NEW ADVENT RESOURCES: Illuminate, Behold, I Light My Candle, A Thrill of Hope, The Journey, and so much more

Two-Advent-Candles_web.jpg
I hope you have personal and family customs and traditions around this holiday time of year.  The psychologists, social scientists and theologians all say it is helpful.  Ritual and symbol, habit and tradition, all shape us in very important ways. 

One of my traditions is entering Advent late.  The liturgical season still hasn’t fully shaped my sensibilities and our work schedule—doing a few out of the store events at the end of November and coping with retail land the weekend of Thanksgiving—seems to keep me from entering the new Christian year with much gusto until mid-December.

I was so glad, and a bit chagrined, when my Sunday school teacher this week (my own 29 year old, Stephanie) quoted from the stunning forward by Lauren Winner in Bobby Gross’ very nice book Living the Christian Year: Time to Inhabit the Story of God (IVP; $17.00.)  It is a passage I’ve commended before, and strikes me deeply every time I’ve read it.  Gross’ introduction to and devotional guide through the Christian seasons is a gem of a resource and we continue to be glad for the time he spent with us last year when the book first came out.

So, here’s my odd-ball tradition: offering a list of books for fellow slackers, late-to-the-game, well-intended, “spirit is willing but the flesh is weak,” slow-poke, Advent lovers.  Better late than never.

TO ORDER ANY OF THESE AT THE BOOKNOTES 20% DISCOUNT CLICK ON THE HEARTS & MINDS ORDER FORM LINK BELOW. 

We will answer any questions you have, or fill your order promptly,  humming “Come Thou Long Expected Advent Book and Resource List” as we do.

expecting.jpgExpecting: Devotions for Advent  Scott Hoezee  (Faith Alive) $4.29  These wonderfully written, short devotions (coupled with a prayer or journalling idea) were first published by the Christian Reformed Church’s Homelink program.  Hoezee is the director of the Center for Excellence in Preaching at Calvin Theological Seminary and is as fine a wordsmith as you’ll find in any pulpit anywhere.  Lovely, insightful, offering a robust Biblical vision, offered nicely in short readings.

illuminate.gifIlluminate: An Advent Experience  Paul Sheneman (Beacon Hill) $9.99  I have been so impressed with the recent small group resources coming from the edgy Nazarenes at Beacon Hill and Barefoot.  This is a great devotional to use daily–complete with prayers and a Psalm and verses to look up and quotes from ancient hymns–but it is ideally used with a candle lighting experience.  Yup, this is nearly a postmodern, family, Advent-wreath guide, with suggestions for service projects and justice work, ideas for storytelling, creative ways to let your light shine as you are illuminated by the light of Christ.  There is a link to the the cyberhymnal website for each old hymn or carol, too, so you can sing along. This is a handsome little book, well-designed with superb, solid content.  Highly recommended.  Get your candles out!  Here is a beautifully done short video clip reciting part of John 1 (and note how they also use a child’s voice) over a match lighting a candle which serves as a trailer for the book.  Neat.

Behold: Cultivating Attentiveness in the Season of Advent  Pamela C. Hawkins
(Upper Behold!.jpg Room) $14.00  Any book that starts with a quote from Quaker mystic Douglas Steere has my attention.  Certainly attentiveness is central to the spiritual life, and the very title of this book—behold!—evokes (if you hear it well) images of contemplative spirituality, inviting us to a slower, deeper pace of life.  Here, in this invitation to a prayerful Advent, we are offered daily meditations as well as a weekly prayer practice such as praying with images, silent prayer, using prayer beads, compline and such.  There is a good communal conversation about the book going on at www.upperroom.org/adventstudy, too, if that would be helpful.  Recommended for personal devotions or group use.  (A guide for leaders is included, adapting the materiel for small groups.)  Be attentive to your expectancy, preparation, faith, and God’s promises.  As always, Upper Room offers exquisite, good stuff for pondering. 

