Showing posts with label Redemption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Redemption. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers (Book Review)

Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers Book Review
Image Credit:  Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers Press Kit

Redeeming Love . . . the movie is out, and everybody is talking about it.  Well, almost every woman I know is talking about it.  I wasn't aware of this new movie until a few friends expressed interest in seeing it.  When I asked them about it, they told me the basics.  It's a story based on the book of Hosea in the Old Testament section of the Bible.  It's a love story written by Francine Rivers.  I mentioned that before I see the movie, I would like to read the book, so a friend loaned me the book. However, before I began reading the novel by Francine Rivers, I decided that I had better read the original historical event from the Bible itself first.  So I did.

I was disappointed.  Now, it grieves me to say I was disappointed in a book of the Bible.  That sounds downright shameful, so let me explain.  

I had never actually studied the book of Hosea.  I had read parts of it here and there when pastors or Bible study leaders had referred to it.  However, I had never actually studied it.  I expected to read 14 chapters of an amazing love story detailing the relationship of a fallen Gomer who marries Godly Hosea.  

Nope.

Let me say this: The biblical book of Hosea is not a love story. The relationship between Hosea and Gomer is only briefly described. The book is about God's frustration and anger toward Israel. God tells Hosea to marry a prostitute named Gomer. The relationship between the two represents the relationship between God and Israel.  

Hosea marries Gomer out of obedience.  She leaves him to return to prostitution several times.  At one point, Hosea buys her back.  We really don't know much more than that.  We don't know if Hosea ever actually falls in love with Gomer, and nothing about the Biblical story tells us that she ever falls in love with him.  God tells Hosea to marry her.  He does.  She leaves him several times.  He brings her home.  They have kids.  God tells Hosea to show love to Gomer, but showing love is not the same as falling in love.  We really just don't know.

Gomer's habit of leaving Hosea despite his provision for her is a representation of Israel's habit of leaving God to worship false gods despite His provision for them.  

The book of Hosea describes God's anger with Israel and His plan to bring them back to Him. He will allow suffering, let the Assyrian army overtake them, and allow them misery so that they will eventually return to Him. There are fourteen chapters describing this. You can read the entire book here at Bible Gateway.

The Biblical book of Hosea describes God's plan to allow Israel to suffer so that Israel will return to Him. The relationship between Hosea and Gomer represents the relationship between God and Israel. Given this information, we might assume that Gomer eventually is faithful to Hosea, but we are not given this information in the book of Hosea. We have no idea.

Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers

On the back cover of the novel, it reads:

A powerful retelling of the story of Gomer and Hosea, Redeeming Love is a life-changing story of God's unconditional, redemptive, all-consuming love.

The novel Redeeming Love is NOT a retelling of the story of Gomer and Hosea in the Bible. It simply is not. They are two very different stories. The rest of that claim is true. The story of Angel and Hosea in Francine Rivers' novel IS a story of God's unconditional, redemptive, all-consuming love.

Before you accuse me of nit-picking, I'm not nit-picking, and here's why.

God's Word is holy, true, living, and active. It was written by human men but inspired by a holy and just God. It is never to be misrepresented.

I don't think Francine intended to misrepresent the Bible.  I think she read the Biblical account, and it inspired her to write this novel.  There is nothing wrong with that, but we, as Christians, are to be vessels of truth, so when we see that something in the Bible is not truthfully represented, we need to point that out and take heed.

God's love is unconditional, redemptive, and all-consuming, BUT God is also just.  He will not stand for His Word to be misrepresented, so just note that this novel (as beautiful as it is) is not a retelling of the Biblical story of Hosea and Gomer.

I mentioned that Redeeming Love, the novel, is beautiful, and it is. I liked the book, and I recommend it. I'll get to the things I like about it later, but first, it is important to point out another problem.

God would never have called a saved-by-the-blood Michael Hosea to marry an unsaved Angel, and here's why.

God will never call someone to do something that contradicts His Word.  

