Van Til Tool

Using the Van Til Perspective as the tool to discover what life means and how it ought to be lived.

Friday, July 10, 2009

REVIEW OF MARY DEMUTH'S DAISY CHAIN

Turning Trials To Triumphs


A Review of

Mary DeMuth Daisy Chain (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2009)
$14.99 361 pp ISBN: 978-0-310-27836-8


Reviewer: Forrest W. Schultz


Mary DeMuth is not afraid to tackle tough issues in her stories, which she calls "relevant prose". Her second novel Wishing On Dandelions impressed me greatly not only by her sympathetic and realistic handling of the terrors of childhood sexual abuse but also by the remarkable way in which she portrayed the victim (Maranatha) as a total person, so that the story dealt with a variety of matters, not just her victimhood -- in fact, she not only is helped but she also helps others!

Demuth's third novel is ostensibly about the abduction and murder of a girl (Daisy Chance), but its far more significant subject is dysfunctional families, which provides the context of the story. As the story unfolds, there is movement from the surface level -- trying to solve the mystery of Daisy's disappearance -- to the spiritual level, but this movement is only started, not completed, because Daisy Chain is the only the first volume of of a three volume story, The Defiance Texas Trilogy. Presumably the resolution will not occur until the end of this trilogy.

Daisy's centrality in the story is due to her remarkable vitality and wisdom and love, which is shown mainly through her influence on her long time friend Jed Pepper, who is very much in need of help in knowing how to deal with his dysfunctional parents. Her influence continues after her disappearance -- in fact, in some ways she helps him more after she is gone than when she was present. How this happens is perhaps the most meaningful and moving aspect of this story. Daisy knows something which Jed needs to learn, namely how to turn to turn trials into triumphs, which is DeMuth's motto for her stories.

Each of DeMuth's first two books was a finalist for the American Christian Fiction Writers Book Of The Year Award. It would not surprise me if the same thing happens to the book under review here.

Laura Jenson Walker says that Daisy Chain is "reminiscent of To Kill A Mockingbird".
I myself felt that Daisy Chain's delightful dog Clementine bore an almost spooky similarity to the dog in To Dance With The White Dog. For this reason, Mary DeMuth can be compared with the best Southern fiction authors as well as the best Christian fiction authors.

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

WTS 80th Anniversary; Machen's Christianity and Liberalism Republished

WTS 80th Anniversary In September
Machen's Christianity and Liberalism Republished
by Forrest Wayne Schultz


September of 2009 will be the 80th anniversary of the founding of Westminster Theological Seminary (WTS). One of the things WTS has already done this year to honor its founder -- J. Gresham Machen -- is to persuade Eerdmans to republish what is probably his most famous book, Christianity and Liberalism with a special preface added, written by WTS Vice-President for Academic Affairs Carl R. Trueman. Trueman's preface places the writing of this important book into its historical context, noting some things I was hitherto unaware of.

This book is one of the best treatments of the contrast between Christianity and what was then called liberalism, but which we now usually call the old liberalism. Later on, one of the most important WTS professors, Cornelius Van Til, wrote a book attacking the new liberalism(or new modernism) which he titled Christianity and Barthianism, which is arguably the most scholarly critique of Barth ever written. John Frame has noted the parallel between the two books including the very titles, thus suggesting that Van Til and Machen are closer in their thinking than is sometimes supposed.

Sincerely,

Forrest

Monday, July 06, 2009

Note to Michael (Recent PBU Grad)

NOTE TO MICHAEL, RECENT PBU GRAD:

IN RE YOUR COMMENT


Michael,

Since I have no other way of contacting you, I am doing so this way.

Please email me at schultz_forrest@yahoo.com in re your recent comment in re Nancy Pearcey Installed as Prof at PBU.

Before posting your comment, I wish to ask you some things.

Looking forward to your email.

Sincerely,

Forrest Schultz