the-journey-2011.jpgThe Journey: Walking the Road to Bethlehem  Adam Hamilton (Abingdon) $18.00  You may know Hamilton’s popular 24 Hours That Changed the World, a great study of the death and resurrection of Jesus that is used during Lent and Easter.  Like that good resource, this Advent/Christmas study is available as a hardback book, has an accompanying DVD (filmed in the Holy Land, and very well done, in about 13 minute sessions), a youth study, and a child’s booklet.  There is a small  28-day devotional guide (The Journey: A Season of Reflection) too, to read along with the chapters of the book which is popular.  We are really impressed with this whole program, and with endorsements from the likes of John Ortberg and Bill Hybels, you can guess it is missional, visionary, exciting and altogether useful and solid.  Hamilton is the senior pastor of the United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Leawood Kansas.  Check out this youtube trailer of the DVD so you can get a flavor of Hamilton’s clarity and helpful style.  Very nicely done.  (By the way, there is a piece at the end of the DVD where there is some illuminating reflection on the current state of Arab-Israeli relations, set in Palestine.  Kudos to Hamilton for offering a desire to see the land of Jesus’ birth be a place of justice, grace and shalom.  It offers a provocative ending to a good study. Thanks be to God.) 
 

The Journey  hardback book $18.00
The Journey  DVD  $39.00
The Journey  devotional paperback $10.00
The Journey  youth study $8.00
The Journey  children’s study $16.00

Swanson_Peaceable-Kingdom_P.jpga thrill of hope.jpgDVD A Thrill of Hope:  The Christmas Story in Word and Art  (Church Publishing –  Morehouse) $29.95 //Discussion Guide; $4.95  This is a splendid, visually striking DVD study produced by Candler School of Theology (at Emory U
niversity in Atlanta.)  The nearly hour-long video explores (in six sessions) the standard Biblical narratives for the Christmas season but opens them up to new insights by experiencing great contemporary art pieces by John August Swanson made to illuminate these texts.  This is ideal for a group study, for personal enjoyment, as a gift given to art lovers or for anyone wanting a fresh take on the old familiar passages. Discussion on the artwork and Biblical texts are from premier mainline scholars (such as Rev. Dr. Tom Long, Dr. Carol Newsom and others.)  Why the package designers they didn’t show off the colorful art of Swanson or explain the marvelous array of contributors to this wonderful resource is beyond me.  Bet your humming O Holy Night, aren’t you? 

Christmas.jpgChristmas: Light Splits the Night infuse bible studies (Faith Alive) $6.99  This is a fine example of good study resources coming from this creative, solid publisher.  These lessons are designed for those who don’t have much time to prepare, who join together for lively discussion and learning…including a celebration at the end of the group.  The approach to Bible study in this series emphasizes discovery (the reader discovers what the Bible has to say by asking questions and seeking answers from the passage.)  Additional insights from history and other sources help to fill in details that connect this story to the larger story of God’s love and care for us all.


Celebrating Christmas With Jesus
  Max Lucado (Nelson) $2.99  Sometimes, I must admit,celebrating Christmas with Jesus.jpg when lamenting the cheesy side of mass marketed evangelical publishing, the name of the ever-popular Max Lucado comes up, icon that he is– a symbol of sorts.  But you know, I have always loved Max’s writing (yes, we call him by first name, even though we never met) and his Advent materials in the past (not to mention his full-length book God Came Near) have been excellent.  These are evocative, moving, well-written, and honest, easily accessible for all.  This little 30-day pocket book is very nicely done and we are happy to promote it. And here is the uniqueness of this: it isn’t a study only of the birth narratives, but looks at 30 key moments in the life of Jesus.  This truly is a (very brief) introduction to the man whose birthday we celebrate at Christmastime.  Not a bad idea, eh?

preparing-for-christmas-with-richard-rohr-daily-reflections-paperback-cover-art.jpgPreparing for Christmas with Richard Rohr: Daily Reflections for Advent  Richard Rohr (St. Anthony Messenger’s Press) $1.95  Speaking of long-standing icons in religious publishing offering nice small books—I hope you know this Franciscan author—this miniature devotional book offers daily reflections and prayers along with each day’s Scripture from the lectionary. Fr. Rohr has deep concerns about authentic spirituality, genuine human-ness, and an outward focus on peace and justice.  These are very short writings based on a popular recorded lecture. 

