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Keeping Holiday All Year Long

Recently Crossway’s homeschool book reviewers discussed Keeping Holiday by Starr Meade on their blogs.

As Beth wrote, “This is a story not only for Christmas, but every day of the year, as each of us strive to grow closer to the Founder.”

Other comments from the reviewers:

“Starr Meade writes a wonderful allegory of faith and the search for God through this beautiful and well-written holiday story. Curl up under a blanket and pull your little ones close to read this wonderful story together. It will be a tradition in my home for years to come.”

Keeping Holiday is like a modern day Pilgrim’s Progress. This book, written for children ages eight and up, would be a wonderful accompaniment to a homeschool Christmas Bible study.”

“I would recommend this book to all, young and young at heart. To all of those searching for the true Founder, may your search end as profitable as Dylan’s.”

Keeping Holiday is beautiful story of God’s sovereignty and man’s desperate need and desire for a savior—a hefty message for such a simple book.”

You can read the full reviews by visiting the following blogs:

If you would like to join Crossway’s Homeschool Book Review Program or find out more about it, feel free to e-mail Crossway at marketing[at]crossway.org.

January 2, 2009 | Posted in: Christmas,Reviews | Author: Crossway Staff @ 9:36 am | 0 Comments »

The Three Wise Women

By Christin Ditchfield

Over the years, they’ve come to be known as Gaspar, Melchoir, Balthasar – the Three Wise Men. Such beloved characters in the traditional Christmas story. Though they are mentioned only briefly in the gospel of Matthew, the Wise Men appear in nearly every nativity scene, every creche set. Somehow through the centuries, these mysterious figures have captured our imaginations and inspired us to “follow the star” on our own spiritual journey to Bethlehem.

Of course we don’t really know what their names were – or even that there were in fact three of them. We assume that there must have been at least three, because there were three gifts. However, if we read the gospel accounts of the Christmas story carefully, we soon discover that there actually were three wise people – three wise women!

Mary, Elizabeth, and Anna. Three very different women, in different ages and stages of life. One single, one married, one widowed. One just beginning to experience life. One coping with the challenges and changes of midlife. And one coming close to the end of her life. How do we know they were wise? The Scripture tells us, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, and knowledge of the Holy One is understanding.” (Proverbs 9:10) All three of these women “feared the Lord.” They were women who walked with Him. Women of faith and courage and character.

Each one played a crucial role in the events of the true Christmas story. Mary became the mother of the Messiah. She gave birth to the Son of God Himself. Elizabeth became the mother of His prophet. She served as Mary’s mentor and confidante. Anna announced the newborn King’s arrival. She sang His praises and proclaimed His salvation to all who had ears to hear. Too often we casually read over the familiar words of Scripture, barely noticing these women. Yet each one in her own way set a powerful example for us to follow today.

From The Three Wise Women: A Christmas Reflection by Christin Ditchfield.

December 22, 2008 | Posted in: Christmas,Women, Wives, Mothers | Author: Crossway Staff @ 9:33 am | 0 Comments »

“Keeping Holiday”

Crossway recently interviewed Starr Meade, the author of the new children’s book Keeping Holiday, about literature, her new book, and more. Here’s what she had to say:

Q: Who should read Keeping Holiday? Is it really a Christmas story?

A: The best stories in children’s literature—works by C. S. Lewis, George MacDonald, Kenneth Grahame—are enjoyable for people of any age, and I would like to think that’s true of Keeping Holiday as well. It’s a Christmas story and more than a Christmas story.

Q: What’s meant by the title, Keeping Holiday, and what’s the basic storyline?

A: The title is a play on words. “To keep holiday” can mean to celebrate a specific holiday. That’s one meaning; how do we most fully celebrate the Christmas holiday? The other meaning has to do with the story: Dylan goes to the delightful town of Holiday once a year on vacation and would like to just stay there. Since that’s not possible, his parents tell him he’ll need to find a way to “keep Holiday—” to have it with him all year, wherever he is. Early in the story, Dylan discovers that the Holiday he always visits is not the real Holiday; there’s a larger, much more wonderful Holiday behind it. He also learns, however, that only citizens of Holiday can come and go in the real Holiday, and that only the Founder of Holiday can make you a citizen. So the story is Dylan’s visit to the real Holiday on a temporary pass, in search of the Founder and citizenship. Each adventure that he has on his quest and each character he meets shows him more of what the Founder is like, so that, increasingly, his desire for citizenship in Holiday changes into a desire to know the Founder for his own sake.

