Tuesday, 03 April 2012

Comments (23)

  • Nous_Apeiron@xanga

    In no particular order...

    I really enjoyed This Present Darkness.

    Dark Night of the Soul by St. John of the Cross is quite interesting.

    Teilhard de Chardin's The Phenomenon of Man is interesting as well.

    Spiritual Combat Revisited by Jonathan Robinson of the Oratory is a work I greatly appreciated.

    I also appreciated Dissent from the Creed by Richard Hogan.

  • ToastersNMilkshakes@xanga

    The Early Christians; In Their Own Words by Eberhard Arnold

    Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes by Kenneth E Bailey

    The Moral Vision of the New Testament by Keith Hays

    Celebration of Discipline by Richard Foster

    Satan and the Problem of Evil; Creating a Trinitarian Warfare Theodicy by Gregory Boyd

    Bonus: Anything by N.T. Wright

  • Captric@xanga

    Breaking  the Spell

    The Third Chimpanzee
  • Ancient_Scribe@xanga

    "The Everlasting Man" by GK Chesterton

    C.S. Lewis' Space Trilogy



    "The Life of St. Gemma Galgani" by Venerable Fr. Germanus

    "Our Lady and the Church" by Hugo Rahner

    "The Story of a Soul" by St. Therese of Lisieux

    Hmm...I wouldn't say those are my TOP 5 but they are five that are definitely up near the top!
  • Pollypinks@xanga

    Gotta say anyone who likes Mere Christianity is a pretty good friend.

  • sometimestheycomebackanyway@xanga

    1.  "Rome Sweet Home"                               by Scott Hahn

    2.  "The Dark Night"                                       by Saint John of the Cross

    3.  "The Summa Theologica"                        by Saint Thomas Aquinas

    4.  "Lumen Gentium"                                      by Pope Paul VI

    5.  "Faith and Reason"                                   by Pope John Paul II

  • JulieMillerFan@xanga


    When I left America to become a missionary, all 6 of these books came with me  --- as I sincerely doubted I would find copies in English where I now live.  All of them have had a profound impact on my growth in Christ at some juncture along the way --- and continue to do so to this day.

    1) Pilgrim's Progress
      --- John Bunyan.

    2) The Great Divorce  --- C S Lewis.  (NOTE: I would hasten to include "The Last Battle" from the Chronicles of Narnia here as well.  They are great companions to one another)

    3) Here I stand (A Life of Martin Luther) --- Roland Bainton

    4) Charismatic Chaos  ---  John MacArthur

    5) Evidence that Demands a Verdict  ---  Josh McDowell

    and the 6th bonus book (why do I feel like I'm applying for a book club membership here...)

    6) Seeds of Change --- Kerry Livgren's Autobiography.  (Lead singer for rock group Kansas about his journey to Christ.  Was the book that took me from my atheism and led me to Christianity 30+ years ago.)

  • asterisktom@xanga

    A good question. I would say:

    Christologia by John Owen (Also his Commentary on Hebrews)

    Annals by Ussher

    History of the Christian Church by Schaff

    The Apostolic Fathers - one of the very few books I took with me to China

    The Parousia by Russell

  • MommaFish89@xanga

    Back to Virtue - Peter Kreft
    Mere Christianity - C.S. Lewis
    The Good News About Sex and Marriage - Christopher West
    Good Families Don't Just Happen - Catherine and Jospeh Garcia-Prats
    An Exorcist Tells His Tale - Fr. Gabriele Amorth
    Catholicism for Dummies - Trigilio/Brightenti
    (^^ this was pre-RCIA, all the others were during and post)

  • deanlusk

    I almost wish I hadn't asked this, because now my want-to-read list has grown immensely and quickly. Thank you for all the lists! It's going to be hard to cherry-pick which ones to read first. Of particular interest was @ToastersNMilkshakes' second listed book, "Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes".

    A couple of people mentioned C. S. Lewis' space trilogy, which I haven't read in years. Time to dust those off and dig in again.

    Again, thank you. The variety is great and I hope to find out first-hand why many of these books made your lists.
  • wounded_rhymes@xanga

    1. Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why by Bart Ehrman
    2. Jesus, Interrupted: Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible (And Why We Don't Know About Them) by Bart Ehrman
    3. The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins
    4. God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything by Christopher Hitchens
    5. The Magic of Reality: How We Know What's Really True by Richard Dawkins

  • Jenny_Wren@xanga

    The Hiding Place--Corrie Ten Boom

    Perelandra--C.S. Lewis
    On the Incarnation--St. Athanasius
    Confessions--St. Augustine
    Orthodoxy--G.K. Chesterton.
    And, if I may, a sixth--Life in the Trinity, by Donald Fairbairn. The most thorough explanation of how God's very nature is reflected in his created world, and his work toward men--how it is all about relationship, and healing relationship.

    And, a timeless answer to humanism and cold materialism is Pascal's 'Pensees--or Christianity for Modern Pagans". He gives an amazing philosophical as well as scientific argument for the validity of Christianity. 