TWO BOOKS AND A VIDEO THAT AREN’T EXACTLY DEVOTIONALS or STUDIES BUT ARE HAPPILY AND HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.

I will Hold My Candle.jpgI Will Hold My Candle and Other Stories for Christmas  Dave Carver (Lulu) $15.00  This is one of my favorite new holiday resources and I hope you will consider picking this up–I really do.  Carver is, I’ll admit, an old friend, and former campus minister with the CCO, so I hope many come to know this little book.  He’s a good, good guy.  For years, now, Dave has labored as an ordinary Presbyterian pastor in a fairly ordinary (is any church ordinary?) urban neighborhood church in Pittsburgh.  Each year he writes a short story for Christmas eve services and this is a fabulous collection of his well-crafted pieces.  These could be read as sermons or devotionals, I suppose, but they are, in fact, stories.  (He explores this is a fantastic opening forward called “Why Stories, Anyway?” which is instructive for any pulpit preacher or classroom teacher.)  All of Pastor Dave’s stories are rooted in The Story, and his conjuring short plot and narrative, characters and surprises, allow us to be open to the Christmas message in fresh, arresting ways.  A few of these are truly great, and all are very well worth reading.  Preachers may borrow them, you could use them in your own family or small group, and of course writers may be inspired to create their own similar short fiction pieces.  As a pastor, he does not want these to be obscure or artsy, so even though they have good literary styling—Carver is a smarter and more eloquent man than I, and quotes from very good poems, too—I’d say they are down to Earth, clear, useful. Dare I say “incarnational”?  As it says on the back cover, “listen for the ways in which God’s promises ring true in our world and allow Dave’s imagination to spur your own.  Perhaps you will be able to see your life, or your neighbor, in a whole new light.”  Great holiday reading!

christmas-is-not-your-birthday-sm[1].jpgChristmas is Not Your Birthday: Experience the Joy of Living and Giving Like Jesus  Mike Slaughter (Abingdon) $12.00  Perhaps you saw our enthusiastic promotion of the Advent Conspiracy DVD and books the last few years.  Maybe you know the Alternatives simple living movement, and their slogan about Christmas not being your birthday.  Energetic leader and author and edgy mega-church pastor Mike Slaughter here gives us the short version of all that, inviting us to reject consumerism, gain a global vision, give and serve more, rooted in a missional, Kingdom-coming, socially-engaged reading of the Christmas story.  As he reminds us, “every year many of us say we are going to cut back, simplify, and have a family Christmas that focuses on the real reason for the season, but every year the advertisements beckon, the children plead, and it seems easier just to indulge our wants and whims.  Overspending, overeating, materialism, and busyness robs us of our peace and joy and rob Jesus of His rightful role as the center of our celebration.”

This Christmas, cut through the hype that leaves you exhausted and broke.  Here are the five well-written, short chapters: “Expect a Miracle”, “Giving Up on the Perfect”, “Scandalous Love”, “Jesus’ Wish List”, “By a Different Road.”  We all need this sort of reminder and Slaughter is living out some remarkable stuff in his own good congregation of world-changers.  Highly recommended.

MORE FROM OTHER YEARS
Other years at BookNotes we have raved about a few key resources and we’d invite you to see the BookNotes Advent list from last year as well. Or the great 2009 Advent list, here.

Note, please, how we previously lauded God With Us (Paraclete Press; $29.95) the god with us.jpg  extraordinary and quite handsome hardback edited by Greg Pennoyer and Image journal’s Greg Wolfe, both who are wise and deep thinkers engaged in the arts and literature for the sake of cultural renewal.  You can tell there is nothing smarmy or inappropriately sentimental with rich contributions by Scott Cairns, Emilie Griffin, Richard John Neuhaus, Kathleen Norris, Eugene Peterson, Luci Shaw.  The glossy paper and good art reproductions make this truly a great keepsake. It would make a great, great gift for thoughtful friends, don’t you think?  I’m sure you know somebody you’d like to remind that the Christian faith is mature and profound and artful—maybe this would help.  This is truly one of the nicest resources we’ve seen in all of our 29 seasons of Advent book-selling.

