Wednesday, December 3, 2025

79. Unoffendable



79. Unoffendable: How Just One Change Can Make All of Life Better. Brant Hansen. 2015. 214 pages. [Source: Library]

First sentence: Okay. So this may sound like the dumbest thing you've ever read, but here goes: You can choose to be "unoffendable." 

Brant Hansen's Unoffendable is a quick, thought-provoking read. It challenges mindsets for sure. It was written by a Christian for other Christians, but, surely the whole world would benefit IF and only IF people CHOSE to be UNOFFENDABLE. 

Essentially, the book argues that GOD IS GOD IS GOD IS GOD IS GOD. We are not. We're just not. God knows all, sees all, hears all, can judge the OUTER actions and inner thoughts. Nothing is hidden from God. NOTHING. Not a thing. We can trust God to handle everything. His justice. His wrath. His righteous indignation. His vengeance, if you will. GOD has a time and place and a WAY. No one will escape his judgment. 

The Bible has commanded us to be forgiving, to love our enemies, to not store up anger, to not act in anger, to not take vengeance, to not harbor resentment and anger and bitterness. Forgiveness is the way. Love is the way. We are to not let anger rule in our hearts, our minds, our spirits. Whether we are sinned against by an unbeliever or a believer, we can choose forgiveness. This means trusting God with everything, with all the details. Hansen argues that it can be our egos, our pride, our sense of entitlement, that fuels our outrage. Choose humility over pride and love over hate. He stresses throughout that it is BECAUSE we have been forgiven by God that we can forgive others. OUR sin was great and yet forgiven. We are not without sin, we are forgiven by a gracious God who calls us to graciously extend that forgiveness to others. The point is also made that God does not need us to be angry on his behalf. God is God is God. Everyone will be held accountable. God doesn't need us to fight his battles for him--in anger. I think you can stand for truth, stand for righteousness, stand for the faith without being angry. Hansen stresses that anger is not necessary for action. You can SEE injustice and ACT without being angry. You can SEE error and speak against it without being angry. 

The book challenges assumptions and presumptions. It's a good read. There are a LOT of stories and illustrations. Not as much exposition of Scriptures in great detail. BUT I do think that when he uses Scripture it seemingly is used correctly. 

ETA: I have read a few reviews that point out that Hansen CHOOSES his verses carefully and does not mention verses that seemingly conflict with his position. That he only presents one side and oversimplifies everything. I thought that was a fair point. I mean he does not do a deep dive into EVERY instance of anger in the Old Testament and New Testament. 

So now I'm torn between four stars and three stars. There are plenty of commands to love and forgive. No lie. In the gospels. In the epistles. But there's also instances in Scripture where we are told to hate sin, to reject sin, to NOT associate or "walk with" the unrighteous. I imagine it is oversimplified here. BUT we are living in dangerous times where EVERYONE tends to be offended by everything all the time always and always and no exceptions. So perhaps the pendulum has swung a little too extreme in reaction to that. But I do think he makes some good points. 

The review of this book that has made me think hardest mentions Paul's anger in the book of Galatians. Though one could easily jump from Paul's anger in that circumstance to Paul's anger with the Corinthians. 
Hansen tends to think that anger is wrong 100% of the time no excuses, and I'm not sure the Bible concurs with that. I think it's more nuanced than that. 

Quotes:
We're told to forgive, and that means anger has to go, whether we've decided our anger is "righteous" or not.

Yes, the world is broken. But don't be offended by it. Instead, thank God that He's intervened in it, and He's going to restore it to everything it was meant to be. 

What about being angry at sin, Brant? Of course, we're supposed to be angry at sin. It's probably worth noting that, usually, when this question is asked of me, it's about something more specific. By "sin" we mean other people's sin. Are we to cling to anger at their sin? God took out His wrath on Jesus for other people's sin. And I believe Jesus suffered enough to pay for it, and my sin too. I'm so thankful for that. He will deal with others' sins; it's not my deal.

We cling to our self-righteousness and can't possibly imagine giving it up. We think it's how we're supposed to live. Wait: We're supposed to surrender the idea that we know others' motivations? We're supposed to give up thinking we know everyone's spiritual temperature? 

But rules don't change anyone's heart, ever. Grace does.

Being offended is a tiring business. Letting things go gives you energy.

An emotion is just an emotion. It's not critical thinking. Anger doesn't pause. We have to stop, and we have to question it.

Anger is extraordinarily easy. It's our default setting. Love is very difficult. Love is a miracle.

