Can You Live Without Being Offended?

unoffended

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The anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God.  (James 1:20 ESV)

If you think you can judge others, you are wrong. When you judge them, you are really judging yourself guilty, because you do the same things they do. God judges those who do wrong things, and we know that his judging is right. You judge those who do wrong, but you do wrong yourselves. Do you think you will be able to escape the judgment of God?  (Rom. 2:1–3 NCV)

What’s more, for those who still want to make anger a nutritious part of their spiritual breakfasts: in the Bible’s “wisdom literature,” anger is always—not sometimes, always—associated with foolishness, not wisdom. The writer recognized that, yes, anger may visit us, but when it finds a residence, it’s “in the lap of fools” (Eccl. 7:9).

So what if—just dreaming out loud, here—Christians were known as the people you couldn’t offend?

~ Brant Hansen

Being angry and offended on behalf of God has become a sacred pastime for many Christians today.  As American culture becomes increasingly less interested in Christianity (to put it mildly), too many of Christ’s followers are, ironically, not following Christ in their response.

Instead of showing love and mercy, much of the church has become offended, which yields anger, bitterness, and separation.

However, the gospels reveal Jesus’ mercy towards those who appear to be the worst sinners, and he levels some pretty strong rebukes to those who think they are above sin.

But wasn’t Jesus angry at the religious Pharisees?  Perhaps, but it didn’t rule his heart.  In His last breaths on the cross, he asks God to forgive them even though they didn’t have a clue what they had done.

So what are we to do when we are offended, angry, and hurt?

Enter Brant Hansen’s book, Unoffendable: How Just One Change Can Make All of Life Better.

I don’t usually say, “Every Christian needs to read this book,” because it has become a bit overused and cliché, so I really mean this: every Christian needs to read this book.

Brant is a Christian radio DJ and also turns out to be a great writer.  He hits hard on a tough subject, but does it with love and good natured humor (check out the chapter titles alone to get an idea of the humor).  I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book, even though it was very challenging.

But most importantly, I believe Brant has revealed the unoffendable nature of Jesus Christ.  This is a game changer for those who desire to let Jesus live through them.  You can’t be angry and love others.  It just doesn’t work.  God’s way is forgiveness, and any judgment belongs to Him.

Not only that, but I’ve found that one important, distinguishing factor in Christ-like maturity is the ability to overlook an offense and choose love.

Good sense makes one slow to anger, and it is his glory to overlook an offense.  (Proverbs 19:11 ESV)

Here are some quotes directly from the book.  I highlighted a ton of this book, so it was hard to choose only a few quotes!

It’s true that sometimes people try to offend us, and they’re intentionally hurtful and spiteful. And yet, there Jesus is, on the cross, saying, “Father, forgive them. They don’t know what they’re doing.” A fair question, then: Is that same Jesus living in and through me, still saying that?

We should forfeit our right to be offended. That means forfeiting our right to hold on to anger. When we do this, we’ll be making a sacrifice that’s very pleasing to God. It strikes at our very pride. It forces us not only to think about humility, but to actually be humble. I used to think it was incumbent upon a Christian to take offense. I now think we should be the most refreshingly unoffendable people on a planet that seems to spin on an axis of offense.

Forfeiting our right to anger makes us deny ourselves, and makes us others-centered. When we start living this way, it changes everything. Actually, it’s not even “forfeiting” a right, because the right doesn’t exist. We’re told to forgive, and that means anger has to go, whether we’ve decided our own anger is “righteous” or not.

We won’t often admit this, but we like being angry. We don’t like what caused the anger, to be sure; we just like thinking we’ve “got” something on someone. So-and-so did something wrong, sometimes horribly wrong, and anger offers us a sense of moral superiority.

But inconveniently, there’s this proverb that says, “You may believe you are doing right, but the LORD will judge your reasons” (Prov. 16:2 NCV). So it’s not just me. We all, apparently, find ourselves pretty darn convincing. Of course my anger is righteous. It’s righteous because, clearly, I’m right, and they’re wrong. My ways seem pure to me. Always.

