October 2011

William P. Young -– The Shack

William P. Young The Shack

When the imagination of a writer and the passion of a theologian cross-fertilize the result is a novel on the order of The Shack. This book has the potential to do for our generation what John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress did for his. It’s that good!
Eugene Peterson
Professor Emeritus Of Spiritual Theology
Regent College, Vancouver, B.C.

Carolyn's Notes
I don’t want to say too much about this book because I don’t want to give anything away. Let’s just say I read it several weeks ago and it is still the dominant conversation in my head. It’s the first non-Arends book we’re offering on Feed the Lake. Read it and you’ll see why we’re mad for it.

$12.00

Philip Yancey –- Rumors of Another World: What on Earth are We Missing?

Philip Yancey Rumors of Another World: What on Earth are We Missing?

Paperback.

Philip Yancey believes we are missing the supernatural hidden in everyday life. In this 2004 Christianity Today Book Award of Merit winner he investigates the natural world and discovers the supernatural hiding in plain view. Nature and super nature are not two separate worlds, but different expressions of the same reality. To encounter the world as a whole, we need a more supernatural awareness of the natural world. He promises that the grace-filled result will be a life of beauty, purpose, freedom, and faith.

Carolyn's Notes
So much of Christian apologetics assumes the reality of something beyond the material world, ignoring the fact that many people in Western culture don’t take that as a given at all. Yancey takes a step back to take a step forward, making a thoughtful and ultimately inspiring case for the existence of a supernatural dimension in, under and above all things.

$12.00

Andrew Peterson -- North! Or Be Eaten (The Wingfeather Saga Book 2)

Andrew Peterson -- North! Or Be Eaten

“Peterson deserves every literary prize for this fine book. It is obvious that his musical talents have been put to good use as his use of words, plot and narrative read like a well scored film script. A very fine book, by a very fine writer and future talent. Amazing – thrilling and well worth reading again and again.”
–G. P. Taylor, New York Times best-selling author of Shadowmancer and The Dopple Ganger Chronicles

“Toothy cows are very dangerous. Andrew Peterson convinced me and shivers run down my spine at the very thought of meeting a toothy cow face to face. The author spills characters like Podo and Nurgabog onto the page, then weaves a tale of danger that holds the reader captive. Believe me, you will relish being held captive by this master storyteller. But be sure you don’t get caught by the Stranders. Those people just ain’t civilized.”
–Donita K. Paul, author of The Vanishing Sculptor

“In a genre overrun by the gory and the grim, Peterson’s bite-sized chapters taste more like a stew of Gorey (Edward) and Grimm (the Brothers). North! Or Be Eaten is a welcome feast of levity—and clearly a labor of love. Andrew Peterson has awakened my inner eight-year-old, and that is a very good thing.”
–Jeffrey Overstreet, author of Auralia’s Colors and Cyndere’s Midnight

“An immensely clever tale from a wonderful storyteller – filled with great values and even greater adventure!”
–Phil Vischer, creator of VeggieTales

“Thrills, chills, spine-tingling mystery, and lots of smiles. It’s not easy to combine heart-pounding danger with gut-busting laughs and make it work, but Peterson pulls it off. For readers who want nonstop action infused with powerful, life-changing themes, North! Or Be Eaten is a must-read.”
–Wayne Thomas Batson, best-selling author of The Door Within Trilogy, Isle of Swords and Isle of Fire

“Andrew Peterson is a gifted storyteller, scene painter and wordsmith who takes you on a rollicking white-water ride of adventure. Readers of all ages are sure to find North! Or Be Eaten worthy of a big mug filled with a favorite beverage and a cozy nook near a crackling fire for hours on end. Here there be tales within yarns within stories. Listen, reader, bend your ear, but keep an eye peeled lest the dreaded Fangs of Dang be near!”
–R. K. Mortenson, author of Landon Snow and The Auctor’s Riddle

$12.00

Brother Lawrence – Practice of the Presence of God (with Spiritual Maxims)

Brother Lawrence Practice of the Presence of God

Paperback.

