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Attempts at Honesty

Reflections on the interplay of the Bible and Culture

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Book Review: Jesus, My Father, The CIA, and Me by Ian Morgan Cron

Posted on August 6, 2011 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

Why you might want to skip this book and review

If you are a perfect parent, and have perfect parents, feel free to scroll down and click on one of the links in the blogroll below and find something else to read. You will gain nothing from reading either this blog post or the reviewed book.

For the rest of us who are imperfect parents and were subjected to imperfect parenting, read on.

Impressions of the book


Ian Morgan Cron, the author, subtitles this book “A memoir . . . of sorts.” This subtitle proves helpful since the book is a series of stories rather than an attempt to provide a detailed chronology of the author’s life.

Throughout the book, Mr. Cron provides glimpses into the struggle that he had in finding a Heavenly father because of the failings of his earthly one.

One of the things that I appreciate about this book is the humor that the author captures when recounting scenes from his childhood. The stories are inherently interesting, but the way that Ian recounts them makes them delightful. The book reminds me of the movie “A Christmas Story” in the way that the author finds humor even in the difficult and embarrassing episodes of adolescence. There were a few places in the book where I found myself laughing out loud while reading it.

The stories are delightful, but also encouraging. While my father was neither in the CIA, nor an alcoholic, as was Mr. Cron’s, I could relate to the struggle to find a sense of self and purpose while navigating the stormy waters of the American school system. Ian shows the reader that all along the way, God was giving him clues to his existence and waiting for him to come home.

The author is quite candid about his own struggle with alcohol and the events that led up to his recovery. I appreciated the candor, and am reminded that even when our hearts have been given to God, sometimes it takes the rest of our being some time to align itself in this new relationship.

Why You Should Read This Book

If you want to laugh with the author at the foibles of growing up, then you will enjoy this book. If you would like to hear one man’s story of finding God even when it seemed as though the world was arrayed against him, then you should read it. If you had a childhood that contained events which were difficult and to this day are recalled with pain, then you might find encouragement from a fellow traveler.

The book is also comforting to me as a parent. Ian is candid about his own struggles and victories in parenting. I am also encouraged by the fact that God can work in the lives of children even when their parents are imperfect. The book instills hope that my own imperfections as a parent can be overcome by our Heavenly Father..

There is one other benefit to reading a book like this. Too often I am so consumed by my own stuff and the needs of my immediate family, to be sensitive to the needs of the people around me. Ian’s writing reminds me that no matter how put together the people we meet seem to be on the outside, there may be mountains of pain and struggle beneath the veneer. I am encouraged to stop and do a better job of listening.

Some helpful links:

  • Ian Morgan Cron’s website
  • The official Facebook pate of Ian Morgan Cron
  • Follow Ian Morgan Cron on Twitter

Disclaimer: I was offered a promotional copy of this book for the purpose of writing a review for this blog. I have received no compensation for writing this, nor do I get any benefit from anyone purchasing the book through this hyperlink in the book cover photo. The link is provided solely for the benefit of the reader.

Filed Under: Book Review Tagged With: book, Jesus, review

Already Compromised – What You Should Know About Educating Your Child

Posted on July 4, 2011 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

The Opportunity

Already CompromisedI have seen some students emerge from Christian colleges with a passion to live for Jesus Christ. I have seen others come away from their learning experience discouraged and disillusioned about their faith.

As a result of this, when given an opportunity to read Already Compromised on the condition that I do a review of the book, I jumped at the chance.

The Problem

The book begins with a bunch of statistics. These are intended to  provide the basis for the remainder of the discussion. If you are not one who enjoys statistics (I am in this camp), press on, the effort will be worth it.

The statistics show that many Christian colleges have begun the process of compromise on critical issues of Christian belief. Further, they show that leaders of these institutions are not always in agreement with faculty with regard to these issues. In response to the statistics, I have to quote Sam Gamgee from the Lord of the Rings, “There’s an eye-opener, and no mistake.” The statistics will cause you to sit up and take notice.

The authors make a good case that many colleges and universities that claim to be Christian are on a trajectory that will result in the spiritual decline that the Ivy League schools experienced in previous generations. When faculty and leadership of a school abandon a firm commitment to the inspiration and authority of Scripture, when that school seeks to compromise with a naturalistic worldview, when academic credibility is valued above Scriptural authority, compromise will result.

Consider this quote from Chapter 2:

The Central issue is this: as Christian leaders it is time to face the issue of just how committed we will be to the authority of Scripture. It is also time to answer to the Church for this problem. It is time to realize that it is possible to hurt young minds. With vigilance we must work to put our young people in classes taught by professors who are committed believers, who even though they might require students to think and develop their own faith, will not compromise Christian truth and exchange it for a liberalism or unbelief that breaks faith instead of building it.”

One of the best tests of belief in the inspiration and authority of the Bible is how the opening chapters of Genesis are understood and taught. Too many of the seminaries and graduate schools which are training Bible teachers have allowed a flawed view of science to distort their understanding of these foundational chapters.

