Wednesday, February 19, 2025

15. Truth Unchanged, Unchanging


15. Truth Unchanged Unchanging. Martyn Lloyd-Jones. 1951/1993. Crossway. 128 pages. [Source: Bought] [4 stars, apologetics, lectures, christian nonfiction, 1947]

First sentence: What is man? Any true consideration of man and his problems in the modern world must answer that question. If the basic idea of what man is is a mistaken one, so of necessity will be the view of his troubles and what can be done for him. 

Truth Unchanged Unchanging began its life as a series of lectures given by Martyn Lloyd-Jones in 1947. It was first published in book form in 1951. Crossway republished it in 1993. The lectures have an apologetic vibe. The lectures address basic questions that "universal man" is asking and seeking answers to. It is very much written with a twentieth-century view, and perhaps slightly older than mid-century philosophy. That is not at all to say--not even a little bit--that the answers are any less relevant or any less true. Just that the specific questions and the arguments against Christian answers will have shifted and changed. Particularly the arguments against. The suppositions/presuppositions will have perhaps changed as well. Again, Lloyd-Jones' arguments FOR Christianity are ever-relevant, ever-true. At the end of almost every chapter, his writing becomes more emphatic, more persuasive. He always ends his arguments strongly. 

Chapter titles include:
  • What is Man?
  • What is Wrong with Man?
  • Sincerity versus Truth
  • The Simple Gospel
  • Is the Gospel Still Relevant?
Quotes:
Man cannot rehabilitate his true self. He cannot find God. Man can lose his own soul, but he can never find it again. He can kill and destroy it, but he cannot create it anew. And were it not for one thing he would go inevitably to the eternal fire of Hell. But, thank God, there is that one thing. "The Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost." (Luke 19:10). Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of God, came down to earth and lived and died and rose again in order to save. He has borne the punishment that we deserve on account of sin and for spoiling and marring the image of God upon us. But more, He restores our soul to us. He gives us a new nature and fills us with power that will enable us to express this new and true self even as He expressed it Himself. (35)


© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Sunday, February 16, 2025

Sunday Salon #7


Bible reading 

1611 KJV
  • Ezra
  • Nehemiah
  • Esther
  • Job 1-15
  • Acts 19-28
  • Romans 1-11

NASB 1977
  • Psalms 56-89
  • Genesis 18-50
  • Exodus 1-4

KJV
  • 1 Kings 17-22
  • 2 Kings 
  • Proverbs 1-24

ESV
  • 1 Samuel 25-31
  • 2 Samuel
  • 1 Kings 1-12

NKJV
  • Leviticus 23-27
  • Numbers
  • Psalms 90, 95


© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Friday, February 14, 2025

14. Happy Lies

Happy Lies: How a Movement You (Probably) Never Heard Of Shaped Our Self-Obsessed World. Melissa Dougherty. 2025. 272 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, christian nonfiction]

First sentence (from the introduction): The year was 2011. I had a sweet, energetic one-year-old girl, and I wanted to have spiritual answers ready for her when she grew up. 

I have been counting down the days until this book released. I watched her announcement video on YouTube and I knew I *had* to read the book. This book is about NEW THOUGHT, not to be confused with NEW AGE. Once you start learning about what New Thought is, you see traces of it literally anywhere and everywhere. Because it is so pervasive, because it in some ways likes to fly under the radar, because it is easy at masking itself, cloaking, if you will, I think everyone should read this book. One thing I appreciated about this one was the Melissa wasn't just using straw man arguments, she was going out meeting people, attending church services, talking to pastors and leaders. She was letting 'the other side' if you will have a voice too. She also seemed to be doing it in a compassionate, genuine way instead of a mockery ha, ha, ha way. 