For three centuries the writings of Brother Lawrence have taught Christians that God is as present in the kitchen as in the cathedral and as accessible in the living room as He is around the Lord’s table. This simple, yet profound teaching will empower you to seek the joy of God’s presence in the midst of every moment and circumstance.

Carolyn's Notes
I was given a copy of this book in High School and I’ve read it at least once a year since. Simple, practical spiritual advice that can completely change your life.

$9.00

G.K. Chesterton -- Orthodoxy

G.K. Chesterton Orthodoxy

Carolyn's Notes
I invited Justine Olawsky to review this book for us.

Orthodoxy Review by guest critic Justine Olawsky
There are books you keep and books you give away. And then, there are the books you buy over and over, because they manage to be both.

Orthodoxy is one of those.

Some books draw a line in the sand that, once crossed, leaves you changed forever. I can count on one hand the books that measure my life in terms of “before and after.” Orthodoxy is one of those. And, lastly, there are those rarest of books that can be picked up, opened to any page, and are so immediately engrossing that you wander off, nose to paper, and lose track of – well, of just about everything.

Orthodoxy is one of those.

Who wants to read a book by an early 20th century Englishman with such an intimidating title as Orthodoxy? Well, you do. Believe me, you do.

Never has so much been packed into such a slender volume – my edition weighs in at a scant 230 pages, with rather large type, to boot.

G.K. Chesterton wrote in 1903 for the Sunday Times that, “[I]f Christianity should happen to be true – then defending it may mean talking about anything or everything.

Things can be irrelevant to the proposition that Christianity is false, but nothing can be irrelevant to the proposition that Christianity is true.” Orthodoxy is faithful to this vision – a sometimes wild, sometimes meandering journey that skewers the idols of the age (his and, remarkably, ours) with wit, sense, and charitable good humor.

This book is many things – a spiritual memoir, a philosophical manifesto, a reply to all forms of “modernism,” a theological meditation – but, it is never pedantic, preachy, or picayune.
In fact, it is the largeness of Orthodoxy that most astounds. This is a book of the big ideas so often disguised in trivialities.

When a friend asked me to explain what I loved most about Orthodoxy, I could not answer at the time. I loved it too immediately and viscerally to ponder the whys. After a period of reflection, I wrote to her that it was his sense of wonder and use of paradox that most stuck with me. He uses these two tools repeatedly to extrapolate the large from the small.

For instance, in response to the ideas of Calvinism and scientific fatalism – that Nature runs in a fixed, pre-determined course – Chesterton uses the illustration of a child happily kicking his legs rhythmically, interminably for no reason other than his pure, energetic enjoyment of it. And what has this to do with refuting material and spiritual fatalism?

Chesterton goes on to say, “Because children have abounding vitality, because they are in spirit fierce and free, therefore they want things repeated and unchanged. They always say, ‘Do it again;’ and the grown-up person does it again until he is nearly dead.

For grown-up people are not strong enough to exult in monotony. But, perhaps God is strong enough to exult in monotony. It is possible that God says every morning, ‘Do it again’ to the sun; and every evening, ‘Do it again’ to the moon. . .

It may be that He has the eternal appetite of infancy; for we have sinned and grown old, and our Father is younger than we.” Wonder-filled, with a twist of paradox at the end. Signature Chesterton.

There is, perhaps, no other writer so completely comfortable with paradox – both as an expository device and a doctrinal reality. Orthodoxy so abounds in these gloriously reconciled irreconcilables that Chesterton titled an entire chapter, “The Paradoxes of Christianity.” And this is why Orthodoxy was a revelation. Never before had I been made so aware of the profound mystery of Christianity’s tenets.

No writer had ever set before me so many things I thought I knew, and then made them new. The greatest gift was a new level of peace in my faith – that sense that, while I had been turned upside-down and shaken a little, I was finally closer to right-side-up. While many Christian writers toil to produce reams that attempt to explain or tame the Creator of Heaven and Earth, G.K. Chesterton happily concluded that He was unexplainable and wild and invited me to share his wonderment and joy. “Joy,” he avers in the last chapter, “which was the small publicity of the pagan, is the gigantic secret of the Christian.” It gets even more beautiful and scalp-prickling-goose-bumpy from there, but you’ll have to read Orthodoxy to find out why.

