The great 19th-century American evangelist Charles Finney once declared, “I cannot believe that a person who has ever known the love of God can relish a secular novel.” And he went on to denounce explicitly Lord Byron, Walter Scott, even Shakespeare. Now such attitudes may strike some as strange, yet, historically, some American evangelicals have been suspicious toward secular literature. To give us the tools we need to know whether that attitude is justified, Louise Cowan and Os Guinness …
Classic Fiction Every Christian Should Read
ONE Audiobooks Staff Picks Done with consuming light and tired content with borderline silly plots that bring little spiritual value? Enter, classic fiction. The stories listed below span hundreds of years and are sure to provide you with plenty of spiritual food for thought. Go through them with a few friends for even more benefit to your soul! Listening is one of the best ways to engage classic fiction (in our …
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Guard Our Hearts: Sense and Sensibility
Thou knowest the infirmity of our Nature, and the temptations which surround us. Be thou merciful, Oh Heavenly Father! to Creatures so formed and situated.Jane Austen In Sense and Sensibility, Elinor and Marianne are quite different in their outlook on life, their opinions, and their emotional makeup. Where Elinor is sensible and level-headed, Marianne is romantic, full of feeling, and sees the world in full color. However, though they are unalike in many ways, Elinor and Marianne know one …
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Redeeming the Time: Sense and Sensibility
Another day is now gone, & added to those, for which we were before accountable. Teach us Almighty Father, to consider this solemn Truth, as we should do, that we may feel the importance of every day, & every hour as it passes, & earnestly strive to make a better use of what Thy Goodness may yet bestow on us, than we have done of the Time past. Mrs. John Dashwood in Sense and Sensibility is perhaps the greediest and most self-centered character in Jane Austen’s novels. When her …
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Royalty Incognito: The Scarlet Pimpernel
Instead, he emptied himself by taking on the form of a servant, by becoming like other humans, by having a human appearance.” – Philippians 2:7 I was first introduced to The Scarlet Pimpernel via the somewhat campy-but-iconic 1982 film adaptation starring Anthony Andrews and Jane Seymour. So enthralled was my tweenaged self, that I promptly devoured the book, which remains an often-reread favorite to this day. The Scarlet Pimpernel intertwines many Christian themes, and …
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