The Healing Jar
Book
What if you have waited to find love only to be rejected when it finally comes? Lenore Lapp is an...
Christian Fiction Amish Fiction Romance
ODY-C Coloring and Activity Book
Christian Ward and Matt Fraction
Book
THE HEAVIEST TRIP IS THE ONE BACK HOME. Lose yourself in an epic twenty-six centuries in the making....
JULIA PRIMA (Roma Nova #8)
Book
“You should have trusted me. You should have given me a choice.” AD 370, Roman frontier...
Historical Fiction
When Twilight Breaks
Book
Munich, 1938. Evelyn Brand is an American foreign correspondent as determined to prove her worth in...
Romance World War 2 Germany Nazi Adult Fiction Christian Fiction
Until Leaves Fall in Paris
Book
As the Nazis march toward Paris in 1940, American ballerina Lucie Girard buys her favorite...
Christian Fiction Romance HIstorical Fiction Historical Romance Nazi Germany
An Inconvenient Beauty
Book
Griffith, Duke of Riverton, likes order, logic, and control, so he naturally applies this rational...
christian fiction historical fiction romance regency romance
The Christmas Swap
Book
All Emma Daley wants this holiday season is a white Christmas. But the young teacher and struggling...
Christian Fiction Fiction Holiday Christmas Romance Contemporary Romance
Half a Creature from the Sea: A Life in Stories
Book
An anthology of dark, powerful and moving short stories from a master storyteller and Hans Christian...
The Berenstain Bears Bless Our Pets
Book
In the newest Berenstain Bear Living Lights title, The Berenstain Bears Bless Our Pets, Brother,...
Children The Berenstain Bears Christian Fiction
Rachel King (13 KP) rated The Centurion's Wife (Acts of Faith, #1) in Books
Feb 11, 2019
This book is the first book in the series Acts of Faith, which I like because not only are all the loose threads not accounted for, but also because I would love to see other Biblical characters portrayed by these authors, such as Paul. I look forward to continuing the series with the next book, The Hidden Flame.
This is how Christian fiction should be written, in my humble opinion. The beliefs and doubts of the characters are real and believable - even to the point of looking messy and contradictory. Their faith hasn't been softened and molded by political correctness, too afraid to quote more than a few fee-good verses from Psalms or even use the name of Jesus. A Christian is not a one-dimensional type-cast description, and neither should the characters in a Christian fiction novel be.