Cross Focused Reviews
Promoting Cross-Centered Books
Like what you see?
Sign up for more Christian book news and reviews!
                                         
  • Home
  • About
  • Extras
    • Blogger Book Review Programs
    • Listing of Christian Publishers on Twitter
    • Listing of Christian Publisher Blogs
    • Other Christian Book Review Sites
  • Contact
  • Reviews
  • Meet the Reviewers

Worldliness: Resisting the Seduction of a Fallen World edited by C.J. Mahaney

Posted by Bob Hayton on
January 31st, 2009
Worldliness: Resisting the Seduction of a Fallen World edited by C.J. Mahaney

Book Details:

  • Author: edited by C.J. Mahaney
  • Category: Christian Living
  • Publisher: Crossway (2008)
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • Page count: 191
  • ISBN#: 1433502801

Recommendation:

  • Review Date: 01/31/09 by Bob Hayton
  • Rating: Must Read

Review:
Any book entitled Worldliness: Resisting the Seduction of a Fallen World promises not to be your average book on the shelf of today’s Christian bookstore. The subject of worldliness, or love for the values of this fallen world, is not a popular theme.

The contributors of this book, start off by asking if 1 John 2:15 ["Do not love the world or anything in the world"], is really in most Christian’s Bibles. All of us are guilty of worldliness. But how do we go about avoiding this sin? C.J. Mahaney explains:

Some people try to define worldliness as living outside a specific set of rules or conservative standards. If you listen to music with a certain beat, dress in fashionable clothes, watch movies with a certain rating…surely you must be worldly.

Others, irritated and repulsed by rules that seem arbitrary, react to definitions of worldliness, assuming it’s impossible to define. Or they think legalism will inevitably be the result, so we shouldn’t even try.

…Both views are wrong. For by focusing exclusively on externals or dismissing the importance of externals, we’ve missed the point…. the real location of worldliness is internal. It resides in our hearts.

The book goes on to try to navigate between these two extremes and call today’s church to a healthy carefulness about how we interact with the world at large. With chapters on movies, music, money and modesty, the book aims to guide believers as they think critically about the myriad of choices facing us in today’s culture.

As one who came out of a very strict fundamentalist background, this book especially interested me. I was encouraged to see contemporary evangelical Christians warning about the social dangers that abound. And I noted that the book did not offer a list of rules which I should follow more closely than Scripture. Instead the authors were careful to encourage discernment and teach general guiding principles.

To some the book will seem quite strict. Think “radical”, instead. The authors aim to glorify God in everything they do. That will come across as totally radical, and will require a unique focus on the temptations and opportunities that surround us.

While the discussion on media (movies) and music was quite good, the chapter on money and modesty wasn’t quite as captivating for me. I’d heard a lot of Mahaney’s stuff on modesty before, so maybe that’s why. But any lull in those chapters was more than made up by Mahaney’s opening chapter and the closing one by Jeff Purswell.

That final chapter focused on how to love the world. We are to love God’s creation and the people He has made. We are placed within His world and called to serve for its good. Perhaps since externals were over emphasized in my fundamentalist roots, this chapter on healthy interaction with the world resonated with me so well. In any case, Purswell paints a glorious picture of God’s covenant dealings with all the earth.

Moving from God’s overarching redemption plan, he elevates our mundane day-to-day duties as part of that plan. He closes his section on work with this appeal:

So don’t just “go to work” and “do your job”–see your job as a way to imitate God, serve God, and love others. This doesn’t mean work will never be difficult or frustrating or tedious; the curse ensures that it will be at times. But God’s creational purposes and Christ’s redeeming work infuse our work with meaning, and promise God-glorifying fruit as a result.

Purswell calls us to enjoy, engage and evangelize the world. “We receive God’s earthly gifts, pursue God’s purposes in earthly life, and work for the salvation of people made in God’s image. All of life lived for the glory of God (1 Cor. 10:31)”.

The final chapter exposes the tension once again. While we are to be in the world and working for its good, we are also not to love what it loves and prize what it prizes. Once again, the book stresses two bents which typify Christians:

Some have strictly spiritual preoccupations. For them the present is of little consequence, pleasures are perilous, spirituality means self-denial…

Others relish life in this world. Their delight in God’s temporal gifts is unrestrained, their enjoyment of their physical existence untempered, their hope in earthly endeavors absolute….

