions will unite in prayer at thousands of events from coast to coast. The theme, “A Mighty Fortress is Our God”, is based on the verse from Psalm 91:2 which states: “I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.”

Mrs. Joni Eareckson Tada will join Mrs. Shirley Dobson to lead the nation in prayer as the 2011 Honorary Chairman of the National Day of Prayer Task Force.

I’m going to try to post about prayer today, to encourage myself and you to spend time in prayer today, to start a prayer habit if you don’t already have one, and to use this day as an impetus to to a renewed relationship with God through Jesus Christ.

Stay tuned.

Taking Off by Jenny Moss

Nominated for 2011 Cybil Awards, Young Adult Fiction category. Nominated by Kelly Jensen at Stacked.

Houston author, Jenny Moss, has written about my hometown setting, Clear Lake City, a suburb of Houston, and Johnson Space Center, the NASA facility where Engineer Husband works. Of course, when I saw such a local interest YA novel on the shelf at the library, I had to read it. And the time for a review, with the last shuttle Endeavor flight scheduled for this month, seems appropriate.

Annie Porter lives in Clear Lake, but she’s never been interested in the space program until her best friend invites her to a dinner where she’ll be able to meet Christa McAuliffe, NASA’s first Teacher-in-Space. Inspired by Christa’s zest for life, Annie, a senior in high school, decides to go to Florida to see the launch of the space shuttle Challenger.

Knowing how the story of Christa McAuliffe ends made this novel of a Texas girl torn between staying at home and venturing forth, well, a bit dark and foreboding. When the launch finally happens in the novel, even though I knew it would happen, the explosion of the Challenger was traumatic and terribly sad. Of course, Annie, who has placed almost all of her hopes and dreams for the future in her admiration for Christa McAuliffe, is devastated.

But Annie recovers and goes on to make a decision about whether she will be a “keeper or a dreamer.” I got those two labels from this post at Rabbit Room by Sarah Clarkson. As I commented there, I think all of us have some of the dreamer and some of the keeper inside us. The key is deciding when it’s time to “take off” and when it’s time to hold fast and make a nest and a community. Taking Off by Jenny Moss offers both a good story and some wisdom about choosing between the two modes of living intentionally.

Of Prophets and Pundits and Politics

First I read William F. Buckley by Jeremy, one book in a series called Christian Encounters, published by Thomas Nelson. These are short books dealing specifically with the Christian faith of various historical figures—John Bunyan, Sir Isaac Newton, and Winston Churchill, for example—and Buckley is the most recently living person profiled in the series.

I’ve always thought Mr. Buckley was a fascinating man; his wit, vocabulary, and, of course, his accent were quite attractive to me. I’m a political conservative, so I enjoyed most of his ideas, too. But I must say the manipulation of words and the way he spoke were the real draw whenever I listened to him, which was not very often. Anyway, Lott’s treatment of Mr. Buckley’s faith and its influence on his public persona was thorough, but a little disjointed. I felt as if I should have read a more complete biography of William F. Buckley first, and then read Lott’s dissertation to fill in the blanks, if any, in reference to Buckley’s Catholic faith and practice. And there were places where Jeremy Lott could have used a better editor; in one section he refers to “the event”, and I never did understand what the event he was referencing was.

Reading this incomplete, but tantalizing biographical treatment of William F. Buckley’s life, made me want to read some more of Buckley’s writing and a thorough biography of the man. I also wondered what WFB thought about Rush Limbaugh and other younger conservative firebrands, since the next book I read was Andrew Breitbart’s new book, Righteous Indignation: Excuse Me While I Save the World! I tend to think that WFB would have enjoyed Mr. Breitbart, even if he found the younger man a bit brash and vainglorious (as I did). I googled Rush and Buckley together and found this quote from Sam Tanenhaus who was supposed to be writing a biography of William F. Buckley at the time of this interview: “He (Buckley) liked Rush Limbaugh, who was published in National Review, but was more skeptical of Ann Coulter, whose book “Treason” he reviewed.” Mr.Tanenhaus’s biography must be DOA or still in abeyance.

