Book Review – EP Commentary on Acts

EP Study Commentary on ActsI am always on the lookout for good study resources. I have a fairly extensive library of Bible study books and commentaries. But I am always looking for more to utilize in my preaching and teaching studies and my own personal growth.

Previous to now, I was not familiar with the EP Study Commentary series. I have never had the opportunity to use one, or even look through one. However, when I received the commentary on Acts from this series, by Guy Prentiss Waters, I was immediately intrigued.

This commentary, and I assume the rest in the EP series are similar, is very well laid out. It is very easy to understand the comments on each passage of scripture, and is easy to read and understand.

But beyond that, I really appreciated the application section at the end of each section. Not only do you understand the text better than before, but you have several options for making the text personally applicable in your life. As a study resource, the comments are very helpful. But when it comes to personal usage, the applications make this commentary stand out.

Overall, I am extremely impressed with the commentary, and I look forward to utilizing it in both my pastoral studies and my personal growth.

I recommend that you grab something from the EP Commentary series and use it in your studies. I’m sure you will find it very beneficial.

Question: Have you used any commentaries from the EP series? If so, what did you think of them? You can leave a comment by clicking here.

If you are interested in reading the EP Study Commentary on Acts, by Guy Prentiss Waters, you can purchase it at Amazon.com. You can also see the other commentaries in the series.

I received this book free from Cross Focused Media as part of their Cross Focused Reviews blogger review program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own.

Book Review – River’s Edge by Terri Blackstock

River's EdgeOccasionally, I really enjoy a good novel. And one of my favorite genres is the suspense or thriller genre. When I read fiction, it usually falls into this category.

Recently, I was able to pick up a copy of the third book in Terri Blackstock’s Cape Refuge series. Since I hadn’t read the first two books, I was hesitant to begin it, not knowing how much I had missed in the previous stories. So I did a bit of searching, and found a copy of the first two novels in the series in one volume.

After reading the first book, I was hooked. I devoured books one and two in three evenings, and then began to read River’s Edge.

This series is a pretty fun series to read, and the third installment is no different. These stories are about two sisters who live on a barrier island off the coast of Savannah, Georgia. Their tiny island is rocked by the murder of their parents in the first book.

While they struggle to make sense of their new reality, plus run a halfway house that helps people get back on their feet, the island is faced with new tragedies in the second and third books. Solving the crimes is only part of the story plot. These sisters are also searching for the hand of God in the midst of personal and community devastation.

Book Review – Romans 8-16 For You by Timothy Keller

Romans 8-16 For YouOne of my favorite authors is Timothy Keller. And one of my favorite Bible Study series is the For You series from The Good Book Company.

So when I found that a new installment in this series was being released, I grabbed a copy as quickly as I could. This particular volume is the second half of the book of Romans, finishing what Romans 1-7 For You began.

As usual, Keller takes Scripture and brings it to a very understandable level. It doesn’t matter how familiar you may or may not be with Paul’s letter to the Romans, Timothy Keller can help you glean several gold nuggets of knowledge from each chapter that will deepen your walk with Christ.

Romans is one of Paul’s longer and deeper letters. It’s one of those books in the Bible that you have to read very carefully, or else you’ll miss something. And the chances are good that you’ll miss something anyway. Having a resource nearby, such as a commentary or a Bible study like this one, is incredible beneficial.

I have several commentaries on my shelf on the book of Romans for this very reason. Two of my favorites are the College Press commentary on Romans, by Jack Cottrell, and the IVP commentary by Leon Morris. Both of these have helped me immensely as I strive to understand Romans. But this second volume by Timothy Keller, paired with the first half, may just be my favorite go-to resource for Romans.

Book Review – Kidnapped By The Taliban by Dilip Joseph

Kidnapped By The TalibanI cannot imagine the horror of being kidnapped by terrorists. The media seems to be full of instances of Americans or other westerners being snagged by the Taliban or other terrorist groups and executed. What these people must go through during those dark hours must be horrendous.

Few come away from it alive.

