This is not a devotional book for spiritual hunters. It does not provide meditations for the deer stand. The book deals with the social situation of small town southern living. The book is entertaining in that the author has moved back to his small town in the south. He discusses some of the issues that his fellow man is struggling with. He talks about making a living wage, health care, gun control, and southern religion. I enjoyed his perspective on the social plight of many of the working poor in small towns. I truly felt for them and gained a greater appreciation for some of the struggles that people go through.
Related posts:
- Read “Turning to Jesus”
- Read “Jesus Land”
- Read “Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes”
- Review of “Why Jesus”
- Review of “Preaching Jesus”
Tags:
This entry was posted by Matthew
on Wednesday, August 29th, 2007 at 9:02 am and is filed under Books.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
About The Author
Matthew is originally from Nova Scotia, Canada. He has a beautiful wife named Charity and a precious baby named Gabrielle. He has graduated from the Brown Trail School of Preaching, Heritage Christian University with his Bachelors of Arts in Biblical Studies, Lipscomb University with his Master’s of Arts in Biblical Studies and his Master’s of Divinity at Freed-Hardeman University. He is presently working towards his Doctorate of Ministry at Harding Graduate School of Religion. His articles have appeared in the World Evangelist, the Highway to Holiness, The West Virginia Christian, The Christian Echo, The Firm Foundation, Church Growth, and the Gospel Advocate. He enjoys hockey, golf, boxing, and chess. In his spare time he enjoys reading numerous genres of books. Also, he is working on climbing all of the 14ers in Colorado. Matthew is the Pulpit Minister for the Castle Rock church of Christ.
Thanks for posting this, as it does sound like a good read.
I may have to check this one out. I probably will think “I didn’t need to read this … I’m living it!”