Why did someone try to burn down EPA CID agent Stacey Sanderson's apartment ... with her in it? Will her partner Chance McPherson ever see her as his equal? Or could there be darkness in his past that is haunting him?
This blog was formally titled Faith, Facts and Fiction. The focus is on dealing with the Christian Faith in both Facts (Biblical Teaching, Apologetics) and Fiction (or in other words, the arts including music, novels, and visual arts.) Posts will include interviews and reviews.
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
BOOK REVIEW - "GAZING INTO DARKNESS" (QUEEN CITY HEROES, BOOK 1) BY HEIDI GLICK
Why did someone try to burn down EPA CID agent Stacey Sanderson's apartment ... with her in it? Will her partner Chance McPherson ever see her as his equal? Or could there be darkness in his past that is haunting him?
Monday, June 2, 2025
'25 SUMMER READING LIST, #1 - "ANOTHER GOSPEL" BY ALISA CHILDERS
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
BOOK REVIEW - INCLUDING THE STRANGER: FOREIGNERS IN THE EARLY PROPHETS
Is Yahweh, the God of the Bible, a vengeful, violent despot who despises the majority of mankind? Or is inclusion or exclusion of individuals based not on ethnicity but on whether they follow and submit to Yahweh?
David Firth deals with this issue in Including The Stranger: Foreigners in the Former Prophets, part of the New Studies In Biblical Theology series. His view is that foreigners who are obedient to Yahweh are included with His people, such as Rahab, the Gibeonites, and Namaan (and theorizes that Caleb the son of Jephuneh, the Kenazite, was not Jewish). Likewise, Israelites who are disobedient are treated as foreigners (e.g. Achan) and sometimes Israelites are treated like foreigners by fellow-Israelites (such as the virgin girls kidnapped by the Benjaminites).
Some may wonder what is meant by "The Former Prophets." The OT canon we normally use are divided into the Law, the Historical Books, the Poetic Books, and the Prophetic books, sub-divided by the major and minor prophets (designated not by importance but by book length). However, the Jewish canon divides those same books into the Law, the Prophets, and the Writings (often referred to as Psalms, which is the first book of that section), with the Prophets divided by Early prophets and later prophets. The Early Prophets include Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings (the Jews did not divide the books of Samuel and Kings).
This is the seventh book I've read in this series. Some books are ones that inspire me; others are ones that leave me more knowledgeable on the subject dealt with. Personally, I would consider this one of the latter. I feel richer intellectually for reading this, but it hasn't really effected my daily life like some of the others did.
Thursday, June 9, 2022
INTERVIEW WITH MARK MIRZA OF COMMON THREAD MINISTRIES
JR: Welcome to the blog, Mark. How did you come to Christ, and how did God lead you to starting Common Thread Ministries?
MM: I accepted Christ when I was 7 years old. My parents were lay-folks who helped expand a fledgling church just outside of San Francisco, and the need for a savior captured me. I am still, an unashamed San Francisco Giants fan, which might say more about myself than I want to. But, that’s life.
Common Thread Ministries came into being as a result of a lunch I had with a colleague when I was in the A & D community (I worked with Architects and Interior Designers as their lighting rep). He and I wanted to start a Bible study with men and women from the different disciplines in our industry. As we were walking back across the street (J-Walking, as I recall), I asked him, “Michael, what is the Common Thread between all of us who will join this Bible study?” Thus, the ministry title was cast.
Interestingly enough, the prayer side of the ministry came about a few years later. I DID NOT get involved with prayer because I was a “Holy-Guy.” I took over the prayer position in our Sunday School class because I was tired of the inefficiency in the way it was handled. I remember thinking “I’m gonna bring my business acumen into this and FIX IT!” Little did I know, God had another idea up His sleeve.
A few years later, in 2006, Dr. Charles Stanley started the Sons of Thunder, a men’s prayer ministry, and, no, he didn’t name it that because of James & John. He was asked in an interview around Mid-2006 why he named it Sons of Thunder, and he said something I have never forgotten, and I have found to be true everywhere I go. He said, “When men pray, it sounds like thunder going up to heaven.” So, Dr. Stanley started Sons of Thunder and after a few weeks I was the lay leader of it, and remained so for the next 4 ½ years when I went out on my own to lead my own prayer ministry.
JR: I was impressed by all the items on your web-page, such as the pastor's page, Washington Encouragement, and Pray All Year. Could you tell us about those ministries, and any other on your heart.
MM: The mission of Common Thread Ministries is to “Rebuild the Foundations of Prayer.” And my efforts of everything I do, is to that end.
In DC, I pray with BOTH sides of the aisle, because I’m not there to fix the way anyone thinks, I’m simply there to bear their burdens. I pray with Congressmen/women, Senators, staffers, visitors and janitors. I pray in the privacy of their offices and in the middle of the street where dozens of people are walking by us.
