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Resources for Biblical Womanhood
Here are some resources to help you cultivate biblical womanhood:
Blogs
Articles
- LIFE article The State of the American Woman
- The Ideal Christian Woman
- Boundless Articles – this webzine has some incredibly practical content when it comes to dating, marriage, singleness, and sexuality
Books
- Feminine Appeal (Carolyn Mahaney) – accessible, practical book on living Titus 2
- Beautiful Woman (Anne Ortlund) – my wife swears by this book as uber practical
- Radical Womanhood – (Carolyn McCulley) – a robust book that addresses feminism, femininity, and
- Jesus and the Feminists (Margaret Kostenberger) – engages feminist readings of Scripture
- What’s the Difference?: Biblical Manhood & Womanhood (Piper) – this free booklet is one of the most helpful resources I know of, especially considering its brevity!
- Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood (Piper & Grudem) – this volume is highly technical but deals with the finer exegetical and theological points very well and is also available for free online reading.
- God, Marriage, & Family (Kostenberger)
These resources were used for my recent sermon on Biblical Femininity. Resource for manhood here.
GROW: organic discipleship
An Acts 29 colleague, Winfield Bevins, has written a new booklet GROW. It is free, insightful, practical and easy to read. Download it free here. Buy it here.
Mission is More than a Command
“Since the advent of Protestant missions, the dominant motivation for missions has been an appeal to the “missionary mandate.” Thus, missions became a response of obedience to a particular set of commands, most notably those texts commonly referred to as embodying the Great Commission. In contrast, Lesslie Newbigin has pointed out that in the New Testament we witness not the burden of obeying a command, but rather a vast “explosion of joy.”[1] Jürgen Moltmann described it as the joyous invitation to all peoples to come to a “feast without end.”[2]…
Harry Boer in his Pentecost and Missions rightly points out that none of the key figures in the book of Acts ever makes a direct appeal to any of the Great Commission passages to justify their preaching, even when questions are raised about the emerging Gentile mission. He further points out that the earliest believers who took the initiative to preach the gospel to Gentiles (Acts 11:20) were very likely not even present at any of those post-resurrection commissioning events.”
Read the rest of Tim Tennent’s fine post.