Friday, October 31, 2008

So what are you reading in October?

Taking almost three weeks off this month enabled me to spend some serious time reading this month.  I was able to polish off three excellent books:

mind The Mind of Jihad by Laurent Murawiec.  A fascinating study of the reasons and possible Gnostic origins that underlie the ideology of past and present day Islam and its concept of jihad.  Although the ideology of jihad is essentially Islamic, Murawiec also shows how today's militant Islamists have borrowed heavily from both the Nazis and Bolsheviks.  A dense but very helpful study into understanding the underlying reasons for the the brutality exhibited in such killings as the recent martyrdom of Mansuur Mohammed in Somalia.

discipleship_edgeDiscipleship on the Edge by Darrell W. Johnson. As the subtitle suggests, this book is an expository journey through the book of Revelation.  The author demonstrates, correctly, that Revelation is not a crystal ball of the future but a discipleship manual for  Christians under persecution at the end of the first century and throughout history.  In my teaching seminars around the world, I often ask participant which book of the Bible they find is the least comprehensible.  The answer is almost universally, the book of Revelation. I would have agreed.  It was a book I tended to avoid, having seen how it was abused when I was a young Christian growing as a teen up in the 1970's.

No longer.  This book awakened my love for this incredible piece of scripture.  I finally think that I am beginning to understand Revelation after having read this and the next book. (Note: we will probably be making this available through VOMC's online bookstore in December or January).

theology-revelation The Theology of the Book of Revelation by Richard Bauckham.  An outstanding and surprisingly readable introduction to the theology of the book of Revelation.  Like Johnson, Bauckham shows how the key to understanding Revelation is to understand the original context to which the book was addressed; one of rising opposition to the church.  Both of these books will be foundational in my upcoming series of book on the biblical theology of persecution and discipleship which will take my earlier book, In the Shadow of the Cross and incorporate the research that I have done since its publication a few years ago.

2 comments:

  1. I have read through the last book of the Bible"Revelation"several times.I have read books about it.Listened to explanations of this book and none has satisfied me.For example the whole idea of the rapture of the church before the last three and a half years of the great tribulation does not make sense to me when i read Revelation.For example the idea that the Souls under the altar are the persecuted and martyred believers after the rapture does not make any sense to me.I rather believe that those souls are the martyred chrstians of all ages.Now I am not a theologian just a christian fascinated by what God tells me in His Word.

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  2. I think you'd like Johnson's book, Suzanna. He would agree with you (as would I)

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