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  • Father Fiction by Donald Miller (audio version)

    Posted on April 23rd, 2010 Richard 1 comment

    I feel like I cheated, because I was abandoned by my father at about the same age as Donald was when his dad took off. As Donald Miller waxes eloquently in Father Fiction he often reflects ideas that I’ve learned through living in the pain, but then he sometimes gets me right between the eyes with an insight. He’s particularly strong at revealing his “fatherless” thoughts and comparing them to how others act; he openly shares his weaknesses, explaining them but not excusing them.

    When he first begins to grasp God as a father through observing a child’s temper tantrum and how a father waits patiently knowing he has a better idea of what is good for his daughter though she writhes on the floor crying out that she is actually the one who is right. How often must God the Father patiently observe us as we throw tantrums about jobs, relationships or circumstance. I don’t know if I can ever be disgruntled again without picturing myself as a child throwing myself on the floor, kicking and screaming while my wise Father patiently waits for me to “get it”.

    Kelly Ryan Dolan narrates this book so well that I presumed it was narrated by the author and the author had taken acting and speech lessons. As funny and irreverent in expression as the author is in prose, they’re a perfect match.

    I give Father Fiction by Donald Miller 5 out of 5 stars.

    Christian Audio provided Father Fiction (audio book) free of charge to me in exchange for writing this review as part of the Christian Audio Reviewers Program.

  • Fifty Reasons Why Jesus Came to Die by John Piper

    Posted on March 13th, 2010 mcProdigal No comments

    My first seminary class at Dallas Theological Seminary was Hermeneutics with Dr. Howard Hendricks. My first homework assignment in this class was to make 100 observations on Matthew 28:18-20, the Great Commission. I jumped into this new world with both feet and cranked out 101 — I was quite proud. Imagine my astonishment with our second assignment was to do make another 100 observations on the same passage. By the time that was done I was a changed man. I never even looked at a leaf the same way again.

    John Piper does this on the topic of Jesus’ death in Fifty Reasons Why Jesus Came to Die. I chose the audio book narrated by Robertson Dean.  Dean is a major improvement over Grover Gardner, the pompous narrator I suffered through while listening to Desiring God by Piper. His steady rendition makes for easy listening.

    I treated this book as devotional and it works as that, each of the 50 reasons stands on its own. I would listen to 3-4 in a sitting. It doesn’t entirely work for this because a good bit of the reasons are quite technical and have only shades of meaning that are different than the others. It’s better taken en toto as a lung-expanding deep sea dive to rekindle appreciation of why Jesus did what He did.

    These were my favorites, I’m still trying to get my arms around them:

    24 To Give Us Confident Access to the Holiest Place
    25 To Become for Us the Place Where We Meet God
    26 To Bring the Old Testament Priesthood to an End and Become the Eternal High Priest
    27 To Become a Sympathetic and Helpful Priest

    I  give Fifty Reasons Why Jesus Came to Die 4 out of 5 stars. Special thanks to Christian Audio for the gratis copy provided through their reviewers program.

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