The Solution

The solution begins by understanding why the Church’s influence has been reduced and then take steps to reversing the trend. The authors outline three reasons why we have lost our influence.

  1. We have abdicated our position in the battle for the mind
  2. We have twisted the message of the Gospel to make it unattractive
  3. We have morphed the Christian message into one of personal preference and happiness

Parents, church leaders and Christian educators need to step up and begin the process of training children at an early age how to think within a Christian world view. Children need to be trained to know their Bibles and how Scripture speaks to the issues they face in the world today. Believers of all ages should be taught how to defend their faith when challenged by anti-Christian world views.

Parents have the additional responsibility of seeking out educational institutions that will build rather than destroy the faith of their children. We, as parents, need to spend the time to understand not only the stated philosophy of the school, but how well the instructors within the school follow that philosophy.

The Book

I recommend this book for any Christian parent, not only those who are actively considering colleges for their child. Church leaders, especially those who are making decisions with regard to children and youth ministries would also benefit.

There is much to chew on in this book and I plan on reading it again.

If you would like to purchase the book, there are live links above. Also, additional useful information can be found at www.creationcolleges.org.

A list of the colleges interviewed for this book can be found by clicking here.

Check out the Christian Post Article about this book.

For the record, there were no stipulations as to what I could or should write in review of this book. The book was given to me with only one condition; that was to write a review of the book on this blog. This post is the fulfillment of that one condition.

Filed Under: Book Review Tagged With: Christian, Compromise

Weird – Because normal isn’t working – Book Review

Posted on May 16, 2011 Written by Mark McIntyre 2 Comments

A Weird Contest Won

 

One day I saw a tweet which announced a contest to win a new book called Weird. Since free is my favorite price and the title intrigued me, I decided to check it out. One of the ways to win a copy was to promise to write a review of the book as a blog post.

I promised, I won and now I write.

What Weird is About

In the introduction of this book, in a section called “Weird 101”, Craig gives us an idea of where the book is going when he writes:

After a Tuesday night Bible meeting, I walked alone to an empty softball field. NO matter what it cost me – even being normal – I had decided that I wanted to know Jesus and live for him. I wanted to do life his way and not mine. As I knelt beside the dugout and prayed, I left normal behind and embraced whatever it took – being different to the point of the God kind of weird – to follow Jesus. Something melted within me, and I waled away forever changed, with a sense of God’s grace I can’t describe.

To much of society, an all-or-nothing, totally-in following of Jesus looks weird. This is especially true in 21st Century America where we are taught to look after #1, do things our own way and not take direction from anyone.

Too often the church has worked hard at appearing “normal” to the outside world. We try to do things in the way that corporations, civic groups or social clubs do them. We attempt to rely on programs, marketing and techniques, all the normal stuff.

As Groeshel points out, “normal isn’t working.” The churches and individuals that do things the normal way, do not experience the personal and corporate growth (not measured only in numbers) that God wants to provide.

My Perception of Weird

This book convinced me that I may be weird, but not weird enough.

In the book, Craig discusses the impact that a relationship with Jesus should have on our view of time, money, relationships, sex and values. The discussion has challenged me to reexamine the way I approach these topics.

I appreciated the way Craig issued the challenges, even when my initial gut reaction was that he was going a little overboard. For each topic, Groeschel presented principles that apply and gave some clues as to how this worked out in his own life. Craig does this without giving me the sense that he thinks he has it wired and if we only did it his way, things would be OK. By his writing style and the principles he presented, Craig created an environment conducive to considering new points of view.

This isn’t a how-to book. It does not lay out “x steps to spiritual maturity.” What it does provide is thought provoking analysis of what a follower of Jesus should consider as he responds to the challenges of the surrounding culture. The principles are presented and it is up to the reader to work through the principles to figure out how the principles should be applied in his own situation.

Why You Should Get Weird

Near the end of the book, Groeschel writes:

If you have just enough of Christ to satisfy you but not enough to change you, answer his knock and let him make himself at home with you. You’ve purposefully chosen to leave the broad path. You’re gladly traveling the narrow road. Your journey may seem weird to others, but your destination will be infinitely better than anything a settle-for-normal world can offer.

The number one reason I would recommend this book is that it will challenge you in areas where you unconsciously or unknowingly have imbibed the surrounding culture. These areas need to be exposed to the light of Scripture so that we can be “transformed by the renewing of our minds.” (Romans 12:1-2).

This book would be excellent as a small group study resource. The way the material is presented would be conducive to small group discussion.

In Conclusion

Craig Groeschel is right, normal isn’t working. Much of Christendom is disarray and decline. For change to take place, we have to get over our fear of being weird. Weird (the book) is a good place to start.

Weird is available from Barnes & Noble and Amazon in both paper (DTB, Dead Tree Book) and electronic formats.

Filed Under: Book Review Tagged With: book, Christian, Christianity, Culture, review

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