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Breaking the Idols of Your Heart is a unique approach to an important
Bible book. We want to encourage our readers to read and study Ecclesiastes. It
is a world and life view book that enables us to understand the importance of a
biblically Reformed world view and how to distinguished non-Christian thinking
“under the sun,” to Christian thinking “above the sun.”
This book possesses high quality, depth, and practicality, as do Allender and
Longman’s other writings. I am impressed with its sound biblical approach, its
contemporary handling of Scripture, and its faithfulness in interpreting and
applying the Word. Both writers have unusual insights into the postmodern mind
because of their sound biblical and theological ability to bring the Scripture
to bear on our setting.
Breaking the Idols of Your Heart has a message for each of the
generations in our culture, but especially for the busters (and the younger
boomers and older millennials who border each end of the buster generation). We
have seen the younger generations, especially since the 1960s, chase one thing
after another to try to bring meaning to very frustrated, confused, and lonely
lives. They chase after power and control, but come up empty. They chase after
relationships, but are not satisfied. They chase after pleasure, but find
meaninglessness. They chase after spirituality (as the younger generation is
definitely doing),and finally after immortality. The problem is that chasing
after these things is like chasing after the wind. “Hey, that sounds familiar,”
you say. Indeed, it is the message of Ecclesiastes.
Breaking the Idols of Your Heart is actually a topical study of
Ecclesiastes set in a contemporary narrative. Noah Adamson, the main character,
is a young businessman who is chasing after the wrong things to find meaning and
to deal with problems that have followed him into adulthood. His wife, Joan,
while more passive, is also searching for meaning. Though they profess to be
Christians their lives are generally empty because they are pursuing things that
cannot fulfill. Through each episode in the book, the reader will identify with
the feelings and experiences of the characters.
Like Acts 17 in the New Testament, Ecclesiastes is one of the most
contemporary books in the Bible. Pagans are not the only ones who seek meaning
through vain pursuits; Christians fall into the same trap. We chase after
relationships and find that, while we are relational, relationships wrongly
sought after leave us empty. God intends us to exercise self-control, but trying
to be in total control doesn’t satisfy either. He made us to work, but work
motivated by envy becomes an idol and also leaves us unfulfilled. The message of
Ecclesiastes, illustrated so powerfully in this book, speaks to good and
necessary things in life that can actually cause us deep emptiness and
meaninglessness when we elevate them above their rightful place. Today, few
people—even Christians—understand how to keep things in their rightful place.
Breaking the Idols of Your Heart helps us see that if we replace God’s
purpose with any other purpose we will not be satisfied. The only way to
experience meaning and fulfillment is to seek a life with God through Jesus
Christ at the center. The message of Ecclesiastes and consequently Breaking
the Idols of Your Heart is that we can live “under the sun” with a sinfully
shortsighted perspective, or we can live “above the sun” and see how God is the
answer to all that we long for in life. This book reminds us of the reality that
St. Augustine expressed: our hearts are restless until they find rest in God. I
am intrigued by the authors’ development of that message and challenged to work
out a strategy to teach this to rising generations.
Buy, read, discuss, and teach this book. Follow carefully the development of
a Christian mind with a world and life view perspective and you will be blessed
far beyond your expectations.
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