We humans are experts at casting ourselves as victims and rewriting narratives that put us in the center of injustices. (More on this in a bit.) And we can repaint our anger or hatred of someone—say, anyone who threatens us—into a righteous-looking work of art. And yet, remarkably, in Jesus’ teaching, there is no allowance for “Okay, well, if someone really is a jerk, then yeah—you need to be offended.” We’re flat-out told to forgive, even—especially!—the very stuff that’s understandably maddening and legitimately offensive.

The thing that you think makes your anger “righteous” is the very thing you are called to forgive.

Anger is extraordinarily easy. It’s our default setting. Love is very difficult. Love is a miracle.

Upon hearing my ideas on anger, a radio listener told me, “I don’t get it. Shouldn’t we be angry at those guys in the news who beat up homeless people?” Here’s what I think, given that we’re to “get rid of all anger”: Anger will happen; we’re human. But we can’t keep it. Like the Reverend King, we can recognize injustice, grieve it, and act against it—but without rage, without malice, and without anger. We have enough motivation, I hope, to defend the defenseless and protect the vulnerable, without needing anger. Seek justice; love mercy. You don’t have to be angry to do that. People say we have to get angry to fight injustice, but I’ve noticed that the best police officers don’t do their jobs in anger. The best soldiers don’t function out of anger. Anger does not enhance judgment.

Choosing not to take offense is not about simply ignoring wrongs. If someone, say, cuts in front of you in line, you can address the situation. You don’t have to simply accept it. But you can act without contempt, anger, and bitterness.

Yet another wrinkle: when there are two “sides” to a story, we tend to think the first one we hear is the right one. I learned this, of course, by watching The People’s Court after school every day. I always thought the plaintiff had a great case . . . until I heard the other side. This bias is universal. It’s not new, either. Check out Proverbs 18:17: “The first one to plead his cause seems right, until his neighbor comes and examines him” (NKJV). Life is full of conflicts, disputes, differing perspectives . . . and in all of those, guess whose perspective I hear first? That’s easy: mine. I establish a story line, and I can get angry before I even hear the other side, which is yet another reason to be very suspicious of ourselves. So let’s have the guts—and the humility—to believe what the Bible says about us, and what the research shows us. We simply can’t trust ourselves in our judgments of others. We don’t know what they’re really thinking, or their background, or what really motivated whatever they did. And since we don’t know, let’s choose ahead of time: we’re just not going to get offended by people. If I don’t need to be right, I don’t have to reshape reality to fit “The Story of My Rightness.”

That person you find so offensive? Somehow, God sees something there. Something you don’t. Ask Him what it is. Maybe He’ll show you. I bet He wants to.

I actually sleep better when I’ve chosen to be unoffendable.

It finally occurred to me that we can’t be agents of healing in people’s lives unless we’re ready to bear their wounds for them and from them.

We decide to be unoffendable because that’s how love operates; it gives up its “status” entirely.

but the more we divest ourselves of ourselves, the better our lives get. Jesus told us as much. He said if we’d give up our lives, for His sake, we’d find real life.

Follow the Life!
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Jesus is the Essence and Source of the Church (and everything else, too)

essence source

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Everything draws its essence from him, and God gave him, him alone, to the assembly as the source of everything it needs. The assembly is, in fact, his body, and every individual contributes to bring his body to a state of completion.

(Ephesians 1:22-23, The Source NT, emphasis mine)

Um… wow.  I have to say that these verses in this translation have just blown me away as of late.

Jesus is the essence of the church.

Jesus is the source of the church.

Everything we need is in Him.

Everything draws its essence, its value, its fragrance, from Him.

And He loves to give all of this to us.

What is true about us because of our identity in Christ is permanent.  It is never untrue.  (Let that sink in for a minute.)  The essence, or nature, of Christ never changes.

Jesus is the real, ultimate essence of His body.  We are the essence of Christ, kind of like a portrait captures the essence of a person or a landscape, but so much more.

Because Jesus is our essence and source, our identity and our real life is found in Him.

The body is the fragrance of Christ in the world.

The body can hold the essence of Christ and also express that essence as we abide in Him.

Our most significant quality is Jesus being uniquely expressed through each member of His body.

Jesus is our source.  He is the origin of the River of Life that flows out from Him and in and through us.  The “every spiritual blessing in the heavenly realms” in Ephesians 1 originate and flow from Him.  It is our union with Jesus as One New Man that gives us access to the blessings.  It is all in and from Him.

