Authors-Anna Sofia and Elizabeth Botkin
Publisher- The Vision Forum Press
ISBN-13 978-0-9755263-8-5
10-0-9755263-8-3
This book was written by two young sisters aged seventeen and nineteen. They live with their parents on a ranch in New Zealand but were born in the USA. They write as Christian young women mainly to other young women. They have observed the decline of western civilization and its effects, particularly upon young unmarried women and the family. Their aim in this book is to encourage young Christian women to wage war on the world and sin and to win. It is not a ‘Christian teenage survival guide’. These sister authors focus on how young women can rise above the God hating culture of today and change it for the better. So many face problems of broken homes, they have to pass through politically correct college courses. There are issues of rampant feminism rammed down their throats with the manifold confusions which issue from its doctrines. Often the church appears to be irrelevant and mothers are confused and fathers often absent. In such an atmosphere many girls feel unloved and without hope for the future. This book provides a vision from a biblical perspective. It is not idealistic but well written and realistic. It sets forth practical solutions for the young woman who wants to glorify God with her life and in time be married and have a family which will be Christian not in name only but in truth. The book, whilst written mainly for young women should be read by fathers also. Chapter headings will help to point the way. “Daughters, Fathers and the Crisis.” “Daughters, Fathers and Virtuous Womanhood”. “Daughters, Fathers and Their Enemies”. “Daughters, Fathers and Marriage”. “Daughters, Fathers and Family Dynamics”. These chapters and the many others make up a book which should be read by every teenage girl in the churches and by parents as well. There is a vibrant commitment to Biblical values in this book which is all the more refreshing in that it comes from the pens of two young women who are proving in their own lives the reality of that of which they write.