Wednesday, February 13

On the Nightstand


9 comments:

  1. How are you finding the Haggai commentary? Finding myself in a building season of life, both at home and at church, it seems strikes me as a particularly appropriate text to be carefully considered once again.

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  2. Tom: I am loving my study of both Malachi and Haggai. I've always found the NICOT to be thorough and helpful--though only rarely inspirational or devotional. My plan is to begin teaching through these books after Easter.

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  3. Mr. Grant-
    I know this isn't exactly on topic, but I was wondering if you could tell me the order of the Wendell Berry's novels on the citizens of Port William. I believe I started with the last one and haven't come across the proper order, but would like to read them that way. I know you're a fan of his so I thought I'd ask you.
    Thanks-

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  4. Kathryn: Berry's Port William chronicle includes 8 novels, a play, and at least 25 short stories. The first, Nathan Coulter, was published in 1960. It was followed by A Place on Earth, The Memory of Old Jack, Remembering, A World Lost, Jayber Crow, Hannah Coulter, and Andy Catlett. Berry has written more than fifty other books of essays, poetry, and cultural commentary. It is all extraordinarily rich fare--despite the fact that he remains more than a little theologically heterodox.

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  5. I've really enjoyed what I have read of Berry's so far and it looks like there is plenty more where that came from. Thanks for the sequence.

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  6. I'd like to know what you think of the McGrath book.

    I've got it on hold at the library.

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  7. Nathan: I'm reading McGrath's book now and it is very erudite and insightful. Amazingly though, the index indicates no mentions of Kuyper, Van Til, or Groen. Machen gets one mention--equal to John Hagee. Willow Creek, on the other hand, gets four mentions and its own little section. Yikes! Methinks a more thorough-going history of the Reformed, ever-reforming world must needs be written still! I'm grateful for McGrath, but he's developing an narrow idea about Protestantism rather than surveying the history of all of Protestantism.

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  8. Mr. Grant- Have you ever tallied how many books you read in a year? I am just curious...

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  9. Esther: Actually, no. I guess that'd be an interesting exercise. But really, I'm not a very fast reader (on purpose) so the tally might not be as high as some might think.

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