Showing posts with label Books and Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books and Reading. Show all posts

Monday, February 1, 2010

J.I.Packer Unpacked

From Christianity Today online

Packer, Unpacked
Timothy George attempts to interpret the great 'theologizer.'

J. I. Packer and Evangelical Future: The Impact of His Life and Thought
by Timothy George, Editor
Baker Academic, October 2009
253 pp., $15.99


When historians look back on the life of J. I. Packer, this volume may serve as a useful starting point. An accomplished group of contributors, including Timothy George, Alister McGrath, Chuck Colson, Mark Dever, and the late Richard John Neuhaus, come together in its pages to reflect on Packer's legacy. Their conclusion: the Anglican scholar should be seen fundamentally as a "theologizer," a "latter-day catechist," a Reformed prophet standing in the tradition of Irenaeus, Augustine, Calvin, Baxter, and Owen.


read more

J.I.Packer is one of my favourite Puritan and Reformed theologian and I look forward to reading this book.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Ron Choong's Question of Origin

Ron Choong's new book is available. I have not read it yet so I cannot offer you a review. Ron is the founder-director of ACT (Academy for Christian Thought)





Title: The Question of Origins (Special 3-in-1 Edition)
By: Ron Choong, PhD
Price: RM49.90
Description:
When you read any book with a title such as The Origin of the Universe, or The Origin of Life, or The Origin of Man, you end up with a single conclusion – we have no scientific idea. Cosmogony, biogenesis and anthropogenesis are relatively new fields of research that depend on the findings of many other fields.

On the question of origins, these sub-fields of physics, chemistry and biology all hit their epistemic limits and enter philosophical speculation. While the sciences and philosophy help theological reflection, they cannot themselves be the basis of truth. They function to explain what we can observe: the sciences offer the best explanations drawn from testable hypotheses and philosophy considers coherent possibilities. But theology offers the most comprehensive framework because it is methodologically inclusive and has always been informed by other fields of human inquiry.

Truth corresponds to reality. But we have no cognitive access to its fullness - both natural and non-natural realities - this side of heaven. Theology has two advantages over science and philosophy. It draws from the Word of God and with insights from science and philosophy, achieves an increasingly holistic understanding of reality. As this book explains, this is especially so in the question of origins.

Dr. Ron Choong's new Book is now available for sale online! BUY ONLINE NOW for our exclusive price of RM49.90. (you will be directed to Canaanland website for online payment)

Alternatively, you can buy it from any Canaanland stores, or at MPH 1 Utama (new wing).

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Brian McLaren's Losing Faith



This video is an interesting way to promote his new book "Losing Faith." However it contains many controversial statements. I cannot wait to read the new book to see how Brian explains them.

He writes,
i think we all go through a process of leaving childish things behind ... and embracing a bigger picture as we grow and mature. this is a central theme of my upcoming book, "a new kind of christianity: ten questions that are transforming the faith," which will be released February 9, 2010.


Friday, December 25, 2009

Lim Kar Yong's Book

I finally have in my hands, my friend the Reverend Doctor Lim Kar Yong's book. It has a good feel to it. Though I have read the original dissertation he submitted, I look forward to reading the published version.



Only one complaint though. It has no pictures!

.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Buying Soft Copies of Bible Commentary

Logos bible software was having a 12 days of Christmas sales, offer one sales per day. There are some good bargains here.

Prices and coupon codes are good through December 31st, 2009.

A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
Retail $4.95
SALE: $0.95
Use code: 12DAYS1

Learn more about A Christmas Carol or buy it now.

Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary
Retail $269.95
SALE: $189.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS2

Learn more about Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary or buy it now.

Dictionary for Theological Interpretation of the Bible
Retail $ 54.99
SALE: $ 24.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS4

Learn more about Dictionary for Theological Interpretation of the Bible or buy it now.

Centered Preaching: Redeeming the Expository Sermon
Retail $29.99
SALE: $13.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS5

Learn more about Centered Preaching: Redeeming the Expository Sermon or buy it now.

Word Biblical Commentary (WBC 59 Vols.)
Retail $1199.99
SALE: $399.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS6

Learn more about Word Biblical Commentary (WBC 59 Vols.) or buy it now.

The Drama of Scripture
Retail $ 19.95
SALE: $ 9.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS7

Learn more about The Drama of Scripture or buy it now.

