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William Boekestein is the pastor of Covenant Reformed Church in Carbondale, Pennsylvania (URCNA). He has authored several books including Why Christ Came: 31 Meditations on the Incarnation (with Joel Beeke), and (for children) Faithfulness under Fire: The Story of Guido de Bres, The Quest for mehr anzeigen Comfort: The Story of the Heidelberg Catechism, and The Glory of Grace: The Story of the Canons of Dort. weniger anzeigen

Werke von William Boekestein

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Boekestein, William
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The Heidelberg Catechism has been taught to children for hundreds of years, encouraging them to seek Christ as their true source of comfort. But how did this catechism get written? In The Quest for Comfort, William Boekestein and Evan Hughes combine history and art to retell the events that led to making the catechism. By sharing the stories of Caspar Olevianus, Zacharias Ursinus, and Frederick III and how they came to Heidelberg, children will gain a greater appreciation of the Christian faith as it is expressed in the Heidelberg Catechism.… (mehr)
 
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wpcalibrary | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 24, 2024 |
What is so great about the Lord’s Day?
In this book, children will hear the story of what happens on any given Sunday and why. From resting from our usual jobs to gathering as a church to worship, the Lord’s Day is a special day for honoring the Lord – it’s all in the name! Children will see how The Lord’s Day also helps them trust in Jesus and get ready to live for God on all the other days of the week. Let us learn to love the Lord’s Day. After all, it is the best day of the week!
For ages 2–7 years (2–4 read to me; 5–7 read myself)
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wpcalibrary | Jun 27, 2022 |
This audiobook - written to bring the story of a great reformer to children - is quite fair in its presentation of Zwingli's enemies, especially Catholics.

I am a Catholic, so naturally I disagree with his viewpoints. It is important to know that this biography is partisan. Its audience is protestant children, not my Catholic children.

It is also good for adults who would like to learn more about Zwingli without having to invest the time or energy into a more academic biography (there are much fewer biographies of Zwingli than Luther or Calvin!)… (mehr)
 
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neverstopreading | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 5, 2018 |
Ulrich Zwingli, by William Boekestein is, as the series is titled, a "Bitesize Biography" but there is a good amount o content in that 'bite'. Despite this biography's size, it gives a lot of information to Zwingli. It actually seems to 'introduce' you to him as opposed to making you a mere acquaintance of his life.

The things I most remember about Zwingli, from other books and sources on him, are that he died in a not-so justifiable battle/war and that he debated and opposed Luther on the presence of Christ in the Lord's 'Table'. I've found out that there were several things I didn't know about his life, these things include sanctifying works of God in and through his life such as his doing away with preaching on Bible texts assigned by the Catholic Church, and opting for a verse by verse, book by book method of preaching instead.

On the negative side, there were the manifestations of the sinful 'remnants' of Zwingli's dead old self that still hadn't conceded that God had won the victory(Rom. 7-8). Some of these negatives are evidenced in Zwingli's struggle with sexual sin(he solicited prostitutes), even when he had come to an accurate view of salvation. He technically shouldn't have been a pastor because of that, but he was still a 'Priest' in the Catholic church, and that sin was practiced by many 'Priests' of the day so I guess they just thought it was normal for church leaders. As the author puts it, "Zwingli's intellectual abilities had greatly outpaced his moral fortitude". Perhaps the key point in Zwingli's struggle was that it was actually a struggle with this sin, and not a resignation to it. It does look as though he ultimately did manage to get to get to a point of acting on the Spirit's promptings to habitually 'kill' those sins, and he married a widow and had several children with her.

Like all Christians, Zwingli had his flaws, and his own battles with his fleshly desires, which makes us admire God's use of the man, realizing even more that any truly godly thing that came out of Zwingli's life was God's work, not his own. And so it is in all of our lives as Christians, we are dependent upon God for all aspects of salvation, and we take comfort that God's work doesn't just stop at our justification but that it continues with our progressive sanctification and ultimate glorification(Rom. 8:30).

If you want to get a quick view of Zwingli's life and God's use of Him, this biography would do very well.
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SnickerdoodleSarah | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 13, 2016 |

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