Do not be mismatched with unbelievers for what do righteousness and lawlessness share together, or what does light have in common with darkness? 2 Corinthians 6:14

God, in His Word, tells Christians not to marry a non-Christian.  He will not call someone to do something contrary to His Word, so He would never have called Michael Hosea to marry Angel.  

How do we know Angel is not a Christian?  Because she rejects God and anything to do with Him her entire life.  

Christians and non-Christians often marry. Once they do, they have created a covenant together before God so that the covenant is not to be broken. It is to be God-honoring. There are certain circumstances where someone may be released from this covenant, such as abuse or infidelity. However, God will not call someone to an action that contradicts His Word.

Marriage was handled differently in the days of the Biblical Hosea and Gomer. Hosea and Gomer were under Old Testament Law. They didn't yet have the book of 2 Corinthians. The story of Michael Hosea and Angel in Francine Rivers' novel takes place in the early 1800s. Michael Hosea and Angel are accountable to 2 Corinthians 6:14.

Now that I've revealed those two things, I'll tell you why I liked Redeeming Love, and I think you will, too.

Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers Book Review
Get your copy here.

The rest of my review may contain spoilers - just so you know.

Francine Rivers does not hold anything back.  This novel, as beautiful as the story is (now that we've separated it from the Biblical story and assumed that Michael had not understood 2 Corinthians 6:14), is not easy to read in some places.  It's hard.  Angel, unlike Gomer, is a victim of sex trafficking. She didn't get to the age of 22 and decided that she liked sex and realized she could make money doing it.  She was sold into prostitution as a child at the age of 8.  

She is 8 years old.  She is sold to a man who has a thing for little girls.  Let that sink in.

Once sold in, she can't just leave.  She is trapped, and the only likely way out is death.  She has been used and abused brutally her whole life.  

Angel had been born out of wedlock which was not well taken in those days. Her mother had an affair with a wealthy married man.  At the news of the pregnancy, Angel's father wanted her aborted.  Her mother kept Sarah (Angel's birth name) and loved her.  Angel's father had kept them in a cottage where he would regularly visit her mother, but eventually, he deserted them.  Sarah and her mother had to move several times.  Sarah's grandparents wouldn't take them in.  They ended up in a shack where her mother became a prostitute to make money for food and shelter.  

Angel's life is hell on earth until Michael Hosea rescues her.  

Michael takes her to his farm. Angel's past haunts her. She doesn't know Michael, and she doesn't trust him. In her mind, he owns her, just like every man she has ever known.  

Michael loves her anyway.  

She leaves.  He goes after her and brings her back.

This is the beautiful part of this novel, and I couldn't put it down for many chapters from this point on. Michael Hosea represents God's unconditional, unwavering, all-consuming, REDEEMING LOVE for us. Angel represents our sinful human nature, which constantly fights the urge to run away from the God we love—and sometimes we do. Like Michael brought Angel home, God is continuously reaching out to us to bring us home.  

In the end, after Angel's final run away, Michael doesn't go after her.  He wants her to return on her own.  During Angel's last "adventure," she finds her faith in the God that Michael had so faithfully tried to show her.  God shows Angel something He wants her to do.  In obedience, she starts a ministry of sorts to help girls who are just like her.  She teaches them to read, write, cook, and sew.  Then, with the help of local churches, the girls are placed in jobs where they can make a living free of prostitution.  

Eventually, Angel returns to Michael.  She tells him her birth name is Sarah, and they start all over.  

Now, I have to complain again.  At the end of the story, when Angel returns home, she approaches Michael's farm.  She sees Michael working outside. As she approaches him, the husband she hasn't seen or heard from in three years, she begins taking off her clothes.  After about 460 pages of traveling with Angel on her journey to redemption, she strips outside as she approaches the husband she left three years before.  I know he's her husband, but they have not seen each other since.  No communication.  No letters.  Nothing.  Michael doesn't even know where she is for three years, but she strips as she approaches him outside on their farm.  To me, this makes her seem cheap again.  Why not have her approach him with her clothes on?  Have them TALK for at least a hot minute about this situation first.  Save the stripping for inside the cabin at least a few minutes later. Goodness . . . 

