Amazon Monthly Ebook Sale, Dallas Willard, Therese of Lisieux, James K.A. Smith, MORE - Oct. 2 - ERB Daily Book Morsel
Published: Wed, 10/02/19
October 2, 2019
“I know now that true charity consists in bearing all our neighbors' defects
--not being surprised at their weakness, but edified at their smallest virtues.”
― St. Therese of Lisieux
YESTERDAY was her feast day
*** Three Poems by
St. Therese of Lisieux
for her Feast Day!
*** Kindle Ebook
Deal of the Day!
Knowing Christ Today
by Dallas Willard
Only $1.99!!!
One of the excellent deals in Amazon's
monthly ebook sale for October...
*** Amazon Monthly Kindle
Ebook Sale ! – October 2019
Amazon recently released their October 2019 ebook sale …
Browse the full sale or check out our recommended deals,
including books by N.T. Wright, Dorothy Day, Dallas Willard, and MORE
*** New Book Releases –
Week of 30 September 2019
Here are a few new book releases from this week that are worth checking out:
James K.A. Smith, Kate Bowler, Chanequa Walker-Barnes, MORE
Jeremy Everett – I Was Hungry – Review
Working Together to Fight Hunger
A Review of I was Hungry: Cultivating
Common Ground to End an American Crisis
by Jeremy Everett (Paperback: Brazos Press, 2019)
Review by Leslie Starasta
In Case You Missed It...
*** Evangelicalism – Ten Books
for Assessing its Present and Future
In a piece for The Atlantic earlier this week, Alan Jacobs proposed that we perhaps have reached the end of evangelicalism.
In order to evaluate Jacobs’s proposal, we need to have a rich understanding of evangelicalism that draws upon history,
theology, and sociology. Here are ten recent (or soon-to-be-released) books that can help us to cultivate this broad sort
of understanding, and to discern the future of evangelicalism (or the movement-formerly-known-as-evangelicalism).
*** David Fitch – The Church of Us Vs. Them – Feature Review
Irenic, Inclusive, and Incarnational Theology. A Feature Review of
The Church of Us vs. Them: Freedom from a Faith That Feeds on Making Enemies
David Fitch (Hardcover: Brazos Press, 2019) Reviewed by Leroy Seat
ERRATA: The prayer attributed to Phyllis Tickle in Monday's email, which does appear in
Tickle's DIVINE HOURS, was not written by her, but rather came from the Book of Common Prayer.
We regret the error.
Here's to energizing reading today!
Chris Smith
Editor, The Englewood Review of Books