Saints, how can we be selfless?

How can we not be anxious about tomorrow?

How can Jesus’ body have one mind?

How can Jesus’ body have one Spirit?

How can we love others as Christ has loved us?

How can we live mutually submitted to each other?

How can we see past each others’ flaws and sins?

How do we not keep a record of wrongs?

How can we be slow to anger and abound in love?

How can we always see the best in each other?

The reality is… we can’t!

Only with Jesus as our essence and our source, our origin, can we accomplish anything of true worth.  Only in Him can we live and move in the divine.

You are the essence of Christ, and He is your Source.

We are the essence of Christ, and He is our Source.

No one else.  Nothing else.

Only Jesus.

This is the key to all spiritual life.

Follow the Life!

*****

If you would like to expand on the theme of Jesus as our Source and abiding in Him, check out the series going on at the 3rd Race blog.

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Psalm 23: Why Jesus Prepares a Table in the Midst of Our Enemies

psalm 23Rewriting Psalm 23… I’ve done this exercise many times and I’ve found so much life in it.  I’ve found that the Spirit will highlight different part of this brief chapter each time I reflect on it, and out flows a different version of the words.

Recently, two things were of special notice.

1. Jesus Himself is the green pasture!  He is leading us into Himself to experience his love and live by his own divine life.

2. It seems odd that Jesus would be preparing a feast for us while our enemies are closing in around us.  Unless of course, He has already defeated all our enemies and knows that they have no real power over us.  When we realize this, we need only to rest and feast at the Lord’s table, where He sustains us and feeds us with His life.  Taking on this posture of ignoring the enemy at our feet and resting peacefully at the Lord’s table shames the enemy and displays Jesus’ own character to the world.

Here’s my paraphrase with these two themes highlighted.

Psalm 23: Mark’s Paraphrase

Thank you Jesus that You are the Perfect Shepherd, and in Your life, we have everything that truly matters.  We only need to keep our eyes fixed on You, and You guide us into the greenest pastures – Your Life!  By Your Spirit, these pastures that are green and vibrant beyond all compare, are located inside of us.  In faith, we look within to find You and we rest in Your presence.  Your life in us gives a peace so that we can relax, like taking a long nap next to a bubbling stream.  We are healed and restored to our true selves as we sit with You.  From this place of rest and trust, we follow You anywhere You lead, and those who see us recognize You and call us by Your name.

Even when the path to Your green pastures winds through dark and dangerous valleys, we keep our eyes on You and fear nothing.  Your gentle and patient leading brings an inner contentment despite our circumstances.  Even when we are surrounded by enemies on all sides, You invite us to rest and feast in You, the Bread of Life.  While we have no power in ourselves, our resting and feasting in Your life in all things brings shame to any who stand against You, and renders them powerless against us.  True religion is on display to the world as we dine at your table in rest and joy.  Meanwhile Your Spirit, Your scent, Your being blooms inside of us so that we overflow with Your life.

We are joined together with You for all eternity, and we will live with Your family in Your house forever.

Follow the Life!

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Reflecting on the Lord’s Prayer

Lord's Prayer

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In the past I’ve recited the Lord’s Prayer more times than I can count, but it wasn’t until recently that I really stopped to reflect on what Jesus says in this prayer.

The group I meet with has been sharing about the Lord’s Prayer in Matthew 6 and Luke 11.  In Matthew, Jesus is teaching the crowd in His famous Sermon on the Mount.  In Luke’s account, the disciples are watching and listening to Jesus pray, and they ask Him, “teach us how to pray”.

In either case, Jesus responds with a very simple prayer:

Our Father in heaven,
may your name be kept holy.
May your Kingdom come soon.
May your will be done on earth,
as it is in heaven.
Give us today the food we need,
and forgive us our sins,
as we have forgiven those who sin against us.
And don’t let us yield to temptation,
but rescue us from the evil one.

(Matthew 6:9-13 NLT)

Jesus says a lot in these few words.  For example, “Our Father” invites the disciples to participate in the Divine Family.  Jesus has a relationship with His Father that He has come to share with us.  Not only that, but Our Father is “in heaven”.  We share in a relationship with a Father in a heavenly realm.  If you look for it in the Gospels, you will find that Jesus emphasizes the goodness of our Father in heaven.