A side story throughout the novel involves Michael's brother-in-law and a family that becomes their neighbor.  The brother-in-law gave my heart grief the entire time.  I couldn't stand him for several reasons.  I intended to include a piece of my mind about him in this review, but ultimately, I decided to leave it out.  You'll just have to read the book to get his story.

The very last chapter gives us the rest of the story.  Francine tells us what the future holds for Michael and Sarah.  Redeeming Love is the perfect title for this book.

In conclusion, despite the things that bothered me about this book (and some things that bothered me a lot), it is a beautiful story of God's redeeming love.   

I wouldn't call this book the best I've ever read, but I enjoyed most of it because even though there were "flaws," I think Francine's intention is realized: to point us to the God who redeems. The story of Michael and Angel is really beautiful.

I am getting conflicting opinions about the movie, and now that I've read the Biblical account and the novel, I can see why there is controversy. I do plan to see the film and write a review of it, too. 

Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers Book Review
Get your copy here.

Personal Application

Are you haunted by the sins of your past?  

Here is a truth for you.  God can redeem you, too.

No matter what you've done, you are never too far gone for God to reach you.  Your past can't keep Him away.  Like Michael longed for Angel to return home to him, God longs for you to return to Him.  

He's waiting for you.  

You can learn more about how to receive Jesus as your Lord and Savior here.  

It's never too late. No height, depth, or width is too high, deep, or wide for God.  

Just come home.

PIN ME!

Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers Book Review

Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers Book Review
The Redemption Series by Karen Kingsbury

While studying the book of Hosea, I used my Beautiful Word Coloring Bible.  I enjoy coloring the designs already on the pages, but if you are creative, there is plenty of space throughout the Bible for you to design your own or use the space for journaling and study notes.   I have this version.

Monday, May 24, 2021

The Redemption Series by Karen Kingsbury: A Baxter Family Series Review

Karen Kingsbury has become one of my favorite Christian book authors.  Her books are relatable because they deal with real situations that all of us face at one time or another.  I have enjoyed several of Karen's stand alone novels that address religious liberty, parenting a child with autism, abortion, broken relationships, renewed relationships . . . you name it.  If you can think of a real life situation that could challenge the faith of even the most faithful, Karen Kingsbury has probably written a story about it.  I recently finished the first five books in Karen's Baxter Family Drama Series.  The first five books are called the Redemption Series.

Karen Kingsbury's Redemption Series won Christian Retailing's 2005 Retailer's Choice Award for Best Series.  Karen wrote the Baxter Family Series for a joint purpose with Gary Smalley.  Each book highlight's a different theme regarding relationships.  Each book offers study questions at the end of the story and then gives you a sneak peak into the next book.  

Redemption Series by Karen Kingsbury
The Redemption Series by Karen Kingsbury - Baxter Family Dramas


The Redemption Series by Karen Kingsbury:  A Short Synopsis Book Review


Book One:  Redemption

Book one of the Redemption Series is titled . . . you guessed it . . . Redemption.  Redemption is a novel that challenges our human ability to forgive.  In this first book of the Baxter Family Series, we are introduced to Kari Baxter.  Kari is excited about the possibility of teaming with her husband, Tim, to offer marriage counseling for couples at their church.  Kari barely has time to think through her plans when she learns that hubby, Tim, has been having an affair.  Tim eventually tells Kari that he no longer loves her and he wants a divorce.  Kari believes God has called her to remain with her husband and fight for their marriage.  

Admittedly, I don't know if I could do what Kari did in this book.  Personally, I believe the Bible tells me that I don't have to remain with a cheating husband but the point here is to tell you how Karen writes Kari's story and in this story, Kari remains faithful to what she believes God has called her to do.  In the end, God rewards Kari's faithfulness.  

