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The Presbyterian Outlook

The Presbyterian Outlook

Creating and curating trustworthy resources for the church, the Presbyterian Outlook connects disciples of Jesus Christ through compelling and committed conversation for the proclamation of the Gospel.

More Stories from this Author

Erskine lawsuit injunction appealed by ARP church

DUE WEST, S.C. — The General Synod of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church has appealed the order of a Circuit Court Judge filed earlier this month that granted a preliminary injunction in the case brought against the General Synod by three members of the Board of Trustees and the Erskine Alumni Association.

Parsons, other leaders praise Obama hospital directive

LOUISVILLE — Gradye Parsons, General Assembly stated clerk of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), has joined religious leaders from across the political and theological spectrum in praising President Barack Obama's April 15 memorandum on hospital visitation ensuring the rights of all patients to designate and receive visitors when admitted to a hospital.

Ten minutes with … Paul Roberts

Editor's note: Paul Timothy Roberts Sr., assumed full responsibility as administrative dean of Johnson C. Smith Theological Seminary, at the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta, Ga., effective April 19.

COLA looks for volunteers to be prayer partners

MINNEAPOLIS — This July several thousand Presbyterians will attend the 219th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in Minneapolis. But there are many more who would like to be at the Assembly, but can’t attend because of time, distance, or other commitments.

Winning? Losing!

We’re winning. Christians in the Great State of Texas have taken the majority of seats on the state’s Board of Education, and they are re-writing the curriculum for social studies courses (final vote in May).

A New Kind of Christianity: Ten Questions that Are Changing the Faith

by Brian McLaren
HarperOne. San Francisco. 320 pages.

reviewed by Jan Edmiston

Brian McLaren first came on my radar in 2004 when Time magazine named him “One of the 25 Most Influential Evangelicals in America.” James Dobson and Rick Warren were familiar names and faces. But Brian McLaren was not only an unfamiliar name; his message sounded very different from his fellow “Influential Evangelicals.”

10 minutes with … Brian McLaren

(RNS) Traditional Christian values and modern culture need not clash, according to Brian McLaren, 53, a nondenominational pastor and one of the leading lights of the Emerging Church Movement and a polarizing figure in conservative circles.

The Worshiping Body: The Art of Leading Worship

by Kimberly Bracken Long
Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2009. 130 pp. $19.95

reviewed by Ronald P. Byars

Whether it is playing the piano or soccer, doing so with a measure of grace requires both coaching and practice, and that is equally true for skills such as preaching, reading Scripture aloud, or presiding in worship. Few find leadership in worship comes naturally, but it can be learned.

This Odd and Wondrous Calling: The Public & Private Lives of Two Ministers

by Lillian Daniel and Martin B. Copenhaver
Eerdmans, 2009, Pb., 235 pp.

reviewed by Stephen r. Montgomery

Ever since Barbara Brown Taylor wrote her critically acclaimed book Leaving Church, I have been waiting for someone with equal eloquence and theological depth to respond with reflections on why, given all the shortcomings and problems of churches, one would choose to stay in church.

They Were Just People

by Bill Tammeus and Rabbi Jacques Cukierkorn
University of Missouri Press, Columbia Missouri, 2009.

reviewed by Leslianne Braunstein

I saw the movie, Schindler’s List in 1993. I thought Oskar Schindler was incredibly brave and appropriately recognized by the State of Israel as one of the Righteous Among the Nations – a non-Jew who risked his life to save Jews from Nazi extermination.

BOOK REVIEW BRIEFS

All the Living: A Novel

Farrar, Straus and Giroux. (2009). 208 pages. By C.E. Morgan.

A finely written novel that portrays the deepest connections of love, land, grief, friendship, marriage, and faith. The author deftly and accurately renders the language and culture of those who tend the land. Theological and pastoral insights are subtly woven into the narrative. An extraordinary story by a skilled young writer.

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