The chapter titles:
  • What You Don't Know Can Hurt You: How New Thought Hides in Plain Sight
  • New Thought, Old Lies: The Roots of Today's Toxic Positivity
  • The Teachings: Some Terminology and Beliefs of New Thought
  • True for Me: Relativism and New Thought
  • Identity Crisis: What Do You Do When You Don't Feel Like You?
  • Loving Ourselves to Death: Self-Help and New Thought
  • Dreams Come True: Toxic Affirmations and the Law of Attraction
  • Prosperity Now: New Thought and the Word of Faith Movement
  • A Different Gospel: New Thought and Progressive Christianity
  • The Schuller Secret: New Thought and the Church Growth Movement
  • Beyond the Happy Lies: Finding True Wholeness in Authentic Christianity
  • Call to Action
Quotes:
  • Love and truth go hand in hand. To love Jesus is to love truth. He testifies in John 18:37 that this is why he was born: 'to testify to the truth.'
  • Deception isn't supposed to be obvious. It's supposed to be beautiful. New Thought is incredibly adaptable to its hosts. It looks enticing, feels good, and tricks people into pursuing their own glory, thinking it's God's will. 
  • This is the purpose of false gospels: make evil look good and good look evil. We should wholeheartedly oppose these false gospels. 
  • Charles Spurgeon is often attributed with saying, "Discernment is not knowing the difference between right and wrong. It is knowing the difference between right and almost right." 
  • If we want to grow in our ability to spot counterfeits and lies, we need to read God's Word regularly so we can develop a solid theological and biblical foundation. 
  • New Thought makes itself look like the more open-minded, tolerant, loving, and true way to view Jesus, the gospel, and the Bible. 
  • New Thought also equates "God" with "love." "God is love" (John 4:8) is taken quite literally. 
  • New Thought also equates what's true with what's loving. The term fundamentalist is often used as a derogatory term referring to those who believe in what they would consider negative attributes of God mentioned previously. 
  • In New Thought, the Bible is just one of many spiritual books containing truth....The Bible was written with the ancient, limited perspective of the original authors. We've grown and spiritually progressed, meaning we can understand the deeper significance of the Bible far better today. A core belief is that Christianity tries to suppress spiritual truths, especially about our divine potential. They keep people captive to only one perspective on Christianity and humanity and one proper way to interpret the Bible.
  • [a Prayer] Lord, in a world filled with distractions, doubts, and deceptions, help me to anchor my faith in your unchanging truth. Grant me discernment to recognize falsehood and the courage to reject it. In moments of doubt, remind me of the words of Jesus and your love for me. Strengthen my faith so that I may never waver but instead hold fast to the truth revealed in your Son, Jesus Christ. I ask for your protection against the lies and deceptions that try to lead me astray. Help me to be vigilant and steadfast, knowing that the truth you offer is the source of my hope and salvation. Empower me to share this truth with others, that they, too, may come to believe in you, the one true God. 
  • New Thought strips sovereinty from God and hands it to humanity. God wants to humble us. Satan wants to put us on a pedestal. God says die to yourself. Satan wants you to live for yourself. God alone says he is the Great I Am. Satan says you are the Great I Am. 
  • We ought to call out bad theology. It's not divisive to do so. It's divisive to teach bad theology.
  • True freedom lies in submitting to what God says, not in shaping God to fit our preferences.
  • Scripturally speaking, the church is to: 1. Pray (Acts 2:42). 2. Teach biblical doctrine and equip the saints for ministry, helping them discover and utilize their spiritual gifts for the body of Christ (Ephesians 4:11-12). 3. Provide a place of fellowship for believers to encourage and love one another (1 Thessalonians 5:11; 1 John 3:11). 4. Help those in need (James 1:27). 5. Spread the gospel. In Matthew 28:19-20 we are given the famous Great Commission. Jesus instructed his followers to go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them and teaching them to obey his commands. In Philippians 1:18, Paul says he is grateful that the gospel is being spread, even when it's done with false motives. 
  • New Thought makes your enemy look like your best friend. The devil is full of dark schemes designed to look like false light. Be strong in the Lord and wear his armor to stand against the devil's schemes.
  • Know your Bible and speak the truth. When a massive group of people believes in lies that comfort them, the only explanation is that the Father of Lies is behind it. Satan's ultimate weapon isn't power. It's deception. If Satan's primary tactic in spiritual warfare is spreading lies, then our most effective defense in the battle against him is the opposite: spreading truth. 
  • Truth is not simply whatever works. This is a philosophy of pragmatism--a concept New Thought is in line with. 
  • Truth is not simply what the majority believes. The majority of people can believe potatoes are secretly undercover aliens that are going to take over the world, but that doesn't make it true.
  • Truth is not what makes people feel good. Bad news can be true.
  • Truth is not simply a belief. A lie believed is still a lie. 

© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

13. Christ Crucified


13. Christ Crucified: A Theology of Galatians. Thomas R. Schreiner. 2024. 176 pages. [Source: Review copy] [christian nonfiction, theology, bible commentary, 4 stars]

First sentence: Galatians heralds the truth of the gospel, and this gospel stands as the authority over all people everywhere.

Who is this book for? Who is this book not for? I feel that the casual bible reader with little to moderate experience with scholarly deep-dives will struggle with this book. Primarily for two reasons: first, Galatians is a weighty book to unpack. It covers some of the same topics as Paul's letter to the Romans, however, it is less general, more specific, and more layered. You have a LOT of decoding context to do before you even get to the theological bits. Second, the book is scholarly. This in and of itself is neither good nor bad. It is what it is. This is not something that can be read, understood, comprehended, mastered by a casual read-through. It requires YOU the reader to engage in complex, weighty theological ideas and concepts so that you can keep up or follow along with the author. If your understanding begins to weaken, if things begin to slide right on over your head, there is no "catching up" and "muddling through" and hoping that the next chapter will clarify. For those more experienced with [weighty] theology and are used to reading scholarly books--textbooks even--then this one will prove an easier go. 