Kingdom of Priests: A History of Old Testament Israel, 2nd ed.
Retail $39.99
SALE: $19.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS8

Learn more about Kingdom of Priests: A History of Old Testament Israel, 2nd ed. or buy it now.

The Essential IVP Reference Collection Version 3
Retail $190.00
SALE: $89.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS9

Learn more about The Essential IVP Reference Collection Version 3 or buy it now.

Jesus in Context: Background Readings for Gospel Study
Retail $28.00
SALE: $13.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS10

Learn more about Jesus in Context: Background Readings for Gospel Study or buy it now.

Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament
Retail $59.99
SALE: $24.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS11

Learn more about Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament or buy it now.

An Exposition on Prayer in the Bible (5 Vols.)
Retail $259.95
SALE: $159.95
Use coupon code: 12DAYS12

Learn more about An Exposition on Prayer in the Bible (5 Vols.) or buy it now.

1 year subscription to
Bible Study Magazine
PLUS a free copy of
The Unexpected Adventure
SALE – $19.95
Subscribe now
No Coupon Code Needed


I have my eye on the Word Biblical Commentary (56 vols) for some time. My problem is that I have most of the hard copies. So is it good stewardship to buy the soft copies for my computer.

What do you think? Shall I buy or not?

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Star Trek: The Romulan War

{contain spoilers}

The francise holder of Star Trek continues to restructure the Star Trek universe in the original and the alternative (Star Trek movie) timeline.

Moving backwards in the original Star Trek universe, the Star Trek novels are picking up where the Star Trek television series, Enterprise was unfortunately and prematurely canceled after the 4th season. The 5th season was supposedly to deal with the Romulan War.

According to the Memory Alpha website

The Earth-Romulan War, also known as the Romulan Wars, was a major interstellar conflict fought from 2156 to 2160 between the forces of United Earth and those of the Romulan Star Empire. Earth was assisted by its allies Vulcan, Tellar, and the Andorian Empire. (ENT: "In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II")

The two sides knew little of each other before the war, and little after the war. Based on the limited state of knowledge that still existed in as late as 2266, the war was summarized as "Earth believes the Romulans to be warlike, cruel, treacherous; and only the Romulans know what they think of Earth."

This novel continues the story after the novel Kobayashi Maru. The Romulans has perfected a technique of telecapturing Coalition (future Federation) ships and the climax of this novel is that Kobayashi Maru was destroyed. Kobayashi Maru went into Star Trek lore as the classical no win scenario.

The true situation was explained in this novel. Enterprise was escorting the Kobayashi Maru when they were attacked by Klingon ships telecaptured by the Romulans. The Enterprise has to leave the Kobayashi Maru behind in order to avoid being telecaptured. The telecaptured Klingon ships destroyed the Kobayashi Maru.


The novel The Romulan War tells of the early stages of the war. The Romulans are winning and the Coalition are having a hard time. Vulcan are abandoning the Coalition. One interesting note is that to prevent their ships from being telecaptured, earth ships are reverting from digital display to knobs and lights. This will make them look like Kirk's Enterprise which comes later. A very clever innovation for the continuity.

The novel makes for interesting reading but was draggy at times as if the author were trying to stretch it out for a few more books. I only wish authors will tell the story instead of trying for trilogies or multiple books. This novel emphasize the building of Daedalus class starship as a cheaper alternative to the NX series.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Top 5 Books to read during Advent and Christmas

Christian History Home > Reviews > My Top 5 Books to Read During Advent and Christmas

Carmen Butcher, associate professor of English at Shorter College in Rome, Georgia, scholar-in-residence, and Christian author and blogger | posted 12/10/2009 01:23AM

This list represents my own desire during this holy season to experience new birth in my soul, as modeled by that divine-human baby lying humbly in the manger. My main interest is in learning how to do discipleship, in finding affective theology to grow in me a more Christ-minded, thankful, wonder-filled, and kinder lifestyle. These are the books I am sipping tea over and steeping in this Christmas.

