Black Joy is an engaging and positive children's book geared toward African-American children and is also great for children of other races. This book explains the origin of Black Love Day, which was instituted in 1993 and is celebrated on February 13th. Black Joy also tells children what love truly entails and how to love themselves. The illustrations in this book are beautiful and show the positivity of an African-American community stemming from a love mural created by a young boy named Jaden.
Shannan's Thoughts
Thursday, January 2, 2025
Saturday, November 30, 2024
Book Review: Charlotte & Penelope and Their Magical Menagerie by Teresa Argenbright
Geared towards a 4- 8-year-old audience, this book is helpful for young emerging readers as it encourages using phonics which they can easily use to decode the next rhyming word based on the last word of the previous word.
This story is enjoyable and I couldn't help but chuckle at the writer's creativity. The illustrations are gorgeous and colorful. My 11-year-old enjoyed the story and recommended the book to her elementary school classmates.
At the end of the book, they ask readers fun questions to give them further things to think about, along with interesting facts about the animals featured in the book.
Friday, November 29, 2024
Book Review: The Ten Big Anti-Israel Lies and How to Refute Them with Truth
Alan Dershowitz, in this tiny book, presents an argument about the 10 Big Anti-Israel lies and it's powerful. In his introduction, he categorizes them into past, present, and future. He then presents each of the myths and rebuttals in separate chapters.
Mr. Dershowitz is very thorough with his facts and presents the political history of the disputed territory. It is clear that he is pro-Israel, but he is also balanced because he does think it would be beneficial to have a two-state system and that the surrounding Arab nations are against it.
This book was written as an informational guide to talk to
Pro-Palestinian protestors he feels are misinformed about the truth, in his opinion, about the Israeli-Arab conflict that came to its ultimate explosion on October 7, 2023.
Thursday, November 21, 2024
My Musings on the Christian Worldview of History
In the history discipline,
historians are tasked with analyzing the past. We study the how, when, where,
why, and who of events. The Christian worldview of history is to search for the
truth. As Christian historians, we are not to discern the actions of God in
human history.[1]
In a Christian worldview, historians must acknowledge that God is sovereign. When
analyzing past events, they are reminded of the ongoing relationship between
God and man.
In the lecture, we learn what
a Christian worldview is. Dr. Samuel Smith quickly says that writing from a
Christian worldview is not a spiritualization of history in which we randomly
use scripture verses to explain what happened in the past.[2] There is a place for
scripture in history but not to find meaning in what God did during a past
event. That is more of a providential list approach to history, which seeks to
glorify God amid your historical research and writing.
According to the lecture, a Christian approach to history should be objective. That is true of the secular approach as well. We should not be overly objective, like the German secular historian Leopold von Ranke, who thought that there should be purism in objectivity, which is impossible.[3] We all have biases based on life experiences and how we were raised. Knowing our biases, we must be careful not to analyze history using preconceived notions. We need a morally balanced analysis, even when not in agreement because human beings are naturally flawed. Becoming aware of our shortcomings, we do not put our moral bias into our analysis. While there may be some opinion in our work as historians, it should not be explicit but implicit.
From the lecture, it is acknowledged that to have a Christian worldview, we must look at the
world through a scriptural lens.[4] When looking at past
events, we must filter out events through God’s perspective, because his ways
are truth as written in the Bible. We
know that Jesus is in the foundation of human history, God is a God of order
and the pillar of truth. Christian historians must be ethical as God provides
us with a code of ethics throughout the Bible.
As a historian, I must acknowledge that humans have limitations and show
that life is a short sliver of time.
In conclusion, when we present our research,
we must be honest and ethical. Using logic,
we should be able to analyze primary and secondary sources to paint a creative
but accurate story to bring history alive to our readers. We need to understand
that we are not in charge of our destiny, God is always in control. Finally,
when we approach history from a Christian worldview, we must be objective and
present bias but look at humans as flawed creatures. We must place our moral standards on them.
When we recognize the complexity, we will not oversimplify, spiritualize, or
sensationalize the truth of the events in the past.
Bibliography
Fea, John. Why Study History? Grand Rapids, MI:
Baker Academic, 2013
Smith,
Samuel. “Christian Worldview of History.” Lecture in HIST 491 at Liberty University,
Lynchburg, VA, November 20, 2024.
[1] John
Fea, Why Study History? (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic,2013), 28.
[2] Samuel
Smith, “Christian Worldview of History” (video lecture in HIST 491 at Liberty University,
Lynchburg, VA, November 20, 2024).
[3]
Ibid
[4]
Ibid
Book Review: Black Joy by Charnaie Gordon
Black Joy is an engaging and positive children's book geared toward African-American children and is also great for children of other ...
-
Alan Dershowitz, in this tiny book, presents an argument about the 10 Big Anti-Israel lies and it's powerful. In his introduction, he ...
-
In the history discipline, historians are tasked with analyzing the past. We study the how, when, where, why, and who of events. The Chris...
-
Geared towards a 4- 8-year-old audience, this book is helpful for young emerging readers as it encourages using phonics which they can eas...