AND THIS: AN EXTRAORDINARY NEW REALITY-SHOW TYPE DOCUMENTARY ABOUT A JOURNEY TO THE MIDDLE EAST TO DISCOVER THE GEOGRAPHY OF CHRISTMAS.  FOR FIVE STRANGERS, CHRISTMAS IS NOW REALITY.

journey to christmas DVD.jpgDVD Journey to Christmas (Windborne)  $19.99  This entertaining, very moving, double disc, expertly-produced video may be the best bargain of the year, and for some, the most important Christmas product this year.  Join five diverse people—from a young First Nation’s woman to an agnostic lawyer, a poet, a Messianic Jew, and a burned out radio personality—as they travel the holy land, work with local guide Nizar Shaheed, and attempt to discover the true meaning of Christmas.  The movie’s tag-line gives us a hint: “For Five Strangers, The Nativity is Now Reality.”  Featuring commentary from Biblical and historical experts like Paul Maier, Craig Evans, and Claire Pfann, this exotic and compelling documentary is like a TV reality show where the stakes are the very meaning of history itself.  Please (please) watch this trailer (shown below) and see the quality of this excellent, interesting resource that could be enjoyed as we share the meaning of the holiday with our family, friends, and neighbors.  We are thrilled to get to sell this sort of thing.  Thanks for caring.

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Tim Keller books on sale — one week only!

We have been really grateful for the many ways so many Hearts & Minds friends and fans have been supportive of our book displays and sales out on the road.  How many good friends we have, hither and yon.  Of course our store staff work hard here in D-town every day, but this fall has seen Beth and I out and about more than usual.  It seemed ages ago that we were in Chicago with the Christian Legal Society or selling books for David Kinnaman or Philip Jenkins or Miroslov Volf, or setting up at a Mennonite camp for our “small church” gathering.  Just the other day we had a provocative few days with Diana Butler Bass and our Episcopal clergy friends from the Diocese of Pennsylvania.  They, and our hosts at a Franciscan retreat center, were so nice to us, bought a lot of  books, served chilled wine as Episcopalians will, while we engaged in serious conversations about the future of faith in these changing times.  Diana has a book coming out in February 2012 which will be called Christianity After Religion (HarperOne; $25.99) and as a historian she has a lot to offer as she looks for a new spiritual awakening breaking in among us. (She did her own academic work, by the way, under the esteemed historian, George Marsden.)  Let us know if you want to pre-order it at our typical BookNotes 20% off.  You’ll be hearing more about it this Winter, I’m sure.

One of the most stimulating and striking experiences of our fall season, though, was the opportunity to sell books at “The Gospel and Culture” conference sponsored by Redeemer Presbyterian Center for Faith and Work, which explored how ordinary folks can relate their faith to their daily callings, professions and jobs.  We sold books like Work Matters: Connecting Sunday Worship to Monday Work by Tom Nelson (Crossway; $15.99) and was pleasantly inspired by Richard Mouw as he reminded us of a “map of the universe” that has Christ enthroned as King.  I did a BookNotes rumination about that conference, here.  You can watch Mouw’s opening keynote, here.  Thanks be to God for churches like Redeemer who care enough about the role of the laity that they have found ways to expertly equip folks to think seriously about faith in the marketplace.

Of course, since the Reverend Timothy Keller was speaking at this event, we took tons of his books.  And—duh—since most of the participants at this event were active at Redeemer week by week, they most likely had his books.  Which is to say, it is sale time again, friends.  We’d rather sell these extra copies that we have here inexpensively, now.  We need the cash, you need the savings—it’s a good deal for one and all. 

I suspect you know that even as we enjoy selling all manner of books in all manner of settings, this is an author and perspective that we indubitably identify with.  Keller is intelligent and reasonable, altogether orthodox, and deeply concerned about proclaiming ancient truths in fresh ways, for the sake of the glory of God and benefit of neighbor.  His people’s work across the city of New York–in the business world, the fashion industry, on Wall Street, in the social service sector, in the art scene and the worlds of medicine, law, politics, education, and such—bears great fruit, making that city a bit more livable, and God a bit more known.  We are glad to sell this wise and effective pastor’s books and to earnestly commend them to you. 