Q: But Dylan keeps hearing, “You can’t find the Founder; he finds you; he’s not just the Founder; he’s the Finder too.” What does that mean?

A: Holiday was established many years ago to honor a King who saved the town from the rule of evil, oppressive tyrants; hence, that King is called “the Founder.” Everyone who knows anything at all about the Founder tells Dylan he can’t find him; the Founder will have to find Dylan. Just as, on the first Christmas, people didn’t go get the Son of God from heaven and bring him to earth, so individual people don’t set out to find Christ and his grace; they aren’t even able to do that. Christ in his grace reaches out and saves them. Biblically, all the credit for coming to the earth as Savior and for coming to any individual as Savior belongs to Christ alone.

Q: You’ve said that one purpose of the book is to give readers a fresh way to look at the Incarnation. How does Keeping Holiday accomplish this?

A: My favorite parts of the Bible are the Old Testament prophets. They paint their word pictures in such extreme shades of dark and light that you come away from them horrified by the bleakness of the human condition and, consequently, wonderfully relieved by the hope and comfort they hold out in their promises of the coming Messiah. The experiences Dylan has—being entombed in a cave, being lost in absolute darkness, wandering across a barren winter landscape—are meant as pictures of humanity’s condition, and each individual’s condition, before the coming of Christ.

Q: What would you consider the best use of Keeping Holiday?

A: I hope families will read Keeping Holiday together, maybe even as a holiday tradition. It helps draw attention to what Christ has done for his people and how ordinary Christmas decorations remind us of those things. This could enhance a family’s worship and celebration during Advent season. At the same time, Keeping Holiday brings up for discussion many doctrinal aspects of the salvation God provides, and his ways of working in the human heart, providing a springboard for discussion of these kinds of issues on a personal level, between parents and children.

For more information on Keeping Holiday, visit the Crossway website.

December 19, 2008 | Posted in: Books,Children,Christmas,Interviews | Author: Crossway Staff @ 8:31 am | (4) Comments »

Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus: Experiencing the Peace and Promise of Christmas

Anita Lustrea and Melinda Schmidt of Moody Radio’s Midday Connection are offering some great ideas for Christmas gifts on the show today. One of the books they’ll be recommending is Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus. The full list of suggested Christmas resources is available here.

You can listen to Midday Connection on your local Moody station live at noon CST or online.

About Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus:

Between purchasing presents and planning travel, enjoying holiday pageants and attending parties, it is all too easy for Christmas to sneak up on us and crowd out a rich anticipation of this sacred season. So when editor Nancy Guthrie decided she wanted a reflective book of Advent readings by writers who held a high view of Scripture, she embarked on what she calls “a sacred adventure,” putting together such a collection herself.

This special volume draws from the works and sermons of classic theologians such as Whitefield, Luther, Spurgeon, and Augustine, and from leading contemporary communicators such as Skip Ryan, John Piper, Ligon Duncan, Randy Alcorn, John MacArthur, Francis Schaeffer, R. C. Sproul, and Joni Eareckson Tada to help readers enter into the wonder of Jesus’ incarnation and birth.

To learn more, you can view the contents or some sample chapters online.

December 3, 2008 | Posted in: Christmas | Author: Crossway Staff @ 11:00 am | 0 Comments »

Evangelicals, Advent, and Anthologies

Cathy Lynn Grossman of USA Today just posted an interesting article about how evangelicals are “adopting — and adapting” traditional Advent rituals. The piece, called “Evangelicals Adopting Advent,” features an interview with Crossway author Nancy Guthrie about Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus, her new book of Advent reflections. Grossman writes:

Bible teacher and writer Nancy Guthrie has a collection of readings for Advent that draws on evangelical writers, with an emphasis on Scripture. In Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus, Guthrie draws on 22 sermons and writings, from Saint Augustine and Martin Luther to theologians such as Jonathan Edwards and contemporary preachers such as John Piper and Tim Keller.

“I so often felt that by the time I got to Christmas morning, after the parties, and planning and shopping and presents and travel, that there was a void, that I hadn’t had time to prepare my heart for the gift, with a capital G, of Jesus,” says Guthrie of Nashville, whose denomination is the Presbyterian Church of America.

“Since I’m not bound by the traditional Advent, I could choose writers for this collection who break out of the familiar talk of Christmas to the shocking wonder of it, that God revealed himself to the humblest among us,” she says.

You can read the full article here. More information about Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus, including the table of contents and sample chapters, is available on our website.

November 26, 2008 | Posted in: Christmas | Author: Crossway Staff @ 1:16 pm | 0 Comments »