Anyway, back to Breitbart, who were he here in person, would likely not have allowed my focus to stray from him and his mission to save the world for so long. Egotistical much? Yes, although similar to Rush Limbaugh’s persona, it’s part ego and part showmanship. Mr. Breitbart says in the book that Rush Limbaugh, Matt Drudge, and Ann Coulter are his heroes, and I would say that Breitbart does a creditable job of emulating that trio while still being an original. He also uses the ideas of community organizer Saul Alinsky to out-maneuver the most devious media manipulators of the left, and when all else fails and he realizes that he’s sounding like a crazy conservative, he pleads ADHD and plunges on to the next controversy.

It’s all highly entertaining, if you’re on his side, the conservative/libertarian side, and even if you’re not, it might be worth reading to see how the other half thinks and lives. Mr. Breitbart, if you’re not familiar with him, is the man behind the ACORN expose, and his web of of blogs, including BigHollywood, BigGovernment, Big Journalism, and BIgPeace, are his attempts to replace what he calls the “Democrat-Media Complex” with a New Media, more responsive to and in touch with the people it claims to serve.

As I said already, I enjoyed the book, even though Mr. Breitbart is something of a one-note Charlie. His message is that the liberals/Democrats control the mainstream media, and that to defeat the Dems conservatives have to discredit and defeat the Democrat-Media Complex. Oh, and the way to take out the mainstream media is to use the tactics that they’ve been using for years, the tactics of Saul Alinsky and the Huffington Post and the not-so-mainstream media.

I’m mostly in agreement with Andrew Breitbart, just as I mostly agree with William F. Buckley, Jr. And either man would make a scintillating dinner conversationalist or a highly explosive and dramatic political speaker. I would prefer to stay on their good side because I’m not as quick-witted as Buckley was, nor does my mind jump around as rapidly as Breitbart’s ADHD enables him to do. If you’re of the conservative persuasion already, you’ll enjoy both books in spite of their flaws and despite the inevitable character flaws of the subjects, Buckley and Breitbart.

If you lean toward the left politically speaking, you might find ammunition in one or both of the books, but probably not much pleasure.

Three Victorian-setting YA Novels

First I read In the Shadow of the Lamp by Susanne Dunlap. It’s set in 1854, and Molly, our protagonist, dissembles a background in nursing in order to be able to join Florence Nightingale as she assembles a coterie of nurses to go to the Crimea. I’ve heard of the Crimean War, and I associate it with Florence Nightingale and with the Charge of the Light Brigade. The vague location in my mind of “the Crimea” is somewhere near Istanbul? It turns out that I’m not so very far off. The Crimea is farther north, on shore of the Black Sea in what is now the Ukraine, but the nurses ended up at the British army hospital in Scutari, which was in a section of Istanbul. Wikipedia:

During the Crimean War (1854-1856), the barracks was allocated to the British Army, which was on the way from Britain to the Crimea. After the troops of the 33rd and 41st[3] left for the front, the barracks was converted into a temporary military hospital.
On November 4, 1854, Florence Nightingale arrived in Scutari with 38 volunteer nurses. They cared for thousands of wounded and infected soldiers, and drastically reduced the high mortality rate by improving the sanitary living conditions until she returned home in 1857 as a heroine.

The story of how Molly learned to be a real nurse and of her comrades in healing turns into a romance and even a bit of a ghost story. I was intrigued enough to look up more information about the Crimean War and about Ms. Nightingale, and I recommend the story for lovers of historical Victoriana.

Fallen Grace by Mary Hooper takes place in almost exactly the same time period, 1854-1861, as In the Shadow. In this novel our heroine is named Grace Parkes, and she, too is poor, spunky, and determined. Grace has an older sister, Lily, who is mentally handicapped, and the two sisters are orphans. The book deals with Victorian death customs, specifically the death of Queen Victoria’s beloved husband, Prince Albert, and with the many difficulties facing a young, unprotected and unattached female in Dickensian London. Grace and Lily are adrift in the city, and they face off with evil villains worthy of a Dickens novel. I thought the history was well-researched, and the story was absorbing as Grace tries to protect her sister Lily and make a way for the two of them to live an honest and free life in a harsh world.

I liked this rags to riches story very much, even though it was somewhat unbelievable. Dickens himself is rather unbelievable, if you stop to think carefully about some of his plots, but he manages to carry it off anyway. Ms. Hooper is writing in that tradition, but the style is appropriate for a modern YA audience.

