Coram Deo ~

Looking at contemporary culture from a Christian worldview


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THIS & THAT: A Gathering of Favorite Articles and Quotes

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  • Favorite Quotes of the Week

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FAITH AND WORK: Connecting Sunday to Monday

Faith and Work News ~ Links to Interesting Articles

  • The Working Genius Podcast with Patrick Lencioni. Patrick Lencioni is one of my favorite authors. Enjoy his new podcast The Working Genius.
  • Gospel Driven Productivity: Getting the Right Things Done. Hugh Whelchel writes “What’s Best Next: How the Gospel Transforms the Way You Get Things Doneis a book that I wish someone had given me forty years ago. Read it and you will be literally astounded by all the things you do.”
  • You are Called to New Work. Howard Graham writes “We all have the opportunity to do new work every day. Many of us miss our opportunity for new work because we confuse our calling, vocation, and our job.”
  • A Reflection on Procrastination. Russ Gehrlein looks at the important topic of procrastination.
  • Your Work is Worship: Kara Martin. Watch this message from the 2023 Center for Faith & Work Los Angeles National Conference. “We often separate out worship and work, seeing our Sunday as distinct from our Monday. However, this is not what the Bible teaches. You will learn how right from the beginning work was part of our worship of God.”

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MUSIC REVIEWS and NEWS

Music Review:
Accentuate the Positive – Van Morrison
****

Van Morrison returns with Accentuate the Positive, his 45th studio album overall, his twelfth in the past ten years, and second of 2023, following the excellent Moving on Skiffle. Covering nineteen songs made popular by the Everly Brothers, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino and others, the album finds Morrison returning to one of his childhood passions, this time to rock ‘n’ roll.
With Morrison’s voice in top form, backed by his excellent band and background singers, this album is a lot of fun. As one reviewer wrote, it was if they were hanging around the studio having a party playing music they love without knowing the tapes were running.
Morrison is joined on guitar by Jeff Beck on one of his last studio performances on “Lonesome Train”, on which Chris Farlowe adds vocals. Taj Mahal joins Morrison on “Lucille” and “Shake, Rattle and Roll”.

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  • Song of the Week Lyrics ~ In Christ Alone by Keith & Kristyn Getty and CityAlight

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BOOK REVIEWS and NEWS

Book Reviews

The Christian Manifesto: Jesus’ Life-Changing Words from the Sermon on the Plain by Alistair Begg. The Good Book Company. 100 pages. 2023
****

In this book, respected pastor and author Alistair Begg looks at a manifesto for the Christian life, straight from the lips of Jesus, taught in one of his most famous sermons found in Luke’s Gospel (6:20-49), and known as the “Sermon on the Plain.” (similar to the “Sermon on the Mount” in Matthew’s Gospel).
Begg writes that at just 725 words, this manifesto is not exhaustive. It does not cover every aspect of how Christ’s people can live in a way that pleases him, but it is foundational. Here is life as it is designed to be lived and enjoyed.
Begg tells us that the Sermon on the Plain is Jesus’ invitation to you to experience life at its very best. It is his description of what life in his kingdom, a kingdom where all that is wrong is being put right, looks like as we live in this world. Here we discover what the marks of a genuine Christian are. The manifesto is a description of the life we were all made for, but it is a challenge to be different from how I naturally am and how the world around me operates. This call to enjoy the blessing of life in Jesus’ kingdom is a call to be different.

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BOOK REVIEWS ~ More of this review and a review of The Advent of Glory: 24 Devotions for Christmas by R.C. Sproul
BOOK NEWS ~ Links to Interesting Articles
BOOK CLUB ~ Truths We Confess by  R.C. Sproul
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My Review of ORDINARY ANGELS

Ordinary Angels, rated PG
***

This film is based on a true story about a family facing seemingly insurmountable obstacles, that took place in Louisville, Kentucky about thirty years ago. The film, which features strong performances by its two lead characters, was written by Oscar nominee Meg Tilly (Agnes of God), and Kelly Fremon Craig (Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret.), and was directed by Jon Gunn (The Case for Christ).
The film opens with a baby girl being born to Ed Schmitt, played by Alan Ritchson (Reacher), and his wife Theresa.

