Nancy Wilson (1)
Författare till The Fruit of Her Hands: Respect and the Christian Woman
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Om författaren
Nancy Wilson has been a pastor's wife and homemaker in Moscow, Idaho for more than thirty years. She is the author of a number of books including virtuous, building her house, and praise her in the gates, and a regular Contributer to www.feminagirls.com. She and her husband Douglas have three visa mer children and seventeen grandkids, which makes for some crazy Sabbath dinners. visa färre
Verk av Nancy Wilson
Women & Marriage 1 exemplar
Taggad
Allmänna fakta
- Kön
- female
- Nationalitet
- USA
- Relationer
- Wilson, Douglas (husband)
Wilson, N. D. (son)
Jankovic, Rachel (daughter)
Medlemmar
Recensioner
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Associerade författare
Statistik
- Verk
- 16
- Medlemmar
- 1,825
- Popularitet
- #14,094
- Betyg
- 4.1
- Recensioner
- 7
- ISBN
- 53
- Språk
- 2
- Favoritmärkt
- 1
As a Christian, I am beholden by desire and conviction to see all things through the lens of a Christian worldview. Literature is one of those important things where an internal and external look will not only benefit to glean the most out of a book but also see which parts are true or not. It is not to say that unbelievers cannot write good books. Part of looking at the internal critique is whether the author "sits" well in his/her viewpoint and see how far it takes them. When they run out of road, so to speak, is where the external critique comes into play. All that to say that this book might be of some help in reminding one how to get the most out of any book they come into contact with. A child's storybook, a historical biography, a science fiction space opera, or a medical drama - all are written out via a worldview and then taken in via a possible opposing worldview.
Wilson does a good job showing the different epochs of time in general. What faulters is not adding to the length to go into more detail how those periods are characterized by the books that were popular and not just knowing the periods of history and pointing to the books that show those worldviews in action. There is a section at the beginning of talking about looking at what a story/book says about God, man, life, etc. and seeing if it's true. Some time should have been taken to show in what ways those various stages in history have shown some true as a way to point to the common imago dei shared that these periods still show. There is also some commentary about poor writing in regards to books like "Left Behind". Sure, call for the theology to be in disagreement with the author's. However, the call of the writing as being poor needed to show some proof. This part early in the book treads too much on the common ground probably shared by most of the readers. But causing one to ask, and not just with this collection of books, well where does poor writing come into play and where does bad theology/anthropology/biology/ethics start?
The trade off of brevity for further help is felt. However, as a first exposure piece to literature critique from a worldview perspective and the importance of parents/educators/Christians to do their due diligence it does offer a good first stepping stone. Final Grade - C… (mer)