Redemption is a story about perseverance, faithfulness, and forgiveness.  Through this story, I see how God calls people to do things we might think is unnecessary or even crazy in order to fulfill His purposes in the lives of His people.  God can redeem the most hopeless of situations.  

By the end of this first book, I think you will love the Baxter family.  I also think you might be inclined to offer forgiveness more freely to those who offend you.

Redemption by Karen Kingsbury
This item is available here.

Book Two:  Remember

In book two of the Redemption Series, we learn more about Kari's sister, Ashley.  Ashley has returned from Paris with a deep secret that haunts her.  She feels like noone, not even God, would forgive her mistakes.  Ashley takes a job at a home for Alzheimer's patients.  She develops friendships with the residents, especially a woman named Irvel who continues to demonstrate a love for her longtime late husband, Hank.  The love that Irvel and Hank had shared is a love that Ashley can only dream about no matter how hard Landon Blake tries to capture Ashley's heart.  

In book two, Remember, we find ourselves back on one of the most heart wrenching Tuesdays many of us will ever remember, September 11, 2001.  By now, you have been introduced to all of the Baxter family siblings in some way.  September 11 becomes close and personal to some of the characters, especially the Baxter family youngest son, Luke, and his girlfriend, Reagan.  

So far, in Redemption (book one) and Remember (book two), the reader has worked through the Baxter family's perseverance and faithfulness to God through infidelity, adultery, and national tragedy.

Remember by Karen Kingsbury
This item is available here.

Book Three:  Return

In book three, Return, Karen writes a story that grips many hearts of Christian parents around the world, the reality of a child gone astray.  I mentioned earlier that September 11, 2001 was a day that personally affected a few characters.  The Baxter's youngest son, Luke, was especially changed by the events of that horrible day.  Luke turns from his faith, changes his appearance, and leaves everything precious to him behind, including his family.  

Luke is known as John and Elizabeth Baxter's golden boy, their only son, and youngest of their 5 children.  After September 11, Luke's relationship with his Reagan is broken.  In the months ahead, Reagan moves back to New York to live with her mother where she delivers Luke's son, a baby Luke knows nothing about.  

Through months of heartbreaking revelations and the faithful prayers of his parents, especially Luke's father, John, this book is about Luke's return home . . . home to his family and home to his faith.  

I'll leave one piece of information to your reading.  Will Luke learn that he is a father?  Will his relationship with the baby's mother, Reagan, be renewed?  

Return by Karen Kingsbury
This item is available here.

Book Four:  Rejoice

Book four focuses on another Baxter sibling, Brooke, and her husband, Peter.  Like Kari and Tim, Brooke and Peter are struggling with a troubled marriage.  Brooke and Peter's troubles are different from Kari's and Tim's.  Their problems will resonate more with couples who grow apart more gradually through life circumstances.  In Rejoice, Brooke and Peter's youngest daughter who cannot swim falls ends up in the pool without her life jacket while attending a friend's party.  

Hayley's accident destroy's Peter.  Through circumstances that are sure to separate Brooke and Peter while forever changing the lives of the entire Baxter family, we learn how God can work through a family's worst nightmare to renew relationships in ways that only God can do.

By the end of this book, through all the pain and suffering of these first four novels, the Baxter family has a reason to rejoice.  The family, John and Elizabeth along with all 5 Baxter children, are reunited at a special wedding . . . a wedding that at one time seemed as though it would never happen - another relationship renewed through circumstances that only a faith in a sovereign God could accomplish.

Rejoice by Karen Kingsbury
This item is available here.

Book Five:  Reunion

The first four books in this Redemption series taught us about four of John and Elizabeth Baxter's 5 children.  In book one, we learn about Kari.  In book two, we learn about Ashley.  In book three, we learn about Luke.  In book four, we learn about Brooke.  In Book five, Reunion, we learn about another Baxter sister, Erin, and her husband, Sam.  

Erin and Sam never had biological children in spite of their desire for them.  After moving to Texas, they decide to adopt a baby.  The adoption process for Erin and Sam takes an unexpected turn that leaves Erin and Sam in the middle of a fraudulent situation and eventually without the baby for which they had prepared.  