    Also--
    'The End for Which God Created the World'--by Jonathan Edwards. Amazing explanation of God's intrinsic wisdom and love being displayed through his plan for humanity. Philosophical and literary gold right there.


    Also, also--
    I've read the 'God Delusion', and it was hardly a compelling philosophical or scientific argument against the existence of God. It was a bit sloppy, actually. I've also read Bertrand Russell--he wasn't that compelling or thorough, either. A better and more interesting philosophical atheist would be Anthony Flew. And ironically, he became an agnostic/deist before he died.
  • LKJSlain@xanga

    Redeeming Love, Francine Rivers
    This Present Darkness, Frank Peretti
    The Visitation, Frank Peretti
    The three books in the Mark of the Lion Series by Francine Rivers

    I don't really know/have any others

  • Jenny_Wren@xanga

    @LKJSlain@xanga - "Redeeming Love" is live changing. So heartbreakingly beautiful and illustrative of God's grace...



    Have you ever read her bloodline of Jesus novellas? I forget the official name, but I remember loving them.
  • LKJSlain@xanga

    @Jenny_Wren@xanga - No... all things considered I'm really not a reader O_o... hard to believe

  • danaenicole@xanga

    NARNIA!! i can't even choose a favorite among those. all seven are amazing.

    c. s. lewis is my favorite author. "mere Christianity" is on my list as well.


    i also really like bryan davis' fiction series "dragons in our midst" and "oracles of fire". he's working on a third one now, but i haven't gotten to it yet.
  • Keiki@xanga

    I haven't read that many, to be honest... but Piercing the Darkness and This Present Darkness by Frank Peretti are two of my favs. 

  • Dark_Gem@xanga

    EVERYONE HERE needs to read the 'Mark of the Lion' series by Francine Rivers. After reading this series, it literally changed my life. I went on to read absolutely everything else she's ever written, and honestly, she has never let me down.
    Amazing and uplifting stories.

    God bless...

  • CecilliaMarie@xanga

    Crazy Love by Frances Chan <3

  • mortimerZilch@xanga

    "Dialogue of the Soul with God The Father" by St. Catherine of Sienna;

    The Autobiography of St. Ignatius;The Life of St. Anthony the Hermit, by St. Athanasius;The Lord of the Rings Trilogy (with the Hobbit) by Tolkein - it's Christian allegory!

  • MaxRebo@xanga

    It's REEEEALLY hard to pick 5... Books with a * were both very enjoyable and influential on my life.

    * 1) The Lord of the Rings trilogy, by J.R.R. Tolkien
    (my all-time favorite book(s)... not exactly a Christian story, but written by a staunch Catholic with numerous Christian themes)

    * 2) The Narnia series, by C.S. Lewis
    (if I had to pick favorites: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe; The Voyage of the Dawn Treader; The Magician's Nephew)


    3) This Present Darkness & Piercing the Darkness, by Frank Peretti

    * 4) The Circle series, by Ted Dekker(favorite: Red)

    * 5) Judgment Day, by James F. David  (I'm reading the sequel, The Book of Summer, right now)

    Honorable mentions: - The Space trilogy, by C.S. Lewis* - The Shack, by William P. Young- The Reckoning, by James Byron Huggins- The Four Loves, C.S. Lewis
  • Marica0701@xanga

    "Mere Christianity" is great. "Screwtape Letters" is on my to-read list.


    I really enjoy Martin Luther's writings, and I have a book by Timothy Lull that is a pretty good selection of Luther's writings. Heiko Oberman has a good biography of Luther called "Luther: Man Between God and the Devil".

    I really would like to read more Christian writings... I should look into the suggestions offered here in the comments!
  • Flying_Heart@xanga

    In no particular order:

    1) The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis (my introduction into Lewis before I knew anything about his faith)

    2)Shadow of the Almighty by Elisabeth Elliot (a biography of the missionary Jim Elliot who died in the field. It's mostly told through old letters and journal entries he wrote. Really encouraged me during a turning point in my life.)

    3) Zora and Nicky by Claudia Mair Burney (This is a fictional story of two people's journey to find love (both Divine and human) despite controlling parents, racism, bad pasts, etc. It is my all time favorite love story and the first realistic Christian fiction book I ever enjoyed.)

    4)Girl Meets God by Lauren F. Winner (a memoir about the author's conversion from Orthodox Judaism to Christianity)

    5) The Hiding Place by Corrie ten Boom (autobiography. She and her family helped hide Jews from the Nazis during the war. This was the first biography that I ever adored and one of the most inspiring things I've ever read.)

    Bonus: An Unlikely Disciple by Kevin Roose. (Not actually a Christian book, but I think it's relevant to Christians. The author, a liberal non-religious student at Brown, decided to spend an "undercover" semester at Liberty University in order to learn more about evangelical Christianity. This book recounts that semester. )

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  • deanlusk
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