Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet


Long Story Short by Andy Frost


We tell stories because they help us describe what is important to us and how we think we fit into what is going on. So what place might we have in the story of God told in the Bible?

 


Long Story Short Long Story Short
By Andy Frost
SPCK
ISBN 978-0-281-07931-5
Reviewer John Rackley



Andy Frost, director of Sharing Jesus International, firstly looks at the importance of stories; our own and the wider story of the life and times into which we are born.

When we turn to our life and times he considers how people in our type of society are drawn to the power of three questions and their accompanying stories:

  • How can we happy?
  • How can we be safe?
  • How can we make a name for ourselves?


Like a modern day cousin of Qoheleth, the author of Ecclesiastes, he demolishes our reliance on finding satisfactory answers to these questions. He concludes that the complexity of the signs of the times always defeat us, and we either opt for reliance on our small and ultimately unsatisfactory stories or must seek a bigger story in which to live.

So he introduces us to God’s story, which is a crash course in a soft evangelical retelling of the God’s people, Jesus the Son of God and the opening years of the Church.

The final chapters of the book aim to explain how we can find our place in God’s unfolding story and concludes with three further questions; reflecting on your roles and relationships:

  • What are you passionate about?
  • What is unique about you?
  • How can you better embrace your sub-plot in God’s story?


I would hazard a guess that what I have read is an edited version of Frost’s sermons and talks, which is easy reading. It could be used as material for a church weekend away or if an individual wanted to review their life during a time of retreat.

The real test would be, as Frost hopes, that it holds the attention and meets the needs of an honest person seeking a meaning for their life.

All churches have contact with such people – all it requires is for them to be handed the book by someone who has confidence in its contents and the two together share an Emmaus road journey.


John Rackley is a Baptist minister and member of the Peterborough Diocese Network of Spiritual Directors

 

Baptist Times, 16/11/2018
    Post     Tweet
A Landscape of Grief by Jenny Hawke
Moving and beautiful book in which the author shares her own journey following her husband's diagnosis of Motor Neurone Disease and subsequent death; written for those who are grieving
The Contemporary Woman by Michelle Guinness  
This reflection on womanhood has some fine moments but is ultimately a mixed offering
God’s Not Like That by Bryan Clark  
Clark writes about how families influence views of God and contains much common sense - but does not address non traditional family situations in any depth
Deepening your walk with Jesus
John Mark Comer's new book is “a summary and synthesis of ancient Christian orthodoxy” for a 21st-century audience, which works hard to make following Jesus practical and accessible in our modern day, writes Chris Goswami
My Big Story Bible by Tom Wright 
'Wright is retelling the stories in an accessible way in something closer to the whole Bible, with his inclusions of the books of the prophets and the New Testament letters'
Clever Cub Forgives a Friend, and Invites Someone New, by Bob Hartman  
Latest titles in series which takes the world of the child seriously and then tries to choose appropriate stories from the Bible to address their experiences - relevant and readable
     Reviews 
    Posted: 01/03/2024
    Posted: 22/09/2023