With Erin and Sam in Texas and Luke in New York, Elizabeth wants a reunion with all their children together.  As all the children arrive at the Baxter house, John and Elizabeth prepare to tell them a secret they've hidden from their children for as long as they could.  Revealing this secret is sure to result in more heartbreak and yet again a challenged faith for this Godly family.  

I grew to love this family as I laughed and cried with them through this first series in the Baxter Family Dramas.  This family grew in their faith as they bonded over triumphs and tragedies that included so many life circumstances including troubled marriages, infidelity, adultery, abortion, a prodigal son, a child drowning, infertility, adoption, national tragedy, two devastating health diagnoses, broken relationships, parenting nightmares . . . and I'm leaving a few things out so I won't reveal everything before you have a chance to read these books. 

I will add that through all five books, book five was the one that ripped my heart into a million pieces.  I highly recommend reading them in the order presented here.  Reading the Redemption Series in order will give you the full effect like watching a movie series in order.  If you watch, or in this case read, out of order, you can probably still enjoy the stories, but reading in order will give you the full effect in time order.  

Book five revealed yet another Baxter family secret.  I won't reveal the secret except to say that it leads us directly in to the next 5 book series called Firstborn.  I have all five of those books sitting right next to me as I type this and I can't wait to start reading them.

Reunion by Karen Kingsbury
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Do you want to order the entire series?  

Redemption Series by Karen Kingsbury
This item is available here.

Redemption Series by Karen Kingsbury
The Redemption Series by Karen Kingsbury:  
A Baxter Family Drama Series

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Redemption by Karen Kingsbury (Book Review)

A little while back, I read my first Karen Kingsbury book.  I had been hooked on Amish romances, but someone highly recommended a book by Kingsbury so I read it.  I don't know why it took me so long to read one of her books!  I've heard her name for years, but for some reason, my eyes had not landed on one of her novels until fairly recently.  Since then, I've read several of her books and have loved every single one.  I've heard a lot of good things about her Baxter family series so I thought our current COVID19 "quarantine" would be a good time to start reading those books.  The first book in the Baxter family series is Redemption and it did not disappoint.  Was there any doubt?

Redemption by Karen Kingsbury - Book Review
Redemption by Karen Kingsbury


Redemption, as did Kingsbury's other books, had me immediately captivated.  This book, as captivating as it was, was also a hard one to read.  It wasn't hard to read due to the writing.  The writing was great!  It was the content that was so hard to grasp.  In Redemption, we are introduced to the Baxter family, a family of loving parents and several adult children.  The focus of this story is on Kari Baxter Jacobs and her husband.  Kari's husband teaches at the local university.  One evening, Kari is stunned to learn of her husband's affair with a student.  Kari believes God has taught her that love is a decision and God wants her to fight for her marriage.

Some readers might misunderstand this book to push the belief that God wants women to stay with husbands who mistreat them.  This is not what the Bible teaches but this is also not what Kingsbury is trying to teach her readers.  I'm a Southern Baptist raised woman.  I'm as conservative as they come and I believe that unfaithfulness in a marriage gives a woman Biblical grounds for seeking a divorce.  This is not the message Kingsbury is pushing.  In her story, Kari's personal testimony based on her relationship with God is that He wants HER to fight for HER marriage, not that this is what all women should do.  I need to add, however, that some women in real life situations similar to Kari's have felt this same calling on them as wives of unfaithful husbands and they have incredible personal testimonies of God's faithfulness to them and their families. I have always wondered how some women can come to the same decisions as Kari Jacobs.  This story helped me see how they do.

I can't relate to Kari's marital circumstances but I can relate to the need for redemption.  We are all fallen.  We all need redemption.

