Book: "The Foolishness of God"
April/06/2010 Filed in: Friends
A message from some friends of mine:
Friends,
Many of you recently saw András Visky’s play “I Killed My Mother” in Chicago. A few days before the play’s opening, a book of stories by András’ father, Ferenc Visky, was published in English for the first time under the title, “The Foolishness of God”.
The book can be purchased at cost (no one's making any profit here) from www.Lulu.com at the link below. And from now until April 30, if you enter the code ‘SHOWERS’ at the checkout you will receive a 10% discount on your order.
If you like the book, please spread the word!
Sha & Chase
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The Foolishness of God
by Ferenc Visky
“In prison,” said Ferenc Visky, echoing Bonhoeffer, “I learned to laugh.” To laugh, and to hold on to God, wrestling with Him for a sign. In stories he would sometimes tell of his years in the Communist prisons of 1950’s Romania and of his friends there, especially Richard Wurmbrand, “Feri bácsi” (as he was commonly known) spoke both of the extreme darkness of that time and of how God was present in the darkness to comfort and even to bring laughter. “The madness of the world,” says the author, “including that of the [then] Soviet system, can only be dispelled by the foolishness of God.”
You can go see it at http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/the-foolishness-of-god/6346506
Friends,
Many of you recently saw András Visky’s play “I Killed My Mother” in Chicago. A few days before the play’s opening, a book of stories by András’ father, Ferenc Visky, was published in English for the first time under the title, “The Foolishness of God”.
The book can be purchased at cost (no one's making any profit here) from www.Lulu.com at the link below. And from now until April 30, if you enter the code ‘SHOWERS’ at the checkout you will receive a 10% discount on your order.
If you like the book, please spread the word!
Sha & Chase
--------------------
The Foolishness of God
by Ferenc Visky
“In prison,” said Ferenc Visky, echoing Bonhoeffer, “I learned to laugh.” To laugh, and to hold on to God, wrestling with Him for a sign. In stories he would sometimes tell of his years in the Communist prisons of 1950’s Romania and of his friends there, especially Richard Wurmbrand, “Feri bácsi” (as he was commonly known) spoke both of the extreme darkness of that time and of how God was present in the darkness to comfort and even to bring laughter. “The madness of the world,” says the author, “including that of the [then] Soviet system, can only be dispelled by the foolishness of God.”
You can go see it at http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/the-foolishness-of-god/6346506