The answer finally is the cross of Christ. The cross tells us who we are, interprets the world we live in, transforms our view of people and gives our lives purpose. Finding our place in God’s story of redemption is the ultimate cure for a love of this world’s desires.

This book has the potential to transform your view of the Christian life. I cannot recommend it highly enough.

Author Info:
C.J. Mahaney is the president of Sovereign Grace Ministries and serves on the Council of the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals, and on the boards of The Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood and the Christian Counseling and Educational Foundation. Mahaney is the author, editor, and co-editor of numerous books, including Sex, Romance, and the Glory of God.

Disclaimer:
This book was provided by Crossway Books for review. The reviewer was under no obligation to offer a favorable review.

Additional Resources:

  • Book Excerpt: Available here
  • Other Book Reviews: Available here
  • Purchase Links: Amazon.com, Westminster Bookstore, Monergism Books and Crossway Books
  • Author’s Website: Here (also his blog, and a listing of online sermons here)
  • PDF Copy: Download a PDF copy of this review
Categories : Book Reviews, Christian Living, Crossway
Tags : Christian life, Christian Living, Christianity, CJ Mahaney, godly, Gospel, Gospel Centered, living, religion, sanctification, Separation, spiritual growth, spirituality, worldliness

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

Sponsors

Find Good Books

Shop at Monergismbooks.com (& support my site) Shop at wtsbooks.com (& support my site)

Recent Posts

  • Free Fiction Friday at Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • Interview with Bill Foster at Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • Free Audiobook – A Tale of Three Kings: A Study in Brokenness by Gene Edwards
  • Book Review – A Life of Gospel Peace: A Biography of Jeremiah Burroughs by Phillip L. Simpson
  • Free Webcast Today (2/16) on The Dark Side Of Darwin with Author Dr. Jerry Bergman

Recent Comments

  • clickme on Special 72 Hour Sale on The Gospel Story Bible
  • clickme on Book Review: 365 Great Bible Stories by Carine Mackenzie
  • antivirus software on Enter The Constantine Codex Book Giveaway at Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • http://andcarinsurancequotes.com on Mail Call: The Soul of C.S. Lewis
  • AbuddyInhaday on Raven’s Ladder (The Auralia Thread series) by Jeffrey Overstreet

Categories

Archives

Partner Sites

  • Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • Books and Theology Podcast
  • Cross Focused Media
  • Fundamentally Reformed

Other Christian Book Reviewers

  • Andy Naselli
  • Beginning with Moses
  • Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • Books and Culture
  • Christian Book Notes
  • Credo Magazine
  • Discerning Reader
  • Englewood Review of Books
  • Eskypades
  • Fundamentally Reformed
  • Justin Taylor
  • Nine Marks Ministries – Books
  • One Book Per Week
  • Pastoral Musings
  • Rabbit Room
  • ReformedBooks.net
  • Rightly Dividing the Word of Truth
  • Seth McBee
  • Sharper Iron
  • The Book Blog
  • The Gospel Coalition Reviews
  • The Quest – Books
  • The Vessel Project
  • Trevin Wax
  • Tim Challies

Christian Publisher Blogs

  • One Mission Blog (Augsburg Fortress)
  • Relligent (Baker Books)
  • The Brazos Blog (Brazos Press)
  • Christian Focus BookNotes (Christian Focus Publications)
  • CPH Social Media NewsRoom (Concordia Publishing House)
  • Crossway Blog (Crossway Books)
  • David C. Cook Blog (David C. Cook Publishing)
  • EerdWord (Eerdmans Publishing)
  • Harvest House Blog (Harvest House Publishers)
  • Kregel Publications News (Kregel Publications)
  • Addenda & Errata (InterVarsity Press)
  • Behind the Books (InterVarsity Press)
  • Inside Pages (Moody Publishers)
  • River North Fiction (Moody Publishers)
  • NavPress Blog Network (NavPress)
  • P & R Publishing Blog (P & R Publishing)
  • Heritage BookTalk (Reformation Heritage Books)
  • Shepherd Press Blog (Shepherd Press)
  • Tyndale Blog (Tyndale House Publishers)
  • WaterBrook Multnomah News (WaterBrook Multnomah Press)
  • Engaging Church (Zondervan)
  • Koinonia (Zondervan Academic)
  • Zondervan Blog (Zondervan)

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org
Cross Focused Reviews
Copyright © 2012 All Rights Reserved
iThemes Builder by iThemes
Powered by WordPress