The last of the three books I read was The Agency: A Spy in the House by Y.S. Lee. The other two novels were gateways to history with real historical characters, such as Dickens, Nightingale, and others, making cameo appearances and with lots of real historical events featured in each book. The Agency is more of a straight spy novel that happens to be set in Victorian London, same time period again, 1853-1858. The protagonist is again a young woman, Mary Quinn, and the lady is in just as much trouble as either Grace or Molly as the novel opens. Mary,in fact, is about to be hanged as a thief before she is rescued by a mysterious benefactress and taken to Miss Scrimshaw’s Academy for Girls to be educated. A few years later, when Mary is grown, she goes before the two ladies who run the school, Miss Treleaven and Mrs. Frame to decide with them what she is to do with her life. There Mary learns about a secretive spy/detective agency that the two ladies operate, and she is given the opportunity to begin training as an operative.

I enjoyed this book almost as much as I did the other two novels, but I did think that this one had some holes in the plot and and missed transitions. I was never sure how Mary Quinn managed to justify her detective activities to her erstwhile partner/romantic interest (who doesn’t know about the secret Agency); her story that she was looking for a runaway maid was rather thin and unbelievable since she never did anything related to the maid’s disappearance. That’s just one example. Ms. Quinn often jumps to conclusions that are not justified by the evidence, but of course, her conclusions turn out to be exactly right. And some of the characters change personalities in a bewildering manner such that it’s difficult to know whom to root for and whom to hate. There’s also an undercurrent of feminist agit-prop, but it’s easily ignored.

The Agency: A Spy in the House seems to be the beginning book in a projected series about this ladies’ spy agency, and I’m hoping that more editing will work out some of the continuity problems in the plot and characterizations. The premise is good, but the logic of the story itself could use a little work.

Three feisty heroines, three stories of romance and intrigue, three British settings. I recommend them together as a set.

Sunday Salon: Books Read in April, 2011 Plus Some Fine Links

The Sunday Salon.com

Children’s and Young Adult Fiction:
In the Shadow of the Lamp by Susanne Dunlap.
Fallen Grace by Mary Hooper.
The Agency: A Spy in the House by Y.S. Lee.
I read these three historical VIctorian-era YA novels one after another, and my review of all three will be coming up soon. I’ll just say I rather enjoyed all three.
Edges by Lena Roy. Semicolon review here.

Adult Fiction:
Goodbye, Mr. Chips by James Hilton.
Firefly Lane by Kristin Hannah. Semicolon review here.

Nonfiction, History, Biography, and Memoir:
Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream by H.G. Bissinger. Semicolon review here.
Cannibals of the Heart by Jack Shepherd.
Praying for Strangers by River Jordan.
Choosing to See by Mary Beth Chapman. Semicolon review here.
Son of Hamas by Mosab Hassan Yousef. Semicolon review here.
Little Princes by Conor Grennan. Semicolon review here. This one was of particular interest because I know someone who lives in Nepal. It has become a small world in many ways, hasn’t it?
William F. Buckley by Jeremy Lott.
Righteous Indignation by Andrew Bretibart.
AfricaTrek: A Journey by Bicycle through Africa by Dan Buettner.

I read lots more nonfiction than fiction this month, unusual for me. I find myself impatient with fiction lately; a lot of what I’ve picked up lately seems so trivial and unsatisfying for some reason. My favorite book of the month? Praying for Strangers by River Jordan. It’s inspired me to start on my own prayer adventure, and I’m having a great time, praying for strangers (and friends) and conversing with the God of the Universe.

What Good Is God? by Philip Yancey

In his Bible study curriculum Experiencing God, and book of the same name, Henry Blackaby advised Christians to “go where you see God at work” and join Him in what He is doing. In this book by prolific Christian author and journalist Philip Yancey, Mr. Yancey does just that. He attempts to find the places where and people among whom God is working and introduce readers to what God is doing in the world.

Some of the people and places are: a convention of former prostitutes, Muslim background (Christian) believers in the Middle East, Virginia Tech after the shooting that claimed 32 lives in 200?, Chinese Christians in underground churches, South Africa where Christians work to overcome centuries of mistrust and racism, Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, a Memphis health center, and even a Bible College in the Southern U.S. where some can feel left out and left behind. In each of these disparate places, Mr. Yancey finds God at work and joins Him by speaking to the felt and unfelt needs of the group before him. I found these chapters to be inspiring, comforting, and challenging all at the same time.