As I continued to reflect on this short prayer, I paraphrased it into my own wording:

Our true Father, who is not from this world, but is from Heaven

Help us live in Your Son, so that Your name is honored

Let your loving mercy expand and fill the earth

So that your ways are known to all in this world

Just as your ways are known in the Heavens

Give us the bread we need to survive today

And don’t let us forget that Jesus is our Real Bread

Open Your heart of forgiveness to us if we hurt You

Just as we open our hearts and forgive those that hurt us

Help us to faithfully live by Jesus’ life in us

And through Him resist the evil of this world

Our Father is the real King of the cosmos

The power of Your love is greater than any other

You are beautiful beyond description

Now and for all eternity

Amen

What other things do you see in the Lord’s Prayer?

 

Follow the Life!

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I’m Still Here!

stress busy

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Just a note today to let you know that I’m still here, and will be continuing to blog as soon as possible.

My family has had a lot of things happening since mid-January.  We’ve had a funeral, a birth, emergency medical issues, kids in new sports, dance competitions, out of town guests, all on top of our usual schedule.

All of this has left me with zero time to continue on the articles I was working on.

Here are a few things that are in the queue to be finished:

  • Part 2: Christian Communities with No Hierarchy or Exclusive Leadership Do Exist and are Possible
  • Jesus Didn’t Tell Mary to Get in the Kitchen
  • Obstacles in Community Life

I’m not sure exactly when I will be completing these as well as other articles, but stay tuned!

Follow the Life!

 

Martin Luther King, Jr. Had a Dream for the Church As Well

martin luther king jr

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Everyone knows that Martin Luther King, Jr. had a dream for this country, a dream for his fellow citizens, and a dream for his children and their generation and those that follow.  Dr. King’s dream has been immortalized in his most famous speech: I Have a Dream.

Did you know that Martin Luther King, Jr. had a dream for the church as well?

On November 4, 1956, Dr. King delivered a creative message, in which he envisioned a letter penned by the Apostle Paul himself to the church in America.  I posted this message a couple of years ago, and I continue to reflect on this message each year when Dr. King’s birthday is celebrated.

I believe Dr. King hits some very key points that coincide with God’s own dream for His church, which is His family and the bride for His very Son.

You can read the transcript of the message here.  You can listen to the message at the youtube link below.

Here are some quotes from the message:

It seems to me that your moral progress lags behind your scientific progress. Your poet Thoreau used to talk about “improved means to an unimproved end.” How often this is true. You have allowed the material means by which you live to outdistance the spiritual ends for which you live. You have allowed your mentality to outrun your morality. You have allowed your civilization to outdistance your culture. Through your scientific genius you have made of the world a neighborhood, but through your moral and spiritual genius you have failed to make of it a brotherhood. So America, I would urge you to keep your moral advances abreast with your scientific advances.

But American Christians, I must say to you as I said to the Roman Christians years ago, “Be not conformed to this world, but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind.” Or, as I said to the Phillipian Christians, “Ye are a colony of heaven.” This means that although you live in the colony of time, your ultimate allegiance is to the empire of eternity. You have a dual citizenry. You live both in time and eternity; both in heaven and earth. Therefore, your ultimate allegiance is not to the government, not to the state, not to nation, not to any man-made institution. The Christian owes his ultimate allegiance to God, and if any earthly institution conflicts with God’s will it is your Christian duty to take a stand against it.

Let me rush on to say something about the church. Americans, I must remind you, as I have said to so many others, that the church is the Body of Christ. So when the church is true to its nature it knows neither division nor disunity. But I am disturbed about what you are doing to the Body of Christ. They tell me that in America you have within Protestantism more than two hundred and fifty six denominations. The tragedy is not so much that you have such a multiplicity of denominations, but that most of them are warring against each other with a claim to absolute truth. This narrow sectarianism is destroying the unity of the Body of Christ. You must come to see that God is neither a Baptist nor a Methodist; He is neither a Presbyterian nor a Episcopalian. God is bigger than all of our denominations. If you are to be true witnesses for Christ, you must come to see that America.