Dr. Dilip Joseph is one of the fortunate ones. In his book, Kidnapped By The Taliban, Joesph tells the story of his work in Afghanistan, bringing medical care and instruction to many of the smaller villages that need it. His work there has been ongoing, and effective.

But on one afternoon, in December of 2012, he was captured by Taliban forces, along with two colleagues. In his book, he tells the story of his capture and time as a hostage. He writes of his despair, of his hope of rescue, and of his unlikely opportunity to connect with his captors and show them the love of Christ.

While most of the book revolves around his capture and his time with the terrorists, the final chapters reveal that dozens of people had been working feverishly to ensure his rescue. SEAL Team Six, the team that infiltrated and killed Osama bin Laden, were instrumental in Joseph’s rescue.

Kidnapped By The Taliban

Kidnapped By The Taliban (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2014)

Over the past couple of years, I have really enjoyed reading true stories that are almost biographical in nature. I wouldn’t call them biographies simply because they deal with only a certain event or portion of someone’s life. But they are interesting nonetheless.

Such is the case with Kidnapped By The Taliban. This is the true story of medical missionary Dilip Joseph, who was kidnapped while serving in Afghanistan. His story is very interesting.

I am currently about halfway through this book, and I expect to finish it before the weekend. Watch for my full review early next week. In the meantime, you can purchase a copy on Amazon.

Book Review – Countdown To Zero Day by Kim Zetter

Countdown To Zero DayEvery once in a while, you come across some information that chills you to the bone, that causes your eyes to be opened to a new reality. That is exactly what happened to me as I read Countdown To Zero Day, by Kim Zetter.

When I picked up the book, I expected it to be something different than what it is. Looking back, I’m not really sure just what I expected, but it wasn’t what I found.

Countdown To Zero Day is the store of the world’s first digital weapon. This seemed far enough away from my reality to be sort of interesting, but not too close to home.

I was wrong.

Several years ago, a computer virus made the news, called Stuxnet. I vaguely remember hearing about it, but since it didn’t infect my computer, I thought nothing about it. But a team of people from Symantec tackled this virus, unpacking it to see what it was up to. What they found was frightening, and very real.

Stuxnet was a virus that targeted a specific system, running on specific hardware, performing specific actions. And once Stuxnet was decoded, it revealed that this virus was in fact a digital weapon designed to bring the Iranian nuclear weapons program to a crashing halt.

Stuxnet was the world’s first digital weapon, and it was designed almost perfectly. It seems it was only discovered by a random series of circumstances.

Once this was discovered, however, it led to more discoveries. The version that they found was a later version, and several previous versions existed. Whoever had created this digital masterpiece had invested a lot of effort and finances, and had created a cunning plan to sabotage the Iranian nuclear program.

Book Review – Grappling With The Chronology Of The Genesis Flood

Grappling With The Chronology Of The Genesis FloodPerhaps my favorite topics to study are the worldview issues developed in the first few chapters of Genesis. I typically devour every new book I can find that deals with Creation, the Fall, Noah’s Flood, and the Tower of Babel and more found in the first chapters of Genesis.

When I discovered that a new book was to be released examining the chronology of Noah’s Flood in detail, I got pretty excited. Specifically, this new book looks closely at the grammatical construct of the Hebrew text to determine the chronology of the Flood.

Grappling With The Chronology Of The Genesis Flood is not an easy book to read. I studied New Testament Greek for several years while in Bible college, but only had a smattering of studies in Old Testament Hebrew, so for me to follow the lines of thought in this volume was a challenge. In order to grasp the meaning of what the authors were communicating, I often had to go back and read again several parts, or grab a Bible and examine the text in detail, in English, to help me understand just what was being conveyed.

However, that is not a negative critique of this book. I was fascinated by what I learned about the timeline of the Genesis Flood. I was captivated with the examination of the geology and geography studied to determine just when the Flood started, when it peaked, when it started to decline, and when it was finished.

And even though I found the geology and geography interesting, I was even more intrigued by the very structure of the Hebrew grammar and how much it contributes to our understanding of the Genesis Flood.