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John Hagee books

Deacon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I’ve been given the title of Librarian for a church library that has been unmanaged for a while.
Just the type of job I dreamed of doing when I was younger.

Last Sunday a gent dropped off quite a few books, many by John Hagee.

Jerusalem Countdown
The Revelation of Truth
Final Dawn over Jerusalem
Attack on America
Earth's Final Moments
Your Guide to the Apocalypse
Finding the Way of God in A Crazy Mixed up World
and a Hagee Prophecy Study Bible NKJV

They're not quite what I want in the church library.



Anyone want them?

RobIMG_1087.jpeg
 
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Reynolds

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I’ve been given the title of Librarian for a church library that has been unmanaged for a while.
Just the type of job I dreamed of doing when I was younger.

Last Sunday a gent dropped off quite a few books, many by John Hagee.

Jerusalem Countdown
The Revelation of Truth
Final Dawn over Jerusalem
Attack on America
Earth's Final Moments
Your Guide to the Apocalypse
Finding the Way of God in A Crazy Mixed up World
and a Hagee Prophecy Study Bible NKJV

They're not quite what I want in the church library.



Anyone want them?

RobView attachment 10550
I will pass. I quit listening to him when he said Jews have a path to salvation other than Jesus.
 

JesusFan

Well-Known Member
I’ve been given the title of Librarian for a church library that has been unmanaged for a while.
Just the type of job I dreamed of doing when I was younger.

Last Sunday a gent dropped off quite a few books, many by John Hagee.

Jerusalem Countdown
The Revelation of Truth
Final Dawn over Jerusalem
Attack on America
Earth's Final Moments
Your Guide to the Apocalypse
Finding the Way of God in A Crazy Mixed up World
and a Hagee Prophecy Study Bible NKJV

They're not quite what I want in the church library.



Anyone want them?

RobView attachment 10550
Best advice would be to thank them and ask them to take them back home
 

Van

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
They're not quite what I want in the church library.

I had not considered what I would want in a church library, certainly nothing divisive or advocating doctrines not believed to be valid according to the church's doctrinal statement.

On the other hand, one of my prior Pastor's gave me a pretty good book, but it contained some sour notes, so compromise seems necessitated by reality.

Biblical commentary can be enlightening, but can also push mistaken views. As Elders, the leadership should have knowledge of the content of the books being provided to the congregation, and weed out those that stray from the narrow path provided by God's word.
 

Deacon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
They're not quite what I want in the church library.

I had not considered what I would want in a church library, certainly nothing divisive or advocating doctrines not believed to be valid according to the church's doctrinal statement.

I'm new to the church, we began attending in October.
Their doctrinal statement hits the basics and doesn't stray into the secondary issues.

The proposed idea is to begin a home school co-op at the church.
With this in mind, they were given a sum of money to purchase new books.
Soon after their purchase they approached me (my wife and I attend one of their small groups and knew I enjoyed reading).

The books they purchased are everything (and more) that I read to my kids... Dr. Seuss, Little House, Mike Mulligan's Steam Shovel, as well as various Science books and Encyclopedias, quite a few are faith oriented... love the title of some, like the Dead Sea Squirrel's, but my favorite title is The Ology Book.

I wrote up broad objectives for the Children and Adults:
To cultivate a space of wisdom, exploration, and imagination, centered on the truth of Scripture and the Lordship of Christ.
To serve as a reservoir of valuable theological resources for a student, a teacher, a leader, or a researcher of Scripture.


And provided an outline of what I want in the library:

The library will include:
  • Theological Works: Biblical theology, commentary, instruction, doctrine, church history, apologetics, etc.
  • Christian Living & Spiritual Formation Literature: Books that interact with family dynamics, politics, finance, science, the arts, social issues, from a biblical worldview.
  • Fiction & Classic Literature: Include works that incorporate or encourage exploration of Christian themes, even if not explicitly Christian
  • Children’s & Young Adult Books: Age-appropriate, biblically grounded, and imaginatively rich (popular series, graphic novels, comics, joke books, sports, etc)
We're going to drop the Dewey Decimal System and work with broader categories, alphabetizing by author.
I'm working on an age-differentiated, color-coded identification for children's books.

We are using a General Honor System Lending Policy with old-fashioned library cards in each book's back pocket.

I'm considering an unfiltered, "Take a Book, Leave a Book" section for popular books that people might read that might not pass my sniff test. No library stamp or check-out needed...if you're interested take it.

~~~~~~~

I found only a few interesting books among the few thousand or so in their old, current collection.

One was Richard Weymouth's, The Resultant Text (1892), in fair condition with brittle pages. Weymouth compared a great variety of composite texts as well as Vaticanus, Sinaiticus, and other uncials that earlier editors did not have available.
His text was one of the three comparative texts used in the first edition of Eberhard Nestle's Greek New Testament (1898).

Anyway... looks like I'll be recycling Hagee's books.

Rob
 
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