$9.00

Mark Buchanan -- Things Unseen: Living in the Light of Forever

Mark Buchanan Things Unseen: Living in the Light of Forever

Could it be that the heavenly minded are of the most earthly good? With pastoral warmth and philosophical skill, Buchanan illustrates how the hope of heaven offers us sustained moral and spiritual ballast for living a life of stability, fearlessness, and substance. Learn to make eternity your fixation—anchoring your hope and strengthening your heart.

Carolyn's Notes
Mark Buchanan is one of my favourite contemporary authors; he has a real gift for turning beautiful phrases around profound concepts. Things Unseen reminds me of an old Charlie Peacock song that goes “I want to live like heaven is a real place” … it asks to consider how we might live our lives if we take the promise of an eternal life with God seriously. Two of the songs on my Under the Gaze album (“Great Cloud of Witnesses” and “Only Time Will Tell”) were written after reading this book.

$17.00

Mark Buchanan -- The Holy Wild: Trusting in the Character of God

Mark Buchanan The Holy Wild: Trusting in the Character of God

It’s the direst question in human existence: Can God be trusted? With refreshing honesty, Buchanan poignantly explains what’s riding on our answer. Whether we’re peaceful or suspicious, happy or discontented, everything hangs on our perception of divine character—and matters mightily at the day of our death.

Carolyn's Notes
This elegant and moving study of the trustworthiness of God’s character has been quietly influencing artists, poets, pastors, preachers and disciples of all variety since its release. I love it.

$15.00

Christmas Instrumental (MP3s) -- Spencer Capier

Carolyn's Notes

Spencer has outdone himself here. Spirited playing, sparkling acoustics, genius arrangements; this is Christmas music somehow equally suited to soundtracking your liveliest holiday parties or your deepest Advent reflections. Guaranteed to become a perennial favourite.

$1.00

Plays Well With Others (MP3s) -- Spencer Capier

Plays Well With Others

“This album is sometimes playful, sometimes beautiful, and consistently well-crafted.”
– DS Martin, Christian Week

Carolyn's Notes

Spencer and I have been playing together for 12 years now (he always says it’s more like 20 years with the wind chill factor).

Anyone who has seen Spencer perform will tell you he’s amazing — equally proficient on violin, mandolin, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, and the always-intriguing bouzouki.

What I hear people talking about is not only his talent but his passion — the energy, even joy, he brings to the music is tangible and contagious.

He’s managed to capture all that in his instrumental project. Each song is a sonic journey to a different place — I can recommend each and every locale whole-heartedly.

I make a little cameo on “You Would Like It If You Loved Me” — a quirky song Spencer and I wrote together that also features our friend Lance Lewman (an acclaimed voice-over artist you can hear on National Geographic specials). My kids’ favorite tune is “Lazarus”…a driving mix of drum loops and organic instruments we like to call ‘acoustica.’

$1.00

Power Washed By God (New CT Column)

Power Washed by God

The blessings—and danger—of divine proximity.

Last summer, we hired a man with a power washer to clean our deck. As he blasted the dirt that had defied our feeble garden hose, I found myself wishing all the muck in my life could be dealt with so efficiently. Sticky kitchen floor? Messy relationships? Unleash the water pressure!

But not so fast. Two weeks earlier, a neighbor's teenager, Matt, was cleaning the driveway with a rented power washer when he felt an ant crawling on his calf. Instinctively, he turned the nozzle toward his leg, obliterating the insect—and, unfortunately, some layers of muscle and tissue. Matt's injury is not uncommon; an online search produces innumerable accounts of gruesome wounds and even fatalities related to the use of pressure washers.

So I decided to give my handyman and his potentially flesh-stripping machine a wide berth. I had to do some reading for a biblical studies course, so I sat by my kitchen window and kept one eye on my yard and the other on the Pentateuch.