Pastors are people with usually NO ONE to pray with them, so I do about 60 prayer conference calls per week, mainly with pastors, allowing me to pour into their lives. I would add that my prayer calls ALL BEGIN with praise. I believe it is the most ignored aspect of prayer. See https://markmirza.com/most-ignored-prayer/ -- My prayer focus is “engaging” people in doing prayer with them. I’m not interested in putting out “The 12 Most Important Prayers…” and etc. I want to see men and women DOING prayer and making commitments to do prayer, well, forever.
Most of my prayer calls have been going on for 5-6 years, every week. It’s actually my way of discipling men and women. In fact my new business card says, not only “Author” but it also says “Pray-er Discipleship” meaning, I disciple pray-ers. I disciple men and women who want to pray.
JR: A lot of my interviews are with novelists, and while I didn't expect it to, this one will fall into that category. Would you like to tell us about Divided Nation?
MM: I have found that writing novels has become a great way for me teach on prayer. In fact, for a little longer, as a result of Covid-19, ALL MY NOVELS are free at https://MarkMirza.com/FREE-Digital -- The novel you are referencing, Divided Nation was my 2nd political novel. However, in ALL my novels, you have no idea who the Democrat or the Republican is, because that’s not the focus.
This novel takes place 5 years after Covid-19, when Christians accidentally spread the next pandemic. The book is a sobering look at what persecution could look like for Christians in the USA (real persecution). I explore how Paul handled persecution, both dishing it out, and taking it. Believe me, my take is not the typical Left Behind view. One of the chapters is a modernization of My great grandmother’s martyrdom, at the hands of non-Christians.
My first political novel is Divided Together and it is a challenging view of how we, in the church deal with our friends who vote differently than we do. The idea is that our unity is in Christ, not the ballot box. This story came from a Congressman who sat with me and told me about a friend of his, in his church, who, after church came up to him and started yelling at him for his politics. It bothered me, and that novel was the result.
JR: One thing that impressed me was hearing you speak at a Speechless Prayer Conference in Georgia, probably over a decade ago now. You mentioned that you don't pray for healing of those who are sick unless the Spirit directs you. Could you mention your rationale for that?
MM: And I still don’t, Jeff. Not because I do not believe in miraculous healing, I have prayed for healing and watched them get healed. My rational comes from a simple reading of scripture. Before, I go further, I pray with men and women all the time who pray for miraculous healing, because of their read on scripture, and I never challenge them, I simply pray for the same issue, if the Lord leads me to, the way I think scripture says, and then, if that pray-er wants to talk to me afterwards about it, I’ll dialogue with them. But again, just like when I am in DC, I am not here to “fix” the way anyone thinks (Hint: I couldn’t even if I wanted to).
Perhaps, it’s better to start on the other side of the argument to explain my position. To pray for healing, most people use Isaiah 53:5 & 1 Peter 2:24: both passages say, “By His stripes you were healed.” As I talk with people, I get it, that was the way they were taught, by their pastor, their mama, by someone they trust. And personally, I’m not going to tell them they are wrong. However, it seems to me, the reasons those two passages were chosen to relate to physical healing was because of a 4 letter word, in English, “WERE.” You see, if you read the verses before and after the two passages it is clearly talking about spiritual healing, not physical healing. Most people have never read the passages though, they have just taken for granted what they were taught.
Let me tell you what I think happened, the same people who push those verse on television (and before that in large crusades) would combine the “By His stripes you were healed,” passage with the James 5 passage to tell their congregants, “That if YOU HAVE ENOUGH faith, you will be healed when I pray for you.” There is a problem with that though, when you look at James 5:15-16, the passage is clear, the one who is to have the faith IS NOT THE ONE BEING PRAYED FOR, BUT THE ONE DOING THE PRAYING. Look, there are a lot of people who pray this way because its what they were taught, They ARE NOT doing it out of malice. But, I suspect a lot of people combine these verses because if the person isn’t healed, it ain’t the fault of the pray-er.
Again, I am all about miraculous physical healing. I’ll never forget the woman who had pain in her feet, I prayed for healing and 6 months later, she still had no pain, Praise the Lord. So, unless I get a sense from the Lord, I do not pray for healing. But if I get a sense from the Lord, I pray with the power of Psalm 5:3, I lay the request before the Lord and watch expectantly for my prayer to be answered the way I prayed it, the way He laid it on my heart, according to the desire of my heart (ref: Psalm 37:4).
JR: We are definitely living in interesting times, with COVID, the Ukraine invasion, the breaking news items that inspired your novel, and the like. How should a Christian be prepared for the tribulation and persecution I believe are coming?