There are other plot twists to keep you guessing about how the story wraps up.  Kari has an ex-boyfriend, one who broke her heart many years ago.  Now, he's back in her life.  His presence makes Kari's fight for her marriage even more challenging.  Kari has other sisters and a brother.  They each have complex personalities, interests, and beliefs.  They were all raised by the same loving, Godly, and well grounded parents but they are all different, molded from different life experiences of blessings and brokenness.

As you flip through the pages of this first of many in a vast series of Baxter family stories, you'll laugh, cry, rejoice, and hurt.  Your heart will break, but also learn to heal. 

Redemption by Karen Kingsbury
Redemption by Karen Kingsbury

If you are someone who can relate to Kari's story on a level that I cannot, I hope you will find her story inspiring, even if your choice is different from hers.  My personal prayer for you is that you will be encouraged by this fictional story and that you will gain a desire to seek knowledge, understanding, and wisdom from the only source of real truth concerning marriage and relationships, the Bible.

Marriage is not the only area in our lives that can produce a broken relationship.  This book demonstrates how God can heal any kind of broken relationship even if restoring the relationship seems hopeless.

At the end of the book, there is a list of discussion questions to help you discover a deeper understanding of the story and applications to your own life.

I can't wait to start the next book in this series, Remember.  I'll let you know what I think.  :)

Other books I've read and recommend by Karen Kingsbury:

Unlocked

One Tuesday Morning

Beyond Tuesday Morning

Remember Tuesday Morning

Shades of Blue 

Oceans Apart 

On Every Side  

Where Yesterday Lives

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UPDATE:  Since I wrote this post, I have finished all five books in the Redemption Series.  You can find my review here.

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Gracious Redemption (from Anointed, Transformed, Redeemed Bible Study)

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Gracious Redemption
Image Credit:  Tessa Rampersad - Public Domain Image - via Pixabay

Gracious Redemption


Last week, our study through Anointed, Transformed, Redeemed led us to crossroads.  Crossroads are places in our lives where we must make decisions.  We must choose to follow the path where God leads us or a path leading to sin and the consequences of that sin.  This week, we are reminded of God’s gracious redemption.  The is the “redeemed” part of our 6 week study.

Most of our study is from 2 Samuel 24, 1 Chronicles 22, and 1 Chronicles 28 – 29.

During this study, we dug more deeply into the Davidic Covenant.  I never realized until this study how beautiful this passage is.  David was quiet a character.  He was a man after God’s own heart.  He loved God and God loved David, but David’s life was laced with scandal, adultery, and even murder.  David was a man of war and bloodshed.

David’s life goal was to build a temple, a house for God’s Ark of the Covenant.  It was his heart’s desire, but God would not allow David to build the house because he was a man of war and had shed too much blood.  Still, God promised David that he would eventually have a son and his son would build the house.

Even after God’s promise to David, David still sinned against God and he sinned big!  God is a just God. He punished David for his sins, but He did not remove his promise to David.

Eventually, after an adulterous relationship, betrayal, and suffering through punishments including the loss of a baby son, David’s son Solomon was born to him.  God honored his promise to David and chose David’s son Solomon to build the temple.

However, God’s plan for David was not over.  David had made mistakes and he had suffered his consequences.  He was now an old man.  He had not been allowed to build the temple.  God was not finished with David.

God allowed David to take part in the temple’s construction by allowing him to gather all the materials Solomon would need to build the house for God’s name.  David was allowed to make preparations for the temple.  David took great joy in his gracious redemption.

We too can take great joy in God’s gracious redemption.
No matter what you’ve done, you will be able to  go deeper still.  If you are alive, there is a future; there is hope because there is God,” – Kay Arthur
That my friends, wraps up the full 6 week study of Anointed, Transformed, Redeemed.  You are anointed for a purpose.  God will transform your life to accomplish his plan and purpose through you.  Even if we think we’ve messed all that up, God is the God of gracious redemption.

You'll find all my posts about the Anointed, Transformed, Redeemed Bible Study here.

Get your copy of Anointed, Transformed, Redeemed:  A Study of David here. 

Anointed, Transformed, Redeemed Bible Study
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