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  • Forsaken: A Novel
    James David Jordan
    Everyone knows the right answer to the question, “Would you die for your faith?” If you want to start a good conversation, try the...
  • Wisdom On...Getting Along with Parents
    Mark Matlock
    Matlock’s sixth book in his Wisdom series for teenagers reflects the same careful attention to Scripture and practical advice that...
  • P.O.D. The Nexus
    Matt Broome, Tom Carroll and Bud Rogers
    As a comic book fan, I was excited and puzzled to see a graphic novel featuring one of my favorite bands, P.O.D. I guess my review...
  • Refuel: An Uncomplicated Guide to Connecting with God
    Doug Fields
    Fields does a nice job of encouraging Christians at any age who struggle with the monotony of a daily quiet time and the guilt that...
  • My Night with the Vampire-Ettes
    Cheri Gillard
    On the night of a full moon, I shared dinner with seven girls (from Christian and Jewish to non-religious) to learn why they love “Twilight,”...
  • My Future and My Changes
    Mark Ostreicher & Scott Rubin
    My Future and My Changes, the two latest books in the Middle School Survival Series, inform middle school students about (you guessed...
  • Following Prince Caspian: Further Encounters with the Lion of Narnia
    Thomas Williams
    With a friendly size and approachable language, this back-pocket resource modestly explores key themes from the epic book (and movie)...

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True Story: A Christianity Worth Believing In
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True Story: A Christianity Worth Believing In
By Tom Hodges

True Story: A Christianity Worth Believing In

James Choung

Intervarsity Press, April 2008, 231 pp., $15, www.ivpress.com

There have been lots of books about presenting the gospel to unbelievers, doubters or even hostile skeptics. However, True Story seems to take a much more open and honest look at personal interaction, feeling and reason. It gives the reader permission to hear other points of view and the freedom to amend our beliefs because we’ve reasoned out for ourselves, as we struggle with tough questions confronting our faith, what the truth really looks like.
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James Choung gives us a penetrating look into ourselves and our faulty reasoning. He challenges us to go beyond “Sunday School” answers and wrestle with pain, sorrow, death and other strong issues that seem to be potholes on our journey of faith. Readers will find True Story a refreshing conversation between two “real” people, and they may soon realize as they are reading that someone could have been writing a book about them and their struggle with faith in a nasty world.

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