Back Cover
Travel back in time to turn-of-the-century America. Skirts trailed the floor, hats were a must, and corsets were commonplace. People traveled by horse and carriage, locomotive, or ship. The first skyscrapers were built. The World's Fair arrived in Chicago.
Life was swiftly changing in the United States, but for most, it was also difficult. Men and women flooded the cities in a desperate search for work. Former slaves fled north seeking freedom and education. Crime began to rise as brothels and saloons became commonplace in American cities.
It was in this world that Fanny Crosby, Mary McLeod Bethune, Nettie McCormick, Sarah Dunn Clarke, Emma Dryer, Virginia Asher, Evangeline Booth, and Amanda Berry Smith lived and worked and served. They were ordinary women called to serve God. They followed His leading, risking their own safety and reputation. In doing so, they changed the world forever.
The stories of these eight historic, faithful women will change your life as well as you see what God can do through the willing hearts of ordinary women.
This book was an encouraging read. Though I read it on and off through a busy work season, it was refreshing to come back to stories of some of the women of history who stood fast "when others shuddered". I had never heard about Jamie Janosz but I was entrigued by the life overviews of women who lived during an ever-changing society.
Stories such as Fanny Crosby's and Emma Dryer's demonstrated the unwavering faith in God despite personal loss. Sarah Clarke and Evangeline Booth showed their unfailing trust in their Savior as He provided for their financial needs. And I loved learned about the lives of Amanda Smith and Virginia Asher--names not commonly heard throughout history. Janosz also includes short chapters about education, missions, and politics as they affected and related to women in these challenging times.
Unlike others around them, despite personal, financial, material, or relational loss, these women refused to give up. While each women has only three chapters written about her, I appreciate how Janosz focuses on personal and spiritual growth in each of their lives. You don't get all the tiny details of the womens' lives, but you see enough to understand how women of different social, spiritual, and financial backgrounds can all relate and build faith in the same God. These women played important parts in history, and many of them were the encouragers of the evangelists and future "great men" of church history. They weren't faultless, and in some cases I would disagree with their choices of lifestyles, but they did have a Savior in common and they followed His leading no matter what those around them said. They were willing to give up personal comfort for the sake of winning others to Jesus. Very glad I requested this book. :)
*I received this book free from the publishers. The opinions expressed are my own. I was not required to write a positive review.
Man, the story-teller, would have to be redeemed in a manner consonant with his nature: by a moving story. -J.R.R. Tolkien, "Letters"
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Tuesday, December 06, 2016
Intended for Evil by Les Sillars
Back Cover:
This is the question Radha Manickam asks himself during the three years and nine months he spends under the merciless rule of the Khmer Rouge. When Khmer Rouge forces take the city of Phnom Penh in 1975, Radha is a new Christian, passionate about living out his faith. Over the next years of his life, 1.7 million of his fellow Cambodians--including most of his own family--will perish due to starvation, disease, and unthinkable violence.
As he strives to hold tight to his faith, he finds that in the midst of hell on earth God has not forgotten him. Forced by the communist regime to marry a woman he doesn't know, Radha discovers that God has a plan for his life that he never would have imagined.
This compelling true story of survival against incredible odds shows that out of war, fear, despair, and betrayal, God can bring hope, faith, courage, and restoration.
The Khmer Rouge, a Communist revolution, was an event in history that I had never heard of. Until this book. I cannot attest to the historical accuracy or interpretation, as I have not studied it out, but I loved learning about the history through Radha Manickam's story. I can definitely see why this story was published.
The eldest of seven children, Radha grew up in a normal, moderately wealthy Cambodian home. The Khmer ethnic group populated most of Cambodia, and the rest were typically Chinese or Vietnamese. Civil war broke out in 1970 and devasted the nations and large cities, along with sometimes conflicting and tense relations with the American forces. Following this war scene and throughout the following years, we live Radha's life with him as he becomes a new Christian and survives the bloody revolution.
This book contains much history, both politically and geographically, and sometimes I found it hard to follow if I read too quickly, but nonetheless it was very interesting. Because of the nature of this revolution, there are specific details given which would lead to a more mature audience. While I don't advocate or enjoy violence, I do think we do well to understand what has taken place in the past. Though Radha's salvation is detailed and frequent episodes regarding his faith and struggles are written, I would have liked to hear more of Radha's faith throughout the story, and how it molded him into the person he became.
Radha loses most of his family to starvation or the violence of the Khmer Rouge, and he's forced to make life-changing decisions as a young man. Terror and death were common elements of the revolution, and the tyrannical dictatorship soon enslaved families and forced them to work in the rice fields. Radha's faith was tested many times. The Khmer Rouge determined everything about people's lives--work, family, marriage--and we also hear of Radha's marriage, a difficult union at first because no one trusted anyone.
Later on in the US, Radha and Samen (his wife) struggle knowing that their nation is still suffering under the effects of the revolution. Radha later returns to Cambodia and sees the devastation of his homeland and works through the horrifying memories. This book isn't a light one at all, but it tells the story of one (among many) man who suffered through the "killing fields of Cambodia" and lived to tell about it. It's a story worth reading, not only for the history, but also to remember our fellow believers who suffered and found grace even in their unspeakable pain.
*I received this book free from the publishers. The opinions expressed are my own. I was not required to write a positive review.
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