St. Augustine: Sermons for Christmas and Epiphany
Translated and annotated by Thomas Comerford Lawler

From the Paulist Press Ancient Christian Writers series, this splendid book of sermons invites us into the lives of the earliest Christians. Here, as the translator says in his excellent introduction, the "brilliant and profoundly spiritual" Augustine explores the divine mystery of the Verbum infans (the unspeaking infant Word) in fifteen sermons for the Christmas season, two for New Year's, and six for Epiphany. With great pastoral care for his congregation, Augustine expounds the Christian creed, exposes the heretical fallacies of his time, explains difficult passages of Scripture, praises God's infinite and ineffable mercy, and works to resolve his listeners' doubts—all in language that is accessible to the ordinary layperson. Above all, Augustine asks us to celebrate with deepest joy and gratitude the "wondrous humility" of the omnipotent and divine Word's coming into this world as a helpless human infant.

* * *


Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Christmas Sermons
Translated and edited by Edwin H. Robertson

Hanged on April 9, 1945, for conspiring in a plot to assassinate Hitler, Dietrich Bonhoeffer was one of the most unforgettable Christian writers of the 20th century. He writes that Advent is genuinely celebrated by "those who are troubled in soul, who know themselves to be poor and imperfect, who look forward to something greater to come." This collection of his complete Advent sermons challenges us to consider how Christ's incarnation can transform our lives. It also includes insightful biographical information.

* * *


Advent and Christmas Wisdom from St. Thomas Aquinas
By Andrew Carl Wisdom, OP

Through the writings and prayers of this Doctor of the Church and founder of the Order of the Preachers (Dominicans), this Christmas book calls us to loving action founded on the discipline of daily prayer. Its devotions from Advent through Christmas lead us into intimacy with God. Each includes a reflection from Aquinas, Scripture verses, a prayer, and a call to action that helps us live out God's new birth in some practical way each day, thus emulating Aquinas's goal: "Nothing but you, Lord. Nothing but you."

* * *


Bernard of Clairvaux: Sermons for Advent and the Christmas Season
Translated by Irene Edmonds, Wendy Mary Beckett, and Conrad Greenia

Based on the critical Latin edition by Jean Leclercq and H. M. Rochais, this scholarly collection succeeds in being both engaging and readable. It includes an excellent introduction by Wim Verbaal, situating the reader in Bernard's 12th century milieu, when he was an unknown Cistercian abbot. It includes seven sermons on the Lord's Advent; six on the eve of Christ's birth; five on the Lord's "birthday"; one on the feasts of St. Stephen, St. John, and the Holy Innocents; three on the Lord's Epiphany; and several for afterwards, all with this eternally vibrant theme: "There will be no lack of what you can do so long as you do not lack brotherly love."

* * *


Martin Luther's Christmas Book
Edited by Roland H. Bainton

The well-known Reformation scholar and author Roland H. Bainton (d. 1984) here presents 30 timely excerpts from Martin Luther's Christmas sermons, nine Nativity illustrations by Luther's contemporaries (including four by Albrecht Dürer), and two of Luther's five Christmas carols. Luther's down-to-earth meditations on the reality of Christ's birth—Mary's cold and lonely stress, Joseph's misgivings, Herod's scheming, the wise men's questions, and the divine baby's naked accessibility—reveal the miracle of the Incarnation as a real event in history. Luther's message is that we should keep Christmas every day of the year.



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Sunday, November 22, 2009

Deadly Viper deadly to Chinese Culture?

President and CEO Moe Gerkins says the book's contents, which used Chinese characters and illustrations, 'are offensive to many people despite its otherwise solid message.'


by Sarah Pulliam Bailey

Zondervan President and CEO Moe Gerkins apologized on behalf of the company for publishing Deadly Viper: A Kung Fu Survival Guide for Life and Leadership, a book that uses Chinese characters and images for illustrations.

deadly_viper.jpg

Gerkins said the company will remove the book and curriculum from stores permanently, according to an email to North Park Theological Seminary professor Soong-Chan Rah.

Rah called for an apology on November 3 on his blog because of what he perceived as insensitivity to Asian culture and to the Asian-American community.

Deadly Viper authors Mike Foster and Jud Wilhite have removed materials from their website, but their Facebook fan page is still up and Zondervan still has two chapters of the book on its website.

Several bloggers had weighed in on the issue, and several are now praising Zondervan's decision.

read more

My comment: "huh?"

.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Second Printing of Spiritual Formation on the Run


My book, Spiritual Formation on the Run has been selling steadily since it's launch in January this year. Many persons have been blessed by reading it and I am so happy. I pray that the Lord will continue to use the book to touch lives.

2nd print of the books arrived today.


I hope you will support the ministry by buying copies for friends to give as Christmas presents.
I do not receive a single cent from my writing and publishing. The proceeds for this book goes to support the 1st Johor Bahru Boys Brigade's activities.