There is another thing that disturbs me to no end about the American church. You have a white church and you have a Negro church. You have allowed segregation to creep into the doors of the church. How can such a division exist in the true Body of Christ? You must face the tragic fact that when you stand at 11:00 on Sunday morning to sing “All Hail the Power of Jesus Name” and “Dear Lord and Father of all Mankind,” you stand in the most segregated hour of Christian America. They tell me that there is more integration in the entertaining world and other secular agencies than there is in the Christian church. How appalling that is.

May I say just a word to those of you who are struggling against this evil. Always be sure that you struggle with Christian methods and Christian weapons. Never succumb to the temptation of becoming bitter. As you press on for justice, be sure to move with dignity and discipline, using only the weapon of love. Let no man pull you so low as to hate him. Always avoid violence. If you succumb to the temptation of using violence in your struggle, unborn generations will be the recipients of a long and desolate night of bitterness, and your chief legacy to the future will be an endless reign of meaningless chaos.

So the greatest of all virtues is love. It is here that we find the true meaning of the Christian faith. This is at bottom the meaning of the cross. The great event on Calvary signifies more than a meaningless drama that took place on the stage of history. It is a telescope through which we look out into the long vista of eternity and see the love of God breaking forth into time. It is an eternal reminder to a power drunk generation that love is most durable power in the world, and that it is at bottom the heartbeat of the moral cosmos. Only through achieving this love can you expect to matriculate into the university of eternal life.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jm5LkiPo-Og

Follow the Life!

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My Best Books List

I added a new page to blog that lists the best books I’ve read on certain topics. If you are in to organic church life or the deeper life in Christ then you may have read some of these titles as well.  Some may be new to you.

When I say these are my “best” books, I mean that these are books that left a lasting impression on me, changed me in some way, or completely wrecked how I viewed certain things in the past.  If we had a conversation about one of the topics below, these are the books I would recommend over and over.  So for me, these books are outstanding.

Regardless, there are few books here that you will find in mainstream Christianity, at least in the west.  Many of these are out of print and I have been blessed to find some copies in good condition for reasonable prices.

The topics included are:

  • Blogs and Websites (I know, they’re not books… but still good reading)
  • Knowing Jesus in a Deeper Way (Focused on who Jesus is)
  • Walking in Christ Daily (Focused on living by Christ’s life)
  • God’s Eternal Purpose
  • Body Life (The community life of the church)
  • Living Missionally
  • Marriage/Relationships
  • Church Practice
  • Understanding The Early Church
  • Devotional Books
  • Specialty Topics

I’ve reviewed or quoted from many of these books in articles here on the blog.  You can find those in the bar under the heading by clicking Reviews.

I’ve written more about the purpose and nature of the list on the page directly.

There is a link in the header section of the blog called My Best Books List. Or you can click here.

I’ll continue to add books and blogs to the list in the future.  I’m also planning to add my own synopsis or comment next to each book as I have time and link directly to any reviews I’ve written.

Given the topics above, what books am I missing?

Follow the Life!

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Stephen Hawking Can’t Explain You

treasure stephen hawking

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Do you think we can ever know everything about Christ?

I believe we’ve barely scratched the surface of exploring the “unsearchable riches of Christ” (Ephesians 3:8).

As John wrote at the end of his gospel:

Jesus did many other things as well. If every one of them were written down, I suppose that even the whole world would not have room for the books that would be written.  (John 21:25)

And these were only the things He did while on the earth.

When the saints I’m pursuing Christ with gather together we often sing a song titled The Half Cannot Be Fancied. The first verse and chorus go like this:

To Jesus every day I find
My heart is closer drawn
You’re fairer than the sons of men
And fresher than the morn;
You’re all that I can say of You
And infinitely more,
And every day You’re dearer
Than You were the day before

The half (the half)
Cannot be fancied
Of such (of such)
A treasure store,
And every day You’re dearer
Than You were the day before

Scientists are still working to unveil the deep mysteries of the earth, nature, and the universe.  With such limited understanding and knowledge of these things, how can we expect to fully comprehend the One who created these things?