God knows others' private motives. We don't. God knows our private motives. We don't. We think we can judge others' motives. We're wrong. We should abandon our "right" to anger, simply because we can deceive ourselves so easily. 

It is the essence of ministry. It finally occurred to me that we can't be agents of healing in people's lives unless we're ready to bear their wounds for them and from them.

Seek justice; love mercy. You don't have to be angry to do that.

We simply can't trust ourselves in our judgments of others. WE don't know what they're really thinking, or their background, or what really motivated whatever they did. And since we don't know, let's choose ahead of time: we're just not going to get offended by people. If we don't need to be right, we don't have to reshape reality to fit "The Story of My Rightness." 

© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Monday, December 1, 2025

Growing4Life 2026 Bible Challenge


Challenge Host: Growing4Life
Group Activity is on Facebook
January - December 2026

There is a reading schedule that is quite detailed, but, this is an abbreviated one. Essentially, she has you reading one chapter per week--multiple times per week. So Luke 1 would be read five to seven times, etc. The system is based on the MacArthur method which has you read each section thirty times. So for January according to the MacArthur system, you'd read Luke 1-4 thirty times. I'm leaning more towards the MacArthur method. But there's enough wiggle room in the challenge that everyone can do what works best for them. 

JanuaryLuke 1-55
FebruaryLuke 6-9
MarchLuke 10-12
AprilColossians
May1 John
June2 John, 3 John, Jude
JulyPsalms 19-23
AugustPsalms 24-26
SeptemberLuke 13-17
OctoberLuke 18-21
November Luke 22-24
DecemberPsalms 27-30

© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

78. Sea View Christmas


78. Sea View Christmas (On Devonshire Shores) Julie Klassen. 238 pages. [Source: Review copy] [4 stars, adult romance, christian romance, historical romance, christian fiction]

First sentence: Miss Sarah Summers sat on her neatly made bed, a treasure in each hand. In her left she held a letter from the man she'd been betrothed to before his death at sea more than three years before. In her right palm lay a dried thistle--stalk, spiny bulb, and purple flower crown--the symbol of Scotland. It had been given to her by a Scotsman who, despite her efforts to forget him, still occupied a large part of her thoughts...and, if she were honest with herself, her heart. 

Premise/plot: Miss Sarah Summers cannot forget Callum Henshall and his stepdaughter Effie. They were among the first boarders at her family's boarding house. It has been a good number of books--three? four?--since Sarah has last spoken with him face to face. BUT neither has forgotten the other. This Christmas season, Callum and his stepdaughter have returned to the boarding house...has he come to woo her and win her? Probably. Possibly. Maybe. Meanwhile, Georgiana, the youngest sports-minded sister, is having a strong flirtation of her own with Colin, a local young man who's just a few years older. Nothing definite happens between them too, but they have the feels for each other AND it's just a matter of time. Probably. Possibly.

My thoughts: I was sad to learn this is the last in the series. I really LOVED this series and wish it would continue for at least one or two more books. I think Georgiana could have used her own novel. There are a few stepdaughters that could use a novel perhaps. And though I can't recall her name--it's been four or five days since I finished the novel--the mother became guardian to one of the orphans in town. So the stories COULD have continued on. 

Julie Klassen is one of my favorite authors. I love this cozy series of romances. 


© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Week in Review #48



This week's Bible reading

NASB 95 (audio, Bible in 90 days plan)
  • Ezekiel 26-48
  • Daniel
  • Hoseas
  • Joel
  • Amos
  • Obadiah
  • Jonah
  • Micah
  • Nahum
  • Habakkuk
  • Zephaniah
  • Haggai
  • Zechariah
  • Malachi
  • Matthew 1-19

KJV (Paragraph 435e1b) 
  • Psalms 116-150
  • Proverbs
  • Isaiah 50-66
  • Jeremiah
  • Lamentations

NASB 77 (Inductive Study Bible)
  • Psalms 87-150
  • Proverbs
  • Ecclesiastes
  • Song of Songs 

ESV Women's Study Bible
  • Habakkuk 



© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

77. The Best Christmas Pageant Ever



77. The Best Christmas Pageant Ever. Barbara Robinson. 1972. HarperCollins. 128 pages. [Source: Bought] [5 stars, realistic fiction, children's classic, children's book] 

The Herdmans were absolutely the worst kids in the history of the world. They lied and stole and smoked cigars (even the girls) and talked dirty and hit little kids and cussed their teachers and took the name of the Lord in vain and set fire to Fred Shoemaker's old broken-down toolhouse.

Let me ask you a question. Who is the gospel for? Think about it if you want. I'll wait.

Is the gospel for people who have it all together, the people who are good and are always striving to do better, to do more?  Or is the gospel for people who don't have it all together, who don't have the answers, who don't even know that they need to be asking questions? Is the gospel for broken, messed-up, difficult-to-get-along-with people? Or is the gospel for people who aren't-all-that-bad-all-things-considered?

On one hand, The Best Christmas Pageant is a comedy through-and-through. It's narrated by a child who's been tormented by the Herdmans for years. And it captures all the reactions of a town to all the bad stuff the Herdmans do (and say). The narrative voice, for most of the book, is just hysterical.

On the other hand, The Best Christmas Pageant is a much-needed reminder of what Christmas is all about, of what the gospel is all about.
The saying is trustworthy and deserving of full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the foremost. 1 Timothy 1:15
And when the Pharisees saw this, they said to his disciples, “Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?” But when he heard it, he said, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. Go and learn what this means, ‘I desire mercy, and not sacrifice.’ For I came not to call the righteous, but sinners.” Matthew 9:11-13 
For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost. Luke 19:10 
The Best Christmas Pageant Ever provides an inside-out look at the nativity story, and captures best why Christ came in the first place.

It is told from the "inside" Christian perspective, a Christian perspective with varying degrees of self-righteousness. That is some characters are presented as more self-righteous than others. But many characters are a bit blind. They have never thought of the gospel as being for the Herdmans. They see themselves as better--significantly better--than those Herdmans!

As if God's grace wouldn't dare include the Herdmans. Jesus die for the Herdmans????? You've got to be kidding, right???? Not them, Lord! Why, that's ridiculous. But the truth is, it's ridiculous for God to save any one of us. None of us--not one of us--merits God's salvation: his mercy and grace.

I liked seeing the Christmas story from a new angle.
They knew that Christmas was Jesus' birthday, but everything else was news to them--the shepherds, the Wise Men, the star, the stable, the crowded inn. It was hard to believe. At least, it was hard for me to believe--Alice Wendleken said she didn't have any trouble believing it. "How would they find out about the Christmas story?" she said. "They don't even know what a Bible is." (55) 
I couldn't believe it. Among other things, the Herdmans were famous for never sitting still and never paying attention to anyone--teachers, parents (their own or anybody else's), the truant officer, the police--yet here they were, eyes glued on my mother and taking in every word. (59) 
When we got home my father wanted to hear all about it. "Well," Mother said, "just suppose you had never heard the Christmas story, and didn't know anything about it, and then somebody told it to you. What would you think?" (68)



© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Week in Review #47


Bible reading

NASB 95 
  • Isaiah 7-66
  • Jeremiah
  • Lamentations
  • Ezekiel 1-12

KJV
  • Psalms 79-109
  • 1 Kings
  • 2 Kings
  • Song of Songs
  • Ecclesiastes
  • Ezra
  • Nehemiah
  • Esther
  • Isaiah 1-39
NASB 77
  • Job
  • Psalms 1-71



© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

76. Everyday Gospel: Christmas


76. Everyday Gospel: Christmas Devotional. Paul David Tripp. 2025. 55 pages. [Source: Review copy] [4 stars, advent, Christmas devotional]

First sentence: I love Christmas.

Paul David Tripp has a devotional, Everyday Gospel. I read and reviewed it last year, I believe. (Whatever year it released is when I read it. I enjoyed it. I was happy to recommend it. I don't always recommend devotionals, mind you.) He has selected twenty-five readings to count down to Christmas that cover the WHOLE gospel story--with readings that cover Genesis to Revelation. (To clarify, there is not a reading from EVERY book of the Bible. But the readings cover ALL the highlights from both testaments so that if one was reading this one could get a grasp of the 'big picture' of what the Bible is about. It would be an appetizer perhaps for further exploration. 

Each reading and accompanying devotion POINTS TO CHRIST. It was compiled to help FAMILIES have a resource to point their children of all ages to JESUS AS THE REASON FOR THE SEASON. Less stuff, more Christ. 

Each devotion has a Scripture to be read, a devotion, a reflection with a question or two, and a prayer. There is substance in this one. IT is short. I'm not 100% convinced that you need this one in addition to Everyday Gospel--the 365 day devotional, but it is a nice bonus. Perhaps one could try this one and if they enjoy go out and seek the year-long devotional. 

© Becky Laney of Operation Actually Read Bible