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Renting Lacy

By Jeremy Myers
3 Comments

Renting Lacy

Renting Lacy is the story about a young girl who is caught up in the child-sex slave industry of Las Vegas. Though a “fictional” account, the book itself is not fiction. There are millions of children right here in the United States who are sold for sex each and every day. This book tells their story.

The book is very readable, but not easy to read. In other words, once you start reading, the book is hard to put down, but the horror you begin to feel at what is happening to these young girls makes the book difficult to read. Multiple times the book caused me to break out in tears. I included an excerpt from the book in a previous post called “I Want to be a Prostitute.”

The strength of the book is not only in the story that is told, but in the facts, statistics, and reports that the author includes at the end of each chapter. Linda Smith goes into great detail about how many children are enslaved, where they come from, how they are enslaved, what is being done to stop child sex slavery, and what organizations are out there that you and I can get involved with.

As a result, this is easily one of the best and worst books I have read in a long time. I highly recommend it, not so that you read it and put it on your shelf, but so that you read it and then get involved in helping rescue girls from forced prostitution in America.

To learn more about Human Trafficking and sex slavery, check out some of these posts:

Human Trafficking Posts

  1. Sex Slaves
  2. Would You Fight Slavery?
  3. Rescue Russian Sex Slaves
  4. Rescue Russian Girls from Sex Slavery
  5. Stop Her Nightmare
  6. Another Girl Rescued Today
  7. Girls for Sale
  8. Goal Reached!
  9. I Want to be a Prostitute
  10. $52,000 raised!
  11. 31 Million Sex Slaves
  12. Renting Lacy
  13. More Than Rice
  14. Human Trafficking Ring Busted
  15. The Other Big Game
  16. Sex Slavery, Planned Parenthood, and Your Tax Dollars
  17. How to Minister to Prostitutes
  18. Wisconsin Woman Held as Sex Slave in Brooklyn
  19. Coked-Up Whore
  20. Human Trafficking has Many Faces
  21. Into an India Brothel
  22. You Need a Girl?
  23. Human Trafficking Media
  24. The Son of God is Selling Children
  25. My Girls Raised $300 to help stop Human Trafficking
  26. Rape for Profit
  27. Human Trafficking Statistics
  28. Help Rescue Girls from Forced Prostitution

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books I'm Reading, Discipleship

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The Next Christians

By Jeremy Myers
5 Comments

The Next Christians

Something new is going on in Christianity. There are various titles given to it, such as the Emergence, the Next Reformation, or even the Reformission. Millions of Christians are part of this movement, many of whom do not even realize a movement is going on. They just know that something is leading them in a direction that is different than where the traditional church is going. If you have been feeling some discontent with your church, or the things your church is doing, you may already be part of this movement.

Various leaders and church experts have tried to describe this change that is sweeping worldwide Christianity, but there is not a whole lot of consensus on what the central values or goals of this movement are. One book I recently read, however, seems to provide a good description and analysis of this movement. The book isย The Next Christians byย Gabe Lyons. His previous book, unChristian, painted a fairly dire portrait of modern Christianity. It was somewhat depressing. But this book holds out the hope and vision for the future of where Christianity is headed. If the old style of Christianity is dying, it is only because a new style is being born.

Here is one good description from the book of these next Christians:

They see themselves on a mission, partnering with God to breathe justice and mercy and peace and compassion and generosity into the world. …Instead of simply waiting for God to unveil the new heaven and new earth, [the Next Christians] give the world a taste of what God’s kingdom is all about — building up, repairing brokenness, showing mercy, reinstating hope, and generally adding value (pp. 59-60).

Gabe Lyons rightfully points out that although many traditional Christians accuse this new breed of Christians of abandoning the gospel for “social justice” issues, the exact opposite is true. First and foremost in the thinking of these Next Christians is the rediscovery that the gospel is not just about evangelism so people can receive eternal life and go to heaven when they die (cf. pp. 66, 192). The gospel is much broader and more far-reaching than that, involving truths and ideas which affect all areas of life. The Next Christians do not abandon the gospel; they embrace and live it to the fullest extent possible.

Based on this, Gabe spends the majority of the book exploring six areas where the Next Christians live out the gospel in the world. The Next Christians are:

Provoked, not offended
Creators, not critics
Called, not employed
Grounded, not distracted
In community, not alone
Countercultural, not “relevant”

I found his descriptions to be accurate, fair, and balanced. I also appreciated several tips for how you and I can move in the direction of being a Next Christian (cf. pg. 123ff).

The only criticism I have of the book is in the examples of Next Christians he chose to write about. Almost all of them are rich, powerful, and famous. They were CEOs of companies who chose to leave their business and start nonprofit organizations. They were at the top of their field in the music, art, or sports industry, and chose to put their skills and abilities toward the mission of God. They were megachurch pastors who led their thousands of people into more focused community service. What about the rest of us? What about the small, insignificant people? Isn’t that the central starting point of the gospel, that God uses the “nobodies” of the world?