And these are but the outer fringe of his works; how faint the whisper we hear of him! Who then can understand the thunder of his power?  (Job 26:14)

And yet, it is God’s pleasure to reveal Himself to us.

All things have been delivered to me by my Father, and no one knows the Son except the Father. Nor does anyone know the Father except the Son, and he to whom the Son wills to reveal him. (Matthew 11:27)

I recently heard a modern version of The Half Cannot Be Fancied on the radio in a song by Weezer called DaVinci.  While they may be singing about a woman, I believe the song echoes the unsearchable riches of our Christ, and that our finite minds are simply unable to grasp all of Him.  Thankfully, God has planted His Spirit in us so that even the weakest could begin to comprehend who Christ is, especially when they join together in expressing Him to each other.

God chose things despised by the world, things counted as nothing at all, and used them to bring to nothing what the world considers important.

Listen to some of the lyrics of DaVinci:

I tried describing you to all my friends
But they just told me to polish my lens
You’re sweet, generous, my sweetheart
I don’t even know where to start

Even Da Vinci couldn’t paint you
Stephen Hawking can’t explain you
Rosetta Stone could not translate you
I’m at a loss for words, I’m at a loss for words
I couldn’t put it in a novel
I wrote a page, but it was awful
Now I just want to sing your gospel
I’m at a loss for words, I’m at a loss for words

Sorry DaVinci.  Sorry Stephen Hawking.  Sorry Rosetta Stone.

You haven’t even scratched the surface of describing, knowing, or translating the ultimate Truth.

Now I just want to sing His gospel…

Follow the Life!

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Introducing a New Blogger!

Have you ever wondered what was happening before creation?

creation

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I’d like to introduce you to a sister in Christ, Joelle, who began a new blogging adventure this week and begins to peel back the layers of this question in her first post.  Her blog will be focused on the infinite ways that Christ reveals and expresses himself through creation.  Joelle is an ecologist, and now also a writer, so this is right up her alley.

I hope you’ll swing over there, check it out, and sign up to get her new posts!

Joelle’s Blog: Even The Rocks Will Cry Out

Here’s an excerpt from Joelle’s About This Blog page:

As we look around at the endless tapestry of creation, we see that the more we look, the more we find that all of it speaks of our Creator, Jesus Christ. The same is true when we read our story with Him that began ages ago in the garden…He appears as the constant thread throughout human history and has also surrounded us with what He has made.

This blog is meant to be an exploration of that: A venture to start viewing the world differently.

Every tree, gust of wind, deep river, and animal call is beautiful in its own right, but it also speaks of a deeper, infinite world in Jesus Christ. It tells us of His character. It tells us how He relates. It tells us what His perfect love looks like. It even tells us who we are in Him.

Follow the Life!

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What I’m Reading to Start 2015

Confession: I’m an avid reader!  I wish I had more time to spend reading, but alas, I have to be very selective in how I spend my limited reading time.  I can also be a little bit ADD with books and jump between several at once.  I’m told that’s not the best thing to do, but it keeps me from getting bored and I think I actually read more this way.

Here are some books that I’ve started reading recently and will be reading in the early part of the new year.

1. The Black Swan Effect: A Response to Gender Hierarchy in the Church, edited by Felicity Dale with a host of contributing authors.  The role of women in the body of Christ and how men view and treat women have become increasingly important to me, being that I’m married and have a daughter, but mostly because I believe that Jesus desires freedom and equality for all.  Felicity Dale brings a wide compliment of men and women to address the subject.

2. The Overcoming Life, by Watchman Nee.  This is based on a series of messages Nee gave in 1935, and is a precursor to his classic book, The Normal Christian Life.

3. The Supplied Life, by Bill Freeman.  This is a daily devotional that I started reading late last year and plan to continue reading in 2015.  The focus is on drawing our daily life from Christ who supplies it, as a branch to a vine (John 15).  The daily writing is brief but dense.

4. The Truest Thing About You: Identity, Desire, and Why It All Matters, by David Lomas and D.R. Jacobson.  This book focuses on our identity in Christ.

What books are you currently reading? 

 

Follow the Life!

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**Disclaimer** The links in this post are affiliate links, which means I may receive a tiny profit if you purchase one of these items from these links.  Take heart, I only recommend items I believe in and have personal experience with.