***SPOILER ALERT***
A few years later though, Theresa dies from a rare liver disease. Then, to make matters worse, Ed finds out his young daughter, Michelle, played by Emily Mitchell, has the same disease. Continue reading


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THIS & THAT: A Gathering of Favorite Articles and Quotes

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– More interesting article links
– Favorite Quotes of the Week Continue reading


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FAITH AND WORK: Connecting Sunday to Monday

Faith and Work News ~ Links to Interesting Articles

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BOOK REVIEWS and NEWS


The Great Dechurching: Who’s Leaving, Why Are They Going, and What Will It Take to Bring Them Back? by Jim Davis and Michael Graham with Ryan P. Burge. Zondervan. 272 pages. 2023
****

This important new book, written by Jim Davis (teaching pastor at Orlando Grace Church, Michael Graham (Program Director at The Keller Center for Cultural Apologetics) with Ryan Burge (associate professor of political science at Eastern Illinois University), uses research on some forty million Americans (about 15 percent of American adults living today), who have left the church over the last twenty-five years. They tell us that we are in the largest and fastest religious shift in the history of our country. This would be an excellent book for church leaders to read and discuss and might also be a good topic for an adult Sunday School class.
What began as a desire to equip the primary author’s local church through a podcast called As in Heaven, became a research project that eventually developed into this book. They engaged social scientists Dr. Ryan Burge and Dr. Paul Djupe to do an academic-review-board-approved, nationwide, quantitative study to answer their questions about the dechurching phenomenon. The authors tell us that the size, pace, and scope of dechurching in America is at such historic levels that there is no better phrase to describe this phenomenon than the Great Dechurching.

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BOOK REVIEWS ~ More of this review…
BOOK NEWS ~ Links to Interesting Articles
BOOK CLUB ~ Truths We Confess by  R.C. Sproul
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BOOK LAUNCH TODAY! The Sacredness of Everyday Secular Work

 The Sacredness of Everyday Secular Work: 4 Ways Your Job Matters for Eternity (Even When You’re Not Sharing the Gospel) by Jordan Raynor. WaterBrook. 224 pages. 2024
****

Jordan Raynor is a leading voice in the faith and work movement. He is the best-selling author of books such as Master of One, Called to Create and Redeeming Your Time). He also hosts the Mere Christians podcast and the weekly The Word Before Work devotional.
The purpose of his latest book, which was dedicated to Tim Keller, is to help you see how your so-called “secular” work matters for eternity. He begins by looking at the instrumental value of your work. Your work matters for eternity because you can leverage it to share the gospel with those you work with. The core idea of the book is that in addition to your work having instrumental value, it has eternal intrinsic value to God. That is, your work matters for eternity even when you’re not leveraging it to the instrumental end of sharing the gospel with those you work with. Continue reading


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My Review of the movie “LIVING”

Living, rated PG-13
***

I was not aware of this film until reading Brett McCracken’s annual article of his top films, on which Living was listed. Based on his recommendation, my wife and I decided to watch the film, and we were glad we did.
The film is a British drama English language adaptation of Akira Kurosawa’s 1952 Japanese film Ikiru (To Live), which itself was partly inspired by the 1886 Russian novella The Death of Ivan Ilyich by Leo Tolstoy. Living was directed by Oliver Hermanus.   
Mr. Williams, played by Bill Nighy (Love Actually, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest), is a senior London County Council bureaucrat in 1953 London. He lives a lonely life, taking the train to and from the city each day. He routinely sits at his desk in the Public Works department, surrounded by piles of paperwork. A group of women petition the council to have a site developed into a children’s playground. Williams’ newest employee Mr. Wakeling, played by Alex Sharp (The Trial of the Chicago 7), is assigned to accompany them with their petition from department to department, eventually ending up back at Williams’ desk, who adds the petition to his pile of paperwork, likely never to be addressed again.

All of this changes when Williams receives a terminal cancer diagnosis. He does not tell his son Michael or his daughter in law Fiona, who live with him, about the diagnosis. Instead, he withdraws half of his life savings and goes to a seaside resort town, where he meets Sutherland, played by Tom Burke, an insomniac writer. Sutherland then takes Williams out for a wild night on the town.
With that out of his system, Williams returns to London where he runs into a former team member Miss Margaret Harris, played by Aimee Lou Wood (Sex Education), who took a new position at a restaurant while Williams was away. Slowly we see their friendship grow as the two take walks and dine in restaurants. At the same time, Williams is inspired to do good before he dies.
Nighy is excellent as Mr. Williams. He received an Oscar nomination for Best Actor for his performance. Kazuo Ishiguro also received an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay.
Content concerns include some drunkenness and exotic dancing.
Living is a well-acted film that shows how Rodney Williams was inspired to change his life for the better (though there is no mention of God), in the time he had left after a terminal cancer diagnosis.