MM: First, we need to accept that it is coming. If for no other reason that because Jesus told us in a number of places, “You will face persecution.” I fear the reason so many people are pre-trib, is because they do not want to go thru persecution. Personally, I don’t take a stand, Pre-trib, Mid-trib, Post-trib. The late Dr. Walter Martin used to say, “Pre-trib, Mid-trib, Post-trib, it’s all a bunch of tribulation anyway, men and women are dying and going to hell and we’re arguing about nothing!”
Let’s go back to Jesus’ words, He told us how bad things would be when He returns. He said they would be as bad as it was in Noah’s day (Matthew 24:37). Do we actually think, life will be “hunky-dory” Jesus will return and THEN things will get bad? If that’s true, then He owes an apology to Iran, North Korea, China, and much of Africa where Christians are being violently persecuted.
You asked how we can be prepared, as with most Christian principles, they are much too simple for most people. I think the way we can be ready is to start living as if, THIS IS NOT OUR HOME! Recognizing that we are merely sojourners on earth would satisfy a lot of issues in Christendom.
JR: Thank you for your time. How do we find your web-site I mentioned? Any other news with Common Thread Ministries you'd like to share?
MM: Please feel free to sign up for my emails. Jeff, you and your wife can attest to the fact that I am VERY CAREFUL about how many emails I send out. People can sign up at: https://MarkMirza.com/email
Thanks for the opportunity to participate in this interview.
Friday, February 4, 2022
DO WE HAVE OUR WELCOME MATS OUT? - A STUDY ON ROMANS 14 PART 4 OF 11
Statue of Meriwether Lewis meeting William Clark, Falls of Ohio State Park, Clarksville, IN |
Are we receptive to others like we should be?
I consider Romans 14 to be the key manifesto on Christian Liberty, but we need to remember why we have liberty as a believer. Is it about us? Or about others?
You may remember my list of translations of Romans 14:1. The Jubilee Bible 2000 renders this as "Bear with one who is sick in the faith...", but the others I listed start with words like "Receive," Accept," and "Welcome."
As we start in this study, it is important to realize that we're talking about the Church. Of course, a smart aleck (like myself) would ask if I meant the local church or the universal church. And of course, I'd answer that question, "Yes."
Naturally, the focus is on the local church. Paul is writing to the Church in Rome. If they have a fellow believer from another city visit, then they are included. Keep in mind, though, that the first nine of Paul's letters listed were written specifically to churches, not to individuals in the church. Some were to be shared, like he asked the Colossians to do with Laodicea, but the focus is more centralized.
It is obvious that we're living in a different context. There were no denominations in Paul's days. There were the beginnings of movements like the Ebionites (some of which were Judaizers) and the Gnostics (not unlike today's New Age movement), but the sects were those who departed from the faith. The Reformers and several of our denominations nowadays are the opposite: they start a new movement because they are in an environment of error and seek to return to the safe harbors of Scripture. Also, the only reason a 1st century believer would stop attending one local fellowship and start attending another was solely because of a physical move: worship styles or children ministries or celebrity preachers weren't an issue back then.
Let's go back to the context. In the seven verses preceding Romans 14, we see an emphasis on loving one another and walking in the light. The former one is a theme throughout the New Testament, with Jesus, Paul, Peter, and John (plus the author of Hebrews, should you think it's not Paul) directly saying we're to love one another and James and Jude implying that command.
I may have said this before (maybe even previously in this study), but Christians tend to unite with those they should be divided from and divided from those they should be united with. How do we know? Are they fellow believers? Do they believe Jesus is the Christ/Messiah, God come in the flesh, Savior of the World, who died for our sins and rose again bodily the third day? Do they believe that salvation is a gift of God, not wages we earn by good behavior, and that it is by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone? Are they seeking to please Him and not themselves in how they live, and are they displaying the fruits of the Spirit? If so, they're probably a fellow believer and you are to welcome them.
Sunday, December 26, 2021
BOOK REVIEW - WHEN FAITH IS FORBIDDEN BY TODD NETTLETON
This is a MUST read book for Christians. Todd Nettleton leads you on a forty day journey interviewing Christians who live in countries where their government and/or community are not happy with them being Christians.
In the West, we view religious persecution as something that happens over there in other parts of the world, but will not happen here, and if it does, we have no one to blame but ourselves for those negative, unwanted circumstances. The believers we meet in this book, on the other hand, see persecution as a natural consequence for faith and view suffering for Jesus Christ as an honor. One lady in the book referred to her time in prison, for example, as "A wonderful time." What causes people to have this mindset?
Todd's stories are nice and short, and this book is great for a devotional. After the story, he challenges the reader to examine where their faith is on certain topics.
I've read over 20 non-fiction books and more than two dozen novels this year (2021), and if you asked me to recommend one book, this would be the one.