ONE WEEK ONLY  30% OFF.  WHILE SUPPLIES LAST. 
SALE ENDS DECEMBER 9th

reason for god ipage.gifReason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism  (Riverhead) regularly $16.00 sale price $11.89  This landmark book was released a few years ago on a prestigious publisher, now a handsome paperback, smart, intelligent, an argument for the cogency of faith. Invites skeptics to “doubt their doubts” to see if the criticisms of faith hold up—some compare him to the significance of the lucid C.S. Lewis.  Excellent reviews from the likes of The Library Journal and The Washington Post. Designed for seekers, skeptics, or those needing a rational basis for the reasonableness of faith.   

prodigal god ipage.gifThe Prodigal God: Recovering the Heart of the Christian Faith  (Dutton) regularly $14.00 sale price $9.80 This slim paperback is one of the finest expositions of the famous parable I’ve ever read.  You should know that (following Ken Bailey’s serious work) Keller insists that the parable (which was told to the Pharisees, obviously) is mostly, therefore, about the older brother.  That it, it is most useful for those who are nominal church folk thinking they are fine because they’ve kept the rules and seem religious, a disposition itself that may indicate that they do not yet know the gospel.  God is the One who offers extravagant grace, and knowing our deep need is the first step towards authentic faith.  Wonderful.  I bet you know somebody to whom you could give it!

counterfeit gods ipage.gifCounterfeit Gods: The Empty Promises of Money, Sex, and Power, and the Only Hope That Matters (Dutton) $15.00 sale price $10.50  This is doubtlessly the best book I’ve ever read on this trilogy of idols, an excellent introduction to a chief topic of the BIble: idolatry.  I cannot imagine anyone who wouldn’t benefit from a good study like this, and nearly every modern person reading this post is enmeshed in the distortions of good things in our broken culture.  Very, very highly recommended.  Just out in paperback, making this a real bargain!  We have some of the hardbacks on sale, too, if you want those at the 30% off price.

generous justice ipage.gifGenerous Justice: How God’s Grace Makes Us Just  (Dutton) regularly $19.95 sale price $13.95  I’ve said before this is one of our favorite books among the many recent resources on social justice and why Biblical faith demands a concern for the poor, social change, and institutional reform.  Helpfully, Keller grounds the call for justice in the very justice of God, and links the gracious redemption offered through Christ with our work for social transformation.  This shows how the deepest truths of orthodox faith are also the most relevant and radical.  Three cheers for this kind of balanced, passionate, clear, Biblical view that affirms evangelical faith and social changed, piety and politics, justification and justice.  Please know how much I respect this book and how I hope many buy and read it. 

kings cross ipage.gifKing’s Cross: The Story of the World in the Life of Jesus  (Dutton) regularly $25.95 sale price $18.00  As with the other Keller books, we reviewed this at BookNotes when it first came out (earlier this year) and raved.  As the subtitle suggests, Keller implies that the deepest story of the whole world, and the deepest truths of the universe, are found in the incarnation and life and death and resurrection of this Rabbi Jesus. This is, actually, a clear-headed study of the gospel according to Mark, in Keller’s own urbane and thoughtful style.  Lovely stuff, serious, helpful.  Mark is the gospel for this just starting Revised Common Lectionary year B, so this is a great resource.

Keller has two other books that we happily carry, but which aren’t included in this deep discounted inventory clearance sale.  We could offer them at 20% off, though, as we usually do here at BookNotes.  While we’re talking about his good products, those two are his first book ever, written when he was doing urban ministry in Philadelphia,  Ministries of Mercy (P&R; $13.99) and his brand new one, The Meaning of Marriage (Dutton; $25.95.)  We also stock his excellent DVD curriculum pieces, The Prodigal God, The Gospel of Life, and Reason for God, each which sell for $24.95, or, for $31.99 shrink-wrapped with a useful participants guide.  I cannot tell you how classy these are and how ideal they are for thoughtful home study groups, serious adult ed classes, college groups and personal viewing.  Having been with him again this fall, we are renewed in our commitments to offer his resources.  We trust our friends and fans will appreciate it and use them well.     


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