This seasons’ best-selling Vision Forum items include The League of Grateful Sons, Jonathan Park, and an important, groundbreaking new book from Anna Sophia and Elizabeth Botkin, So Much More: The Remarkable Influence of Visionary Daughters on the Kingdom of God.
So Much More smashes stereotypes of the Left and Right. In the spirit of the principle of semper reformanda, So Much More is a reflection of the current great Holy Spirit work of Christ-focused family revival where a people are being made ready for the Lord as the hearts of children are turned to their parents and parents to their children — all this, in the midst of a paganism-loving, saltless Christianity which has all but embraced the worst vision of womanhood in the name of cultural relevancy and personal rights.
So Much More recaptures definitions of biblical womanhood which have been under attack by feminist sabateurs within the camp of the Faithful. It presents a forward-thinking, distinctively biblical vision of Christian womanhood which transcends time and culture. It adds further clarity in answering the question: “what’s a girl to do?” Destined to be despised by feminists, post-moderns, and neo-barthian anti-patriarchs; but beloved of those who cherish the biblical ideal of womanhood in all of its beauty and influence, So Much More is the kind of literature we should be placing in the hands of our noble daughters. Within the pages of this book, girls will discover practical, biblical solutions for the young woman who wants to do so much more than just “survive” in a savagely feministic, anti-Christian culture. Readers will find the answers a girl is not likely to get from her church youth group, her peers, or her culture
Of So Much More, Jennie Chancey writes:
You hold in your hands a rare gem, the fruit of godly parenting, biblical mentoring, and thoroughly scriptural teaching. Its vision is one that should awaken every daughter to the calling she has to advance the kingdom of God. Page after page, I laughed, rejoiced, wept, and felt “hallelujahs!” rising in my throat. Praise the Lord for such a book! —Jennie Chancey