You can order copies from your local bookstores (it will help me if you ask them to order if they do not have stock), Amazon.com or from me via draltang@yahoo.com




.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Reading Biographies

Visted the SKS Christian bookstore in Singapore yesterday and am surprised that there are fewer new biographies being published. I wonder why.

Top Story
Illustration by Amanda Duffy
Let us Tell You a Story
Recovering the lost spiritual discipline of reading biographies.


The Mushroom Hunt
How to find a good biography.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

The Literary Bar in Malaysia

There are a lack of serious writers in Malaysia and National Laureate shares his thoughts in the Star newspaper. Interestingly he thinks that there is no racial bias in awarding the National Laureate when he is the 10th and all ten are Malays.


Sunday October 25, 2009

Raising the literary bar

By ANDREW SIA


Our new National Laureate talks about the need for more serious works and an alternative media.


The malaise of Malay literature starts from schools, Anwar says. “In the school system, we don’t encourage too much serious discussions. It’s about following the format or scheme to answer questions. So when they grow up, there is the lack of a critical mind. ”

After writing for over 40 years, Anwar Ridhwan still believes in quality over quantity.

read more

Saturday, October 24, 2009

15,000 bibles detained by Malaysian Government

In the Religious Liberty Watch blog, nkm notes that 15,000 Bibles are detained by the Malaysian authorities and gives his opinion.


15000 Bibles Detained by Malaysian Government this Past Year

By nkw

It is bad enough that Malaysian government officials continue to seize and detain the Al Kitab (Malay Bible) at their whims and fancies. It is worse as the government is supposed to have a gentlemen’s agreement dating from the mid 1980s with the leaders of the Malaysian Church that allows the Al Kitab to be used within church premises.



read more

Sorry Your Book is Banned!

Elizabeth Tai highlights in the Star newspaper about book banning in Malaysia and what a sad state of affair it is.

It’s arbitrary, my dear

By ELIZABETH TAI


Given broad, vague guidelines that keep changing, publishers and authors are hard- pressed to decipher what books get banned.

ON March 9, 2001, a day after the start of the Kampung Medan clashes in Kuala Lumpur, Suaram chairperson K. Arumugam was chased by 20 motorcyclists when he drove into the area.

The experience affected him so much that he decided to write a book about it.

Right to Read, held in Kuala Lumpur two weeks ago, aimed to get people to ask why books are banned, and what happens when access to information is restricted.

After spending two years on research and RM10,000 on printing, 5,000 copies of March 8 (written in Tamil) rolled off the press in April 2006.

Nine months later – on Jan 19, 2007 – Elizabeth Wong (now Selangor exco member) informed Arumugam that his book, which had sold about 3,000 copies by then, had been banned.

read more

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Tuesday, October 6, 2009

My Top 5 Books on the Emerging Movement

Christianity Today, October, 2009



The New Christians: Dispatches from the Emergent Frontier
By Tony Jones

This intelligent and informative book is the only insider story from one of the leading lights of the more progressive wing of the emerging movement, the former national coordinator of Emergent Village.


* * *

The Emerging Church: Vintage Christianity for New Generations
By Dan Kimball

Kimball, who gets credit for first using emerging in a book title to describe the movement, articulates the nitty-gritty of what goes on among these Christians, and does so from an evangelical basis.


* * *

Emerging Churches: Creating Christian Community in Postmodern Cultures
By Eddie Gibbs and Ryan K. Bolger

A richly documented survey of what emergent churches believe and practice, this book sketches emerging congregations around the globe.


* * *

Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church: Understanding a Movement and Its Implications
By D. A. Carson

Carson offers the first thorough critique of the movement; he demonstrates where some have wandered from biblical revelation and focuses on the postmodern threat to the biblical concept of truth.


* * *

Why We're Not Emergent: (By Two Guys Who Should Be)
By Kevin DeYoung and Ted Kluck

This hard-hitting analysis of the liberal tendencies of some in the emerging movement is theologically informed, biblically alert, and pastorally concerned


read more

Monday, October 5, 2009

A Good Day for Books

Recently I was feeling a bit weary and indulging in a bit of self-pity about not being appreciated. Suddenly, all on the same day and out of the blue, I receive...

these two books from a dear fellow spiritual pilgrim who is journeying with me




and from the mail, arrived a book from someone whom I do not know but who is interested in spiritual formation. She came to know me from my blog and website. I think we are going to be good friends.



and this is also from another friend who came to know me from my blog and website. We have corresponded and, gracious me, she sent me a gift card which arrived today.



and the final surprise, MPH Bookstores sent me a voucher for a certain sum based on what I have spent at their stores from Jan-July 2009 and the amount is enough to pay for these two books!