I was inspired by Christian believers in difficult situations where following Christ is not a decision to be made lightly. I was reminded that Jesus said to take up my cross daily and follow Him, and that daily obedience requires sacrifice no matter where you live.

I was comforted to know that many Christians, former prostitutes and alcoholics and racists, realize that they live in daily dependence on God. So do I. I don’t have it all together, but God does. He will choose to use me, even to save me, in His sovereign will. I I just have to trust and obey, as best I can. He’s in control.

I was challenged to see that many people face much worse circumstances, both personal and political, than I do. Yet they remain faithful. I can surely follow Him daily in my little corner of Major Suburbia.

Mr. Yancey proposes to answer the titular question, “What good is God?” He does so by telling stories of God at work in the world, stories of humble people serving God as best they can, sometimes in difficult life conditions. This anecdotal evidence and reply format leaves the book feeling somewhat disorganized and disjointed, but ultimately such a question is best answered by the changes in people’s lives rather than a formal and systematic apologetic.

Faith ‘n Fiction Roundtable:
Linus’s Blanket
My Friend Amy
Book Addiction
Carrie’s Books and Movies
Book Journey
Ignorant Historian
My Random Thoughts
The 3R’s Blog: Reading, ‘Riting and Randomness
Word Lily
Tina’s Book Reviews

Saturday Review of Books: April 30, 2011

“In a very real sense, people who have read good literature have lived more than people who cannot or will not read. It is not true that we have only one life to lead; if we can read, we can live as many more lives and as many kinds of lives as we wish.”~S.I. Hayakawa

SatReviewbuttonIf you’re not familiar with and linking to and perusing the Saturday Review of Books here at Semicolon, you’re missing out. Here’s how it usually works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime during the previous week of a book you were reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Then on Saturday, you post a link here at Semicolon in Mr. Linky to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

After linking to your own reviews, you can spend as long as you want reading the reviews of other bloggers for the week and adding to your wishlist of books to read. That’s how my own TBR list has become completely unmanageable and the reason I can’t join any reading challenges. I have my own personal challenge that never ends.

1. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Heart of a Samurai)
2. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Cloud Tea Monkeys)
3. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (His Shoes Were Far Too Tight)
4. Carol in Oregon (The Extravagant Frugal Reader)
5. the Ink Slinger (To Say Nothing of the Dog)
6. Carol in Oregon (String Straightedge and Shadow)
7. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (Assassination Vacation)
8. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (The Tudor Secret)
9. Florinda @ The 3 R’s Blog (What Good is God?)
10. Why Homeschool (America Alone)
11. Beth@Weavings (Lumby On the Air)
12. Yvonne@fictionbooks ‘Eyeshot’ by Lynn Hightower
13. Collateral Bloggage (Bloody Crimes)
14. Barbara H. (A Tale of Two Cities)
15. Hope (What to Eat by Marion Nestle)
16. Across the Page (The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society)
17. Beckie @ ByThe Book (Tales of The Dim Knight)
18. Beckie@ByTheBook (Jane Fairfax)
19. Beckie@ByTheBook (The Genesis Trilogy)
20. Glynn (letters of Welty & Maxwell)
21. Graham @ My Book Year (Player One)
22. Sarah Reads Too Much (The Tapestry of Love)
23. Sarah Reads Too Much (Bossypants by Tina Fey)
24. Zee @ Notes from the North (Ett UFO gör entré (The Help)
25. Zee @ Notes from the North (Herland)
26. Alice@Supratentorial(Unshaken)
27. Lucybird’s Book Blog (Living Dolls: The Return of Sexism)
28. Lucybird’s Book Blog (Flyte)
29. DebD (Ghost Map)
30. Farrar @ I Capture the Rowhouse (The Fog Mound)
31. Word Lily (Attachments)
32. SmallWorld Reads (A Far Country)
33. Lazygal (This Live Is in Your Hands)
34. Lazygal (Everest)
35. Lazygal (In the Garden of Beasts)
36. Lazygal (The Emerald Atlas)
37. Lazygal (This Other Life)
38. Lazygal (This Beautiful Life)
39. Lazygal (The Wrong Mother)
40. Lazygal (Born Under a Lucky Moon)
41. Lazygal (Tempest Rising)
42. Lazygal (The Woodcutter)
43. Bob (Hero: The Life and Legend of Lawrence of Arabia)
44. Girl Detective (“Calliope” from Dream Country)
45. Girl Detective (House of Tomorrow)
46. Reading to Know (The 21 Balloons)
47. Reading to Know (Inconceivable)
48. Reading to Know (Baseball Picture Books)
49. Reading to Know (Blackberry Crumble)
50. Ruth (latest three books)
51. Cindy’s Book Club (Sweet Caroline)
52. JHS (Memoirs of a Widowed MistressGIVEAWAY)
53. JHS (Husband and Wife GIVEAWAY)
54. JHS (Attachments GIVEAWAY)
55. JHS (Literary Ladies Guide to the Writing Life GIVEAWAY)
56. JHS (The Four Ms. Bradwells GIVEAWAY)
57. Becky (How To Study the Bible. R.A. Torrey)
58. Becky (How to Pray. R.A. Torrey)
59. Becky (The Judgment. Beverly Lewis)
60. Becky (Brief History of Montmaray by Michelle Cooper)
61. Becky (Land of Silver Apples by Nancy Farmer)
62. Becky (Sharp North by Patrick Cave)
63. Becky (Ropemaker by Peter Dickinson)
64. Santiago Pliego (The Greener Grass Conspiracy)
65. Santiago Pliego (Attlas Shrugged Pt.1-Book)
66. Santiago Pliego (Attlas Shrugged Pt. 2-Book)
67. melydia (Exchange)
68. melydia (First Men in the Moon)
69. Nicola (DC Super Pets! The Fastest Pet on Earth)
70. Nicola (Dragonbreath: Lair of the Bat Monster by Ursula Vernon)
71. Nicola (Dragonbreath: Curse of the Were-Wiener by Ursula Vernon)
72. Nicola (High Flight: A Story of WWII by Linda Granfield))
73. Nicola (Grandma’s Attic Books 1 & 2 by Arleta Richardson)
74. Nicola (Nura: Rise of the Yokai Clan, Vol. 2)
75. Colleen (Thread of Sky)
76. Anne (Bible Study: Following the Ways of the Word)
77. Grooming the Next Generation for Success
78. Yvann (No Safe Haven)
79. Yvann (The Eloquence of Desire)
80. Yvann (Bel Canto)
81. Gina @ Bookscount (Cupid Gone Wild)
82. Woman of the House (The Thirty-Nine Steps by John Buchan)
83. Diary of an Eccentric (Tomaree)
84. Diary of an Eccentric (A Jane Austen Education)

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The Cross and the Switchblade by David Wilkerson

David Wilkerson, author of The Cross and the Switchblade and founder of World Challenge Ministries, died in a car crash today, Charisma and CBN are reporting.

CBN reports that Wilkerson was 79. The church that he founded, Times Square Church in New York City, has more than 8,000 members. His wife Gwen, was also involved in the crash and was rushed to the hospital where she is said to be in critical condition.

Oddly enough, my English/History class at homeschool co-op is reading Wilkerson’s most famous book, The Cross and the Switchblade, this week. My son, who is in the class, told me yesterday that he thought the gang stuff in the book was exaggerated. I told him him he was mistaken. Gangs were and are very bad, but God is bigger.

I remember reading The Cross and the Switchblade over thirty years ago, and I re-read it last week. It holds up. The story of a country preacher who takes on the street gangs of New York City armed with nothing but the sword of the Spirit and the shield of Faith was just as compelling last week as it was when I read it as a teenager growing up in West Texas far from the evils of the big city, but not far at all from many of the same issues that Wilkerson faced in his work with street people and gang members. The poverty Wilkerson described in his book was foreign to me as a middle class teenager, but I had friends who had given themselves over to drugs and to illicit sexual relationships and who were just as much in need of a Saviour as anyone in New York City. And I saw in my own heart, too, the possibility for sin and evil just as horrific as that of any drug-addicted junkie in NYC. There but for the grace of God . . . Even though I never did agree with Rev. Wilkerson’s Pentecostalism, I certainly found his commitment to the Lord Jesus Christ and his dependence on the Holy Spirit to be inspiring and encouraging.

How did David Wilkerson’s life and minstry impact you? (on Facebook-CBN)

David WIlkerson’s last blog post, faithful to the end: “Beloved, God has never failed to act but in goodness and love. When all means fail—his love prevails. Hold fast to your faith. Stand fast in his Word. There is no other hope in this world.”

Now that’s a legacy.