McCain chooses Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin for V.P.
E-MAIL NEWSLETTERS







There was an error processing this request. We cannot subscribe you to newsletters at this time. Please contact technical support with details.
Featured Sponsors
Blogs Sponsorship

About Mitali Perkins

Mitali Perkins is the author of Ambassador Families: Equipping Your Kids to Engage Popular Culture (Brazos Press). She studied Political Science at Stanford University and Public Policy at U.C. Berkeley, and has written for Christianity Today, Discipleship Journal, Campus Life, With, Prism, War Cry, U.S. Catholic, and other periodicals. Mitali also writes fiction for young readers, including Monsoon Summer (Random House), The Not-So-Star-Spangled Life of Sunita Sen (Little Brown), Rickshaw Girl (Charlesbridge), and the First Daughter books (Dutton). She lives in Massachusetts with her husband and twin sons.

Search The Bible   
Advanced Search
<< >>

Mitali Perkins

Author

Saturday, June 21, 2008

THE ATTENTIVE LIFE by Leighton Ford

I was nervous. For the first time in my life, I'd been invited to an exclusive gathering of evangelical executives. The renowned Christian leader Dr. Leighton Ford was the guest speaker, and my assignment was to sit in the back of the room and take notes for my absent boss. 

I was young then, a new follower of Jesus, the only brown face in the room, and the only woman, but already well-attuned to the revelatory nuances of non-verbals. In fact, in some evangelical settings, I struggled with feeling overlooked and invisible. 

That's why it shocked me to note Dr. Ford's eyes seeking mine throughout his talk. He was intently concentrating on his message, but his gaze repeatedly focused on me as though I were the most important member of his audience. It was as if his subconscious was trained to attend to the weakest person in the room. A lot like God, I found myself thinking.

Two decades later, I'm loving THE ATTENTIVE LIFE (IVP, May 2008). Dr. Ford uses the liturgical hours (vigils, lauds, prime, terce, sext, none, vespers, and compline) to inspire reflection on the stages of life, and weaves in stories and poems to make this a perfect summer devotional read. In a culture ensnared by worry and hurry, this book can equip us with the sturdy resistance we need for spiritual health.

Pay attention to God, Dr. Ford says, because God pays attention to you. And I, for one, believe him, thanks to a time when a "powerful" Christian leader helped a young, insecure listener appreciate the grace of divine attention.
  • Email
  • Print
  • Discuss
Most Recent User Comments