What a good day for books.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Of Mice and Men

Me and my friend John Steinbeck at Monterrey Peninsula

John Steinbeck is a Nobel Laureate who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1962. I considered two of his books, Of Mice and Men (1937) and The Grapes of Wrath (1929) as two of the greatest books of North American literature. The Grapes of Wrath won the Pulitzer Price in 1940.


Steinbeck wrote about true heroes and the indomitable human spirit against impossible odds. This is what makes his books so worth the reading. Of Mice and Men is about the dreams of two poor ranch workers, George and Lenny, trying to earn enough money to buy their own ranch. One of the men is mentally retarded. The novel is about racism, prejudice, injustice, bigotry and the struggle for personal independence. The Grapes of Wrath describes the struggles of a family of sharecroppers, the Joads, who were driven from their land due to the dust storms of the Dust Bowl during the Great Depression. There are eerily echoes of the present economic meltdown. Steinbeck, himself no stranger to poverty narrates these lives well. I remember crying when I read certain portion of the novels and even today, I cannot bring myself to reread these portions.

I believe Steinbeck believed that he was called to write of these sufferings so that it will never be forgotten. In his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, he said,

the writer is delegated to declare and to celebrate man's proven capacity for
greatness of heart and spirit—for gallantry in defeat, for courage, compassion
and love. In the endless war against weakness and despair, these are the bright
rally flags of hope and of emulation. I hold that a writer who does not believe
in the perfectibility of man has no dedication nor any membership in literature.
(source Wiki).

Truly a great champion of the spirit of man.



Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Zondervan and Logos Teamup


Zondervan has linked up with Logos Bible Software and now has a special offer for their 87 titles which include

* Expositor's Bible Commentary (12 Vols.)
* Expositor's Bible Commentary: Abridged (2 Vols.)
* NIV Application Commentary: New Testament (20 Vols.)
* NIV Application Commentary: Old Testament Prophets (8 Vols.)
* Zondervan New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology (4 Vols.)
* Zondervan New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology and Exegesis (5 Vols.)
* Zondervan Encyclopedia of the Bible (5 Vols.)
* Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentary: New Testament (4 Vols.)
* Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentary: Old Testament (5 Vols.)
* 22 individual titles from authors like Gordon Fee, Robert Mounce, and Rick Warren

Zondervan Bible Reference Bundle (87 Vols.)



Suggested
Retail Price
Logos
Sale Price
Pre-Pub
Special

DOWNLOAD $2,917.07 $2,161.69 $1,999.95


Salivating...shall I or shan't I?

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Saturday, August 8, 2009

A Book Too Far

Sometimes one can become so immersed in a literary/academic project for so long that one comes to suffer what the Early Church Fathers called apatheia. At times like this, my old friend Wordsworth has a few words to say about it.


The Table Turned by William Wordsworth

Up! up! my Friend, and quit your books;
Or surely you'll grow double:
Up! up! my Friend, and clear your looks;
Why all this toil and trouble?

The sun, above the mountain's head,
A freshening lustre mellow
Through all the long green fields has spread,
His first sweet evening yellow.
'tis a dull and endless strife:
Come, hear the woodland linnet,
How sweet his on my life,
There's more of wisdom in it.

And hark! how blithe the throstle sings!
He, too, is no mean preacher:
Come forth into the light of things,
Let Nature be your teacher.

She has a world of ready wealth,
Our minds and hearts to bless--
Spontaneous wisdom breathed by health,
Truth breathed by cheerfulness.

One impulse from a vernal wood
May teach you more of man,
Of moral evil and of good,
Than all the sages can.

Sweet is the lore which Nature brings;
Our meddling intellect
Mis-shapes the beauteous forms of things:--
We murder to dissect.

Enough of Science and of Art;
Close up those barren leaves;
Come forth, and bring with you a heart
That watches and receives.

.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Creative Spaces


Photographer Kyle Cassidy undertakes a project to photograph the creative space where some science fiction writes writes.

Take a peek here