Mark in 40 Days

Mark in 40 Days

LENT IS ALMOST UPON US, starting 9th March this year: are you ready? Are your customers ready? As always, there’s a lot of material out there, but here’s one you may have missed: Mark in 40 Days, from St Mark’s Press. St Mark’s Press are a relatively new Christian publisher based in Bedfordshire, last featured here for Christian Aid Week 2010: Give as you sell with St Mark’s Press.

Mark in 40 Days is written by Simon and Chris Danes: Simon is the director of St Mark’s Press and Chris, his older brother, is a writer and broadcaster, perhaps best known for his audioblog on bipolar disorder for the BBC’s You and Yours. Both Simon and Chris are former teachers and theology graduates from Oxford who have also had plenty of experience of adult education as well as writing books together on Christianity for young people. Over to Simon:

I don’t like blowing my own trumpet, but we’re very pleased with the way Mark in 40 Days has turned out. It’s a Bible study course, with comments and daily reflections, but it also introduces readers to what New Testament scholars have said about the Gospel. I’d hesitate to say it’s a similar sort of thing to the Daily Study Bible – I can’t claim to have Barclay’s brilliance! – but it’s that sort of style: both devotional and informative, you know the sort of thing.

St Mark’s Press are emerging as a key publisher of Barclay’s backlist with The Gospels and Acts (two volumes) and The Mind of St Paul already in print and a further three titles planned this year. The Barclay family are keen for them to publish more still, so a programme is beginning to be put together. Back to Simon:

It’s early days yet as we have to get the rights issues finalised and that can take time. We’ll let people know as soon as we can what the new titles are going to be. It’s likely that we’ll do two of Barclay’s books on the New Testament and one of his prayer books in 2011; we’d be interested in hearing from retailers if they have any preferences: whether they’d like more New Testament studies or more books of prayers, or whether they have favourite titles that they’d like to see.

The books that are out at the moment are doing well. The Gospels and Acts is in two volumes: the first covers Matthew, Mark and Luke and the second’s on John and Acts. It was one of the last things Barclay wrote before his death and it’s got a strong claim to be the best. They’re more detailed than the Daily Study Bible but every bit as good; I always find the depth of Barclay’s knowledge and his ability to put things across absolutely astonishing. An incredibly learned and wise man. The Mind of St Paul is an older and shorter work but it’s still very good; it’s an introduction to themes in Paul’s thought and, as usual, is accessible and readable.

All St Mark’s Press books are available direct (with good discounts!) or through STL, Gardners or Bertrams. Contact details and full bibliographic info as follows:

The Gospels and Acts: John and Acts
William Barclay
St Mark’s Press, 2010
ISBN 9781907062070
£14.95 

The Mind of St Paul
William Barclay
St Mark’s Press, 2010
ISBN 9781907062087
£11.95

Mark in 40 Days
Simon and Chris Danes
St Mark’s Press, January 2011
ISBN 9781907062117
£9.95, paperback

The Gospels and Acts: Matthew, Mark and Luke
William Barclay
St Mark’s Press, 2010
ISBN 9781907062063
£14.95

Contact Details:

St Mark’s Press
20 Close Road
Pavenham MK43 7PP

01234 824861 / 077907 13872
info AT stmarkspress.com [email address split to resist spambots]
www.stmarkspress.com

LENT is upon us. What will you be giving up — or giving away? What, if anything, does Lent mean to you? What is your church doing — or stopping doing — for Lent this year?

Traditionally, of course, Lent has been seen as a time for giving things up, for travelling, metaphorically, with Jesus into the wilderness, for resisting temptation, for listening for the voice of God’s Spirit whispering to us as we take time out.

But how many of us can actually do that, take time out in Lent? Instead of allowing us to give things up or give us a little breathing space, churches seem to see Lent as a time to demand more: Lent groups spring up everywhere; clergy and Lent group leaders beat themselves up in the attempt to drum up support and encourage participation, losing themselves in a bewildering wilderness of planning and organisation… and somewhere outside of all our frenetic activity, the wind howls in frustration, unable to drive us out into the desert because we’ve battened down the hatches and locked ourselves in…

Love Life Live Lent

Love Life Live Lent

One way to break free that I’ve taken a liking to is the Church of England’s Love Life Live Lent campaign — as they say on the website, Love Life Live Lent is more than a booklet, more than a website: it’s a movement. And it’s a movement away from ourselves and our tendency to churchify everything — including Jesus himself: let’s say no to Christ churchified! — and to take our faith into our communities instead.

Love Life Live Lent Family Book

Love Life Live Lent Family Book

There are two booklets (only £1 each, from Church House Publishing) available to support the movement: the Love Life Live Lent: Adult & Youth Version (ISBN 9780715141762) and Love Life Live Lent: For Kids (ISBN 9780715141793) as well as a Love Life Live Lent: Family Book (ISBN 9780715141823, £4.99) which, alongside the suggested daily actions in the booklets, includes family activities, recipes and prayers.

All in all, Love Life Live Lent is a fantastic resource that — if we allow it to — will get us out of the rut of regular church activities and out into the wild wilderness of our communities and neighbourhoods where we’ll find the Holy Spirit already at work, doing his thing transforming lives without all the religious paraphernalia we’re so fond of piling up on top of people.

And finally: you’ll find Love Life Live Lent on Facebook and Twitter too — so even when you’re tied to your desk with your computer, you can still break free for a moment or two. This year, don’t endure Lent: enjoy it; and be prepared for God’s Spirit to take you places you weren’t expecting (says he, suddenly realising how risky saying something like that can be…).

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