I was making my way through Exodus, feeling a little jealous of my spiritual ancestors. It seemed they never had to wonder if God was there. They had only to follow pillars of cloud and fire, gathering up the manna served fresh daily from God's kitchen. At Sinai, Yahweh made his presence even harder to miss, clearing his throat with thunder, lightning, trumpet blasts, trembling mountains, and billowing smoke.

I wondered why the present-day actions of the immutable God sometimes seem so muted in contrast to the God of Moses. I wouldn't mind a pillar of cloud or fire when I need direction, or some manna on my front lawn when I pray for provision.

But 10 chapters into Leviticus, I sobered up to the dangerous side of God's proximity to the Israelites. They had just set up the tabernacle, and two of Moses' nephews had been recruited for the priesthood. When they failed to follow protocol and offered "unauthorized fire" at the altar, "fire came out from the presence of the Lord and consumed them, and they died before the Lord" (Lev. 10:1-2).

This seems a little harsh. Two guys make one mistake their first day on the job, and they get "fired." But other similar incidents had the same tragic result: Achan's stashed plunder (Josh. 7), Uzzah's casualness with the ark (2 Sam. 6), Ananias and Sapphira lying about their offering (Acts 5). In each case, God was inaugurating a new era in salvation history, and in each case, his holiness was underestimated with dreadful consequences.

These episodes remind me of a strategy employed by one of my schoolteacher friends. On day one, he sends the first unruly student into the hallway, knowing that an early show of authority makes the rest of the year go smoothly. It is tempting to think of the disturbing accounts of God's judgment as cases of extreme classroom management.

But as I struggle to reconcile Yahweh's apparent "zero tolerance" policy in these stories with the inexhaustible mercy we see in Jesus, I wonder if both the wonderful and awful aspects of God's power experienced at close range aren't more like the blasts of a pressure washer than the techniques of an irate teacher. God's holiness is the very thing we need to get wholly clean. But, unmitigated, it's too much for us. We can't survive it.

Maybe Yahweh's holiness (and its sometimes fiery consequences) became more visible at turning points in salvation history less because God wanted to set a stern example, and more because at those moments he'd drawn particularly near to his people in all his power. As envious as I might be of God's visibility to the Israelites, they clearly sensed the danger inherent in his proximity. In Exodus, they ask Moses to speak to God on their behalf, so they can stay at a safe distance.

When I grasp that God's holiness is necessary for my cleansing but is also, by its nature, a vaporizing force, two things come into clearer focus. First, I begin to perceive God's judgment as no more malevolent than the blast of water from a pressure washer. It is simply God's holiness doing what God's holiness does. Second, this reality points to one reason we need a mediator. Jesus is the only human who could vicariously absorb (and ultimately survive) the cleansing we so desperately need. Because of him, we are washed not by a force so intense it annihilates us, but rather by the blood of the Lamb.

Just like I wish I could turn the power washer on all the messes of my life (without the resulting carnage), I still find myself longing for more visible manifestations of God's nearness and power. But in the final analysis, I am grateful that the God who once resided in a cloud on the mountain now lives in us, baptizing us not with an obliterating flood, but with his Spirit.

Copyright © 2011 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Look Out Now -- Jana Alayra

Jana Alayra Look Out Now

Carolyn's Notes

I feel like Jana Alayra lives with us, although she’s really in California. Seriously, she’s in our car, she’s in our living room, she’s at our kids’ school and at church. Jana is THE source for great faith-filled songs that kids adore, and we are thrilled to be able to offer her music.

$15.00

Jump Into The Light -- Jana Alayra

Jana Alayra Jump Into the Light

Carolyn's Notes

I feel like Jana Alayra lives with us, although she’s really in California. Seriously, she’s in our car, she’s in our living room, she’s at our kids’ school and at church. Jana is THE source for great faith-filled songs that kids adore, and we are thrilled to be able to offer her music.

$15.00

Dig Down Deep -- Jana Alayra

Jana Jane Alayra Dig Down Deep

Carolyn's Notes

I feel like Jana Alayra lives with us, although she’s really in California. Seriously, she’s in our car, she’s in our living room, she’s at our kids’ school and at church. Jana is THE source for great faith-filled songs that kids adore, and we are thrilled to be able to offer her music.

$15.00