Admittedly, he does say that he is

…not suggesting that every person’s calling is to start a nonprofit organization to a address huge global problem. For you, it probably doesn’t mean leaving your job or career at all. It simply means restoring right where you are (p. 126).

I agree, and I’m glad he said it, but I wish he had given us some examples. To say that, and then on the very next page begin talking about the “influential filmmaker” (p. 127) seems disingenuous. It makes it seem that Gabe is not really aware of any “normal” people like you and me who are trying to live the gospel among our neighbors and coworkers without millions of dollars and thousands of powerful contacts at our disposal.

But all in all, I loved the book and highly recommend it for anyone who wants to understand what God is doing in the church today.

Disclosure: I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books I'm Reading, Discipleship, Theology of Salvation

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Defiant Joy

By Jeremy Myers
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Defiant Joy

G. K. Chesterton is one of my favorite authors. His book Orthodoxy is on my Amazon “Burning ย Books” list. I will write more about that list later. So it was with great excitement that I was recently invited to review Defiant Joy: The Remarkable Life and Impact of G. K. Chesterton by Kevin Belmonte.

And the book did not disappoint. After a few opening biographical chapters about the birth and early life of Chesterton, the rest of the book is devoted to summarizing his written works and the events surrounding their publication. And while there are chapters on Orthodoxy, The Everlasting Man, and The Man Who Was Thursday, threeย of his greatest books,ย Kevin Belmonte also includes chapters on some of the ย lesser-known works, such as his play, Magic: A Fantastic Comedy in a Prelude and Three Acts.

The book was well researched, carefully written, and for me, highly depressing. Why? Because of how much Chesterton accomplished in his writing career before he was 35. By the time he was my age, he was an internationally renowned literary critic and author. Me? Well, I have a blog.

I’m (mostly) joking, of course. The book reminded me of how much I enjoy reading Chesterton and taught me many things about him that I did not know. If you love Chesterton and want to learn more about him, I recommend this biography.

Disclosure: I reviewed this book as part of the BookSneeze program.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books I'm Reading

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The Great Derangement

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

The Great Derangement

A liberal friend of mine gave me The Great Derangement by Matt Taibbi the other day. Being a conservative Christian, I thoroughly enjoyed the book. Yes, thatโ€™s right. Matt attacks both conservatives and Christians throughout the book, and I laughed all the way through it. Not because of how wrong he is, but because of how right. I figure that if you canโ€™t laugh at yourself, you shouldnโ€™t believe what you believe. And if you want to laugh, there is almost nothing funnier than his chapter โ€œThe Three Longest Days of My Life.โ€ It was so funny I read it three times, once out loud to my wife.

The book is an odd mix of two riot-inciting topics: religion and politics. He takes us inside the inner working of Washington DC, and goes undercover into the Hallelujah-filled halls of John Hageeโ€™s megachurch. And Matt, though he comes from a different perspective than I do, confirmed what I have always suspected: people who are not conservative or Christian think weโ€™re crazy. And Iโ€™ll admit it; we are crazy. In fact, for several years now, I cringe at the idea of being called a conservative or a Christian. I suppose in some circles that means Iโ€™m neither.

Which brings me to my only criticism of Mattโ€™s book. He seems to imply that all who believe in God and follow Jesus are like the tongue-speaking, demon-vomiting, gay-hating, environment-polluting Christians he encountered at Cornerstone Church. There are some of us who are more like Matt than he realizes. He can argue with me any time he wants. And I promise, I wonโ€™t try to cast demons out of him.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books I'm Reading, Discipleship

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Ever Stick a Fork in your Eye?

By Jeremy Myers
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Ever Stick a Fork in your Eye?

Somewhere along the way my sense of humor drank too much coffee and stunted its growth. My wife knows what I’m talking about.

But a friend of mine at work gave me a book today called The Great Derangement, and although I’m already reading several books (see my reading list to the right), I decided to read a few pages and see what the book was about.

I was laughingย right away. It’s not a religious book, and the author uses quite a bit of profanity, but he makes some astute observations about religion and politics in the United States. Here is what he says on page 22 about his visit to a megachurch:

I’d say the craziest, stupidest stuff, trying like hell to get a raise out of people, and not only would I not get one, I’d for the most part be completely ignoredโ€”smiled and nodded at, and then just waved on through into my seat in the megachurch.

That’s the way it is in America. You can literally stick a fork in your own eye in public, and so long as your check clears, no one will even bat an eye.ย  …You can say a lot of very weird $#!+ when you’re a Brother in Christ, so long as you don’t forget to sing along at the right times.

I can’t tell you about some events going on in my life right now, but this is exactly what I’m experiencing. So when I read it, I laughed out loud, and thought I’d share the quote with you. Enjoy!

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books I'm Reading, Discipleship

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