One thing that I was able to appreciate was its clarity. You might be confused. Didn't I just say this one was too complex for the average reader? (And I am definitely in that grouping with this one. I struggled.) The book is clearly laid out and organized. It tells you what to expect in each part or section, each chapter. Each chapter has a CONCLUSION which sums up the main points of the chapter. If nothing else, the conclusions help clarify some of the arguments. If not for the conclusions, then I might have given up all hope of finishing this one. 

What I did read and understand--there were some bits--I found thought-provoking. I appreciated that he was trying to put the book into context and piece together WHAT Paul's opponents actually-actually believed instead of just diving into the Scripture itself. If Paul is arguing THIS in response, can we figure out more clearly WHAT position(s) were being held. At one point it was like theological algebra--solving for x. The discussion on circumcision, for example, brought up some points that I had not considered. 

I decided to rate four stars because I think most likely what is here is solid theologically, I just couldn't quite understand it well enough to fully engage and benefit from it. Perhaps ministers and teachers could benefit more from it because it was written more on their level. 

© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Sunday, February 9, 2025

Sunday Salon #6


Bible reading 

1611 KJV
  • 1 Chronicles
  • 2 Chronicles
  • John 18-21
  • Acts 1-18

NASB 1977
  • Psalms 19-55
  • Ezra
  • Nehemiah
  • Esther
  • Genesis 1-17

KJV
  • 1 Samuel 16-31
  • 2 Samuel 
  • 1 Kings 1-16

ESV
  • Judges
  • Ruth
  • 1 Samuel 1-24

NKJV (audio)
  • Exodus 14-40
  • Leviticus 1-22

© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

12. The Indigo Heiress


12. The Indigo Heiress. Laura Frantz. 2025. 416 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, christian fiction, historical romance, clean historical romance]

First sentence: Amid the timeless silence of the verdigris parlor, Juliet remained seated in her Chippendale chair...for the third hour.

Premise/plot: The Indigo Heiress is set a few years previous to the American Revolution; it is set in Virginia AND Scotland circa 1774/75. Juliet Catesby and her sister Loveday star in this historical romance. Juliet has always felt that her sister Loveday was absolutely wonderful, beautiful, striking--everything a man could ever hope to have in a future wife. She's always felt a little less so in comparison. However, when a Scottish merchant, Leith Buchanan, comes a-calling [from Scotland] it is HER he wants. Though perhaps not the stuff of fairy tales. He is a widower looking for a marriage of convenience. He's looking for a good mother for his children, yes, but he's also thinking of how the marriage can benefit him and his business. The two have a mutual attraction that is obvious to everyone but themselves. How could she ever love him? How could he ever love her. Thus, of course, being "the last to know" in a predictable way.

I *do* have a weakness for marriage of convenience stories. 
I definitely have a SUPER strong weakness for Scottish romantic leads.
I do LOVE historical romance.
I have loved so many of Laura Frantz' previous books.

I will say that this one suffers a bit here and there with pacing issues. I also either blinked and missed it OR the book lacks a little in the villain backstory development. In other words, I'm not sure I picked up on *why* the villains were the villains and why they were choosing to act that way? It was a little melodramatic at a point or two in a way that I never require. Still, I enjoyed it a great deal. 

© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

11. C.S. Lewis at War: The Dramatic Story Behind Mere Christianity



11. C.S. Lewis at War: The Dramatic Story Behind Mere Christianity. Focus on the Family Radio Theatre. Paul McCusker screenplay. 2013. Tyndale. 2 Discs. [Source: Inter-Library] [4 stars, audio book]

What is it about? It opens with a radio broadcast being interrupted to announce that war has been declared against Nazi Germany. A few minutes later, listeners hear C.S. Lewis' lecture--or guest lecture--being interrupted to deliver the same news to students. So, essentially it is focused on World War II, and, the effect of the war on the British home front. Particular attention is paid to the BBC and to C.S. Lewis. It is a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the creating of Mere Christianity and The Screwtape Letters.

Further thoughts: Though I am not typically a fan of audio books, I have a harder time listening than reading, I thought the format of this one worked well. Why? Because the heart of the story is about RADIO BROADCASTS, so it makes perfect sense to LISTEN to the story in such a dramatic, polished way.

Would I recommend listening to this? Yes! I really loved it. I found myself listening to this one several weekends in a row.

Who would I recommend it to? Anyone who has read C.S. Lewis. This includes anyone who has read The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe, Screwtape Letters, or Mere Christianity. Anyone who is interested in history and world war II. Anyone who enjoys fiction or nonfiction set in the UK. Anyone who is interested in the history of radio.

© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible