Posted in theology

The Joy of Collecting Books: A Personal Journey

By Elizabeth Prata

I blogged earlier in the week that I enjoyed attending the annual Book Fair put on by a literacy organization where the public can enter the well-organized warehouse and browse for books and take up to 100 of them for free.

I found some books for the school library, friends, and some for my own shelves.

I’ve been blessed with the opportunity to live in a nice apartment that has two bedrooms. I don’t need two bedrooms- I live small. However, the second bedroom is a blessing because I’ve always wanted a personal, home library. And now I have one!

One of my hobbies is collecting books. Searching for books, reading books, and living with books are separate things. Related, but separate. As far as searching goes, I like the thrill of the hunt. I almost found a first edition of Dune. A 1st edition of that science fiction book would bring in five figures. It turned out to be a first ‘book club’ edition, which is worth significantly less, but still a thrill to find. Or when I found a first edition of CS Lewis “Till We Have Faces”, worth about $200-400.

It’s an ‘Antiques Roadhouse’ sort of thing, where you come across a book at a yard sale that has an original Dali sketch inside, or a valuable first edition, or just THE book you’ve been wanting to read.

The other pleasure with books is organizing them. I use LibraryThing as an inventory software so I know which books I have and by what author etc. Very helpful since even though I have a good memory, I can’t remember all of them. So before I add one to my library I double check. Or after I get a few books, I add them tot he inventory. If there are any duplicates, I know which ones to give away!

Once I’ve obtained a book, and once I’ve inventoried it, I enjoy organizing the shelves. I have mine arranged by genre. Of the theological portion of my library, I have them arranged by topic and the commentaries I arranged in order of the Bible’s order.

Thus, Commentaries on Genesis start off the shelf and Revelation commentaries are at the other end. Missionary biographies are together, and the topics of heaven, grace, fearing God, prayer, and so on are also all together. I have one bookcase dedicated to the commentaries by MacArthur and his authored books that GTY has sent me or that I’ve purchased, and another bookcase with a shelf dedicated to Sproul. One large section next to the Sproul shelf is my Puritans section.

So it’s enjoyable to place a recently obtained book where it should go, and to then sit in the library and be among all my books and look at them, which by now are like friends.

It has taken me 35 years to accumulate them. I was always a reader and enjoyed library book sales and yard sales and finding books even before I was saved. When I moved from Maine to Georgia, though, I halved my personal library, after calculating the weight and the cost of hiring the mover to haul them 1500 miles.

When I moved within Georgia from one apartment to another, I halved them again, for the same reason, and because I was moving from a 800 sf apartment to a 400 square foot apartment. By then I was saved and I had started looking for theological books, anyway. I didn’t mind abandoning the books I left behind because many were not acceptable reading for a Christian. Dream interpretation/New Age books, spiritual but not doctrinal books, romances, and the like…all went bye bye.

EPrata photo

This was a blessing because not only were my shelves cleaned and purified but now I had room to accumulate books about missionaries, commentaries, doctrinal books and so on. And for the last 21 years I have been doing just that.

With this last batch I’ve accumulated, inventoried, and placed lovingly on my shelves, I realized now my shelves are full! I realized I literally have no more room to put one more book. This is both a sadness and a joy.

I never really collected anything other than books. I like function, and books are functional. Early in my life, like when I was 10, 11 years old I began collecting glass figurines. In the Mall (when there were malls) there used to be glassblowers selling their wares at kiosks. I had bought a delicately glass-blown small tall ship, a ballerina, and several other figures. My brother in a fit smashed them all one day. I thought “Well, that’s that.” I decided not to collect ‘things’ as they might one day be destroyed and render the whole collecting endeavor pointless.

As an adult I don’t like collecting ‘things’ because you have to dust them, and they take up space. I prefer empty or nearly empty flat surfaces. But books are living, so to speak. They’re friends you can turn to for entertainment, for comfort, to learn from. I came from a family of readers, so it seemed like a natural fit to collect them.

I remember once in the mid 1990s when my husband and I were traveling from Maine across the southern tier of the US for a few months. We made it to Los Angeles. My cousin lived there, which seemed exotic to us New Englanders to have a family member living so far away. We got together and visited, and he took us to a taping of the Tonight show. At that time Jay Leno was the host, and old time comedian Jonathan Winters was the main guest.

We were standing in line to get the free tickets, and since this was pre-cell phone days, we each took out a book to read as we were waited, me from my purse, my husband and cousin from their back pockets. Reading was what we did at any spare moment. We always carried a book or had one nearby.

I know some people don’t mind books in piles, books laid down on top of standing books on the shelves, books everywhere. I am too structured for that and I’d decided not to have any book piles when my shelves became full. So if my shelves are full, that means no more books. I’ve winnowed down twice, and the books I have are the books I want, so I won’t be dispensing with any unless something changes in me, my apartment, or my circumstances.

I love my books and now I get to love the ones I have and there will be no more additions for the time being. There will be no more collecting. I am happy to be a reader, to live a live of books, and to own so many wonderful possibilities for picking one up and mentally journeying whenever I want.

panoramic shot of my library room
One of the bookcases in the living room. I took this a few months ago, the gaps in shelf 2 and 3 are gone now
This is the other bookcase in the living room. There is a small bookcase in the bedroom, and a very small one in thekitchen next to the fridge that holds cookbooks.

Whatever hobby you have, whatever leisure you choose, I pray it brings you enjoyment and comfort.

Posted in discernment, theology

Big Dream/The Amazing Collection ministry review

By Elizabeth Prata

 

I received an inquiry asking me to look into the ministry founded in Georgia called Big Dream Ministries which produced a Bible study called The Amazing Collection. Since I’m in Georgia, the inquirer thought I should know about the influence of the ministry, which is large and growing.

I did research it and was surprised at how large the ministry is and how far it has spread. For this essay, I read their web pages, previewed their materials, read the About, read the Beliefs, watched to two of their videos- Genesis and Revelation, and read their Facebook pages. (I believe how a person teaches Genesis and Revelation, two of the foundational books of the entire Bible, reveals their doctrinal stances and hermeneutic).

The ministry was officially founded 18 years ago but has been informally active since 1996. Their About page states,

“Under the direction of Pat Harley, a women’s ministry was initially formed in Roswell, Georgia to provide excellent Bible teaching and encourage women in their roles as women, wives, and mothers. The teaching team of Pat Harley, Eleanor Lewis, Linda Sweeney, and Margie Reuther taught the Bible in a sequential manner, in a study called The Amazing Collection.”

The Amazing Collection’s purpose is to teach the word of God sequentially, going through all the books of the Bible so that women, and the ministry is aimed at women, learn how the entire Bible hangs together. Founder Pat Harley realized that the women in her church were learning lots of bits and pieces of the Word, but not the overarching story. The word of God is the Word of God, and thus worth knowing all of, they say.

The Books of the Bible are an “Amazing Collection”, and people should be amazed by His word. hence, the ministry name. The “Big Dream” of the ministry is that women learn the entire Bible.

Mrs. Harley noticed that though she had participated in many mass-produced studies, some quite popular, she was remembering very little from them. And if she remembered little, she wasn’t translating what she had learned into practical Christian life and pursuit of holiness. She writes:

Why was I unable to recall so little from all of the studying I had done? I began to ask many other serious students of the Word. I would begin by asking what Bible studies they had taken. The response usually included a fairly lengthy list of popular studies. Some of those were considered “light” while others were very detailed and “deep”. More often than not this was preceded by a few words on how wonderful the study was and how very much they enjoyed it. But when I asked the question “What did you learn that you remember?” I was often confronted with a somewhat blank stare. It was then that I realized that I was not alone. Somehow we were learning much but remembering little.

Therefore, I was relieved to read that their foundational motto about the Big Dream and Amazing, isn’t the usual “You go, girl, you have big dreams to fulfill because you’re amazing” kind of motto. Instead, the ministry seems entirely God-focused.

Available materials are the original book-by-book lesson series, and there are additional focused series of topical studies such as the Life of Jesus, The Pentateuch, and a series based on Titus 2 for women which includes “lessons on character, relationships, and the care and management of the home. Practical topics covered include finances, hospitality, meal planning, and parenting.”

The study materials are translated into 4 languages so far, Portuguese, Spanish, French, and Russian. The lesson in Genesis I watched on Youtube displayed Arabic captions. There is a children’s series of materials, too. The ministry has extended into 120 other countries via television, and there is a team on the ground in Brazil.

In the Genesis lesson I watched, the following doctrines were covered:

Evolution explicitly rejected
Literal creation affirmed
Literal word meanings in the original language
An emphasis that scripture interprets scripture
Affirmation we all have a sin nature

Genesis is usually a test case for me, because it’s the beginning and all other doctrines flow from that seminal book. That the lesson didn’t wiggle or waver on the above doctrines is a good sign. So is the ministry’s premise, that God’s word is amazing and women should know all of it, because it is God’s word.

I especially liked the founder’s thought process as she described. She realized that the canned studies she was going through were not giving her an overall biblical worldview, but were only fleetingly giving her a sense of purposeful study, but she was not retaining it. She then went one step further, and did something about it, developing the lessons from which we now have the Amazing Collection. All 66 DVD lessons have recently been completed.

The ladies listed as teachers are all teachers of women or otherwise active in their home churches. I appreciated that they seem grounded at home and in church, rather than gallivanting all over the world solving social justice issues, making sales on book tours, or preaching at conference events, as so many of the women’s ministry teachers do nowadays.

From what I’ve seen and read, the Big Dream/Amazing Collection seems solid. Thank you to the sister who brought it to my attention.

Links:

Big Dream Ministries (includes links to Bible studies, Leader resources, materials Previews, and their online store.)

Big Dream Ministries Facebook