Saved By Grace, by Anthony Hoekema

Book Review December 2014Pastor Bill Mayk provides an introduction to Saved by Grace by Anthony Hoekema.

The study of salvation is known as the doctrine of Soteriology. To the surprise of many Christians, this subject covers much more than the idea that a person must believe on Jesus to go to heaven. Numerous believers are unfamiliar with topics such as the role of the Holy Spirit in salvation, regeneration, repentance, and the nature and power of faith. Others find it difficult to distinguish between justification and sanctification, or to know whether salvation is secure or if it can be lost. Due to a lack of understanding about these issues, the spiritual life of many Christians is a constant struggle for the assurance of God’s love.

In his well written book, Saved By Grace, Anthony Hoekema clears up much of the ambiguity surrounding salvation. Using a rich array of scriptural references, citations from Church History, and a writing style that makes his material easy to understand, the author provides scholarly insight into this important theological doctrine.

I highly recommend this easy-to-read, yet rewarding volume for anyone interested in understanding the fullness of our salvation.

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To End All Wars, by Ernest Gordon

To End Alll Wars, Ernest GordonForgiveness, grace and spiritual transformation are subjects about which every Christian studies and desires. Nevertheless, many of us find it not only difficult to receive these in their own lives, but to extend them to others.

To End All Wars is a book that demonstrates the power of God to touch individuals that are confined in the most horrid conditions humanity can devise and transform them into people that willingly love, forgive and offer grace even to their most brutal enemies. Written by Ernest Gordon and originally titled, Through The Valley Of The Kwai, this historical account of the famed Burmese railroad, that was built by prisoners during World War II, is a gripping record of men who had lost everything except God and came away transformed by grace.

The book opens with the author seemingly dying in a prison hospital known as the “Death House”. The story unfolds as Ernst Gordon recalls his life leading up to Scotland’s entrance into the Second World War, his decision to join the 93rd Highlanders Regiment, and his subsequent placement to Malaya. After the fall of Singapore and a foiled escape attempt, Gordon was captured and sent to work as slave labor for the Japanese.

While a prisoner, Gordon and the other British Commonwealth troops faced death by disease, brutality, and starvation. As he recuperated in the hospital, the author was befriended by two Christians. Through their influence he, along with others, began to study the Bible and experienced a truly amazing work of God in their lives.

Without either whitewashing the atrocities or damning his captors, this soldier relates how the love of God impacted hateful, abused, dispirited and hopeless men so that they overcame their animosities and experienced God’s transforming power.

The end of the book relates the permanence of this spiritual change as many of these former prisoners returned to serve Christ and their fellow man. Although the brutality in the book is sometime hard to read, I highly recommend To End All Wars as a magnificent reminder that forgiveness and grace are possible through the redeeming work of Jesus Christ.

This account can also be found in a movie by the same title (To End All Wars), starring Kiefer Sutherland. It is rated R for the true life violence it portrays.

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The Glory of Christ, John Owen

Monthly Book Suggestion October 2014Banner of Truth Trust hit another home run when it updated the language and reprinted John Owen’s masterful work The Glory of Christ. Written near the end of his life, Owen penned this work from his own personal meditations on his Savior. Looking upon Christ from various theological angles, the author beckons the reader to see Jesus as being precious to the soul. Throughout each chapter he draws us closer to Christ so that we might gaze upon His glory by faith in the confident hope that, one day, we will gaze upon Him by sight. Having used this book as a devotional, I found it to be like cold water to a thirsty soul. I encourage anyone to read this short work (168 pages) so that by viewing the glory of Christ, He might “revive our souls